Rapper from Little Rock club shooting held in separate case | iNFOnews | Thompson-Okanagan's News Source
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Rapper from Little Rock club shooting held in separate case

Original Publication Date July 24, 2017 - 2:59 PM

LITTLE ROCK, Ark. - A federal magistrate declared Monday that the rapper who was performing at a Little Rock club during a mass shooting was too dangerous to cut loose pending a trial on a separate weapons charge, rejecting arguments that gunplay captured on video and a tough-guy persona were just part of an act.

Ricky Hampton of Memphis, Tennessee, who performs under the name Finese2Tymes, was indicted this month on a charge of illegally possessing a weapon at a club in eastern Arkansas about a week before the July 1 Little Rock shooting. Hampton had been in a Tennessee prison until last summer on a robbery conviction, and Kearney noted Monday that Hampton's rap sheet starts at age 15.

"There is heavy evidence that he is a danger to the community," U.S. Magistrate Jerome T. Kearney declared in court. In a written order filed later, he added, "The Court finds no condition or combination of conditions that would reasonably assure the safety of the community."

With a pair of felony convictions behind him, Hampton is barred from having weapons. His bodyguard was accused in federal court last week of supplying Hampton with one, and Hampton was charged July 6 after a woman complained that the rapper shot at her June 25 outside a Forrest City nightclub, grazing her neck. No one has been charged in the Little Rock shooting, which left 28 injured.

In court Monday, agent Warren Newman of the U.S. Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives said videos showing Hampton with guns emerged online the day Hampton was released from prison. Other video showed him smoking marijuana rolled into cigars.

"Ricky Hampton is a violent individual. He has no regard for the law," federal prosecutor Stephanie Mazzanti argued. "He has said he doesn't go to his appearances unless he is armed."

But Nicole Lybrand, a public defender representing Hampton, said that prosecutors waited more than a week after the Forrest City incident before arresting him in Birmingham, Alabama, the day after the shooting at Little Rock's Power Ultra Lounge.

"If they deemed him a risk, they could have picked him up before Little Rock," she said. She told the magistrate that Hampton could stay with Hampton's pregnant girlfriend in Memphis and suggested the weapons in the videos could have been props.

"Mr. Hampton is a rapper. There is a certain type of image" associated with rap performers, she told Kearney.

Hampton sat next to his lawyer, leg irons wrapped around a pair of bright blue Air Jordans. He fidgeted at times, shook his head "No" during part of Newman's testimony and turned to make eye contact with several in the gallery.

While no one has been charged in the Power Ultra shooting, prosecutors say a slug from Hampton's bodyguard's gun matched one recovered from the club. Further ballistics tests are required before investigators make a definite link.

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Follow Kelly P. Kissel on Twitter at www.twitter.com/kisselAP

News from © The Associated Press, 2017
The Associated Press

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