Pooh Shiesty Speaks Out From Jail After Getting Arrested For R*bbing Gucci Mane

The audacity of Pooh Shiesty’s January 2026 “contract negotiation” with Gucci Mane has set a new, dark gold standard for self-destructive behavior in the music industry. While the streets argue over 50 Cent’s “snitching” allegations against Gucci, the federal government has quietly assembled a mountain of evidence so comprehensive it reads like a “how-to” manual for getting a life sentence.

As of April 2026, the DOJ has laid out eight distinct categories of evidence that make this case virtually indefensible.

The Digital Noose: Ankle Monitors and AirTags

The most staggering display of institutional hypocrisy is that Pooh Shiesty—fresh out of a three-year federal stint—orchestrated an armed kidnapping while wearing a government-mandated GPS ankle monitor.

    The Ankle Monitor: Every step Pooh Shiesty took inside that Dallas studio was logged by the feds in real-time. He didn’t just violate his home confinement; he broadcasted his coordinates to his probation officer while holding an AK-style pistol to his boss’s head.

    The AirTag: In a stroke of accidental genius by the victims, a stolen wallet contained an Apple AirTag. The feds tracked the stolen goods directly to a parking lot adjacent to the apartment where Pooh Shiesty and his father were staying.

Premeditation at Staples

This wasn’t a “heat of the moment” dispute. The feds have documented the paper trail of the crime’s origin:

The Staples Receipt: Hours before the robbery, Pooh’s father, Lantrell Williams Sr., was caught on camera at a Staples office supply store.

The Documents: Prosecutors believe he was printing the very contract termination papers that were later forced upon Gucci Mane at gunpoint. This transforms the case from a simple robbery into a sophisticated, premeditated kidnapping and extortion plot.

Forensic and Social Suicide

The crew’s lack of operational security (OPSEC) extended to the physical and digital world:

The Red Cup Evidence: Members of the nine-man Memphis crew left behind red plastic cups in the studio. Forensic teams recovered latent fingerprints from these cups, tying multiple co-defendants (including Big 30) to the scene.

Social Media Flexing: Within hours of the robbery, Terrence Rogers and Demarcus Glover posted videos and photos to Instagram wearing the stolen Rolex watches and jewelry. They essentially filmed their own confessions for the Dallas Violent Crimes Task Force.

The 50 Cent Factor and the “Snitch” Narrative

The internet erupted when 50 Cent clowned Gucci Mane for identifying his attackers as “RD” (Radric Davis) in federal documents. However, the hypocrisy of the “street code” is on full display here.

Gucci Mane was lured into a trap by an artist he kept on his payroll while that artist was in prison.

He was robbed of his wedding ring, and his associate was choked into near-unconsciousness.

When an artist uses a “business meeting” to facilitate an armed takeover, the street code is already dead. Gucci Mane isn’t “slimming” anyone out; he is a victim of a federal crime that was documented by the perpetrators themselves.

The Cost of Loyalty

The tragedy of this case is the collateral damage. Big 30, a rapper with genuine momentum and a separate label deal, now faces life in federal prison simply for “blocking the door.” He wasn’t the gunman, and he didn’t want the contract, but his presence as an enforcer makes him equally liable under federal conspiracy laws.

By April 2026, Pooh Shiesty has traded his music freedom for a cage, and he took his father and his best friend down with him—all because he wanted to settle a paperwork dispute with a Draco instead of a lawyer.