Leaked Video Of Gucci Mane Snitching On Pooh Shiesty Is Going Viral

The sheer, unadulterated stupidity of the situation in that Dallas recording studio is enough to make any rational person’s head spin. We aren’t just talking about a “rap beef” or a “disagreement over points.” According to the federal indictment, we are talking about a coordinated, armed takeover fueled by a level of amateurism that would be hilarious if it weren’t so violent. Gucci Mane, a man who literally wrote the book on surviving the streets and rebuilding a legitimate life, walked into a trap set by the very people he helped elevate.

The irony is so thick you could trip over it. Gucci Mane arrived in Dallas on January 10, 2026, for what he thought was a business meeting to settle a contract dispute. He didn’t come looking for trouble; he came with an off-duty police officer as his head of security and two music industry professionals. These people weren’t there to “slide”; they were there to look at spreadsheets and legal clauses. They were sitting in the control room, kicking back and watching a football game, completely unaware that a nine-man crash out crew from Memphis was closing in.

The calculated betrayal here is staggering. The federal complaint alleges that Pooh Shisty’s father, Lantrell Williams Sr., was the logistics manager for this disaster. He reportedly booked the studio under the guise of a recording session and even stopped at a Staples—yes, an office supply store—to print out the “termination papers” they intended to force Gucci to sign. Imagine the scene: a man in his 50s standing at a self-service printer, preparing the legal documents for a kidnapping he’s about to help his son commit. It’s not “gangster”; it’s pathetic.

Once the trap sprung, the situation turned into a nightmare. Shisty allegedly isolated Gucci in a back room, pulled out a black AK-style pistol, and demanded he sign the papers. When Gucci initially refused, Shisty didn’t back down; he had a subordinate record the forced signature on a cell phone. They literally filmed themselves committing a federal felony. To add a layer of dark comedy to the tragedy, Shisty allegedly consulted his father to see if the paperwork looked “official,” and the father insisted Gucci add a date to the signature. They wanted the paperwork to be legally binding while they were holding the man at gunpoint. The level of delusional entitlement required to think a contract signed under the threat of an AK-47 would hold up in any court is breathtaking.

While Gucci was being robbed of his wedding ring, watch, and earrings, his team in the other room was being terrorized. One victim was choked so hard they nearly lost consciousness, leaving visible scratches that are now immortalized in federal evidence photos. The victims truly believed they were about to be executed. And for what? A few chains, a Rolex, and a “released” contract that wasn’t worth the Staples paper it was printed on.

The aftermath of the crime is a masterclass in how to get caught by the feds in record time.

The Ankle Monitor: Pooh Shisty was on federal home detention. He literally brought a government GPS tracker to the scene of the kidnapping.

The AirTag: They stole a wallet that had an Apple AirTag inside, which tracked them directly back to the apartment where Shisty and his father were staying.

Social Media: Within hours, the suspects were on Instagram flashing the stolen jewelry. They might as well have tagged the FBI in the comments.

Physical Evidence: They left fingerprints on red plastic cups in the studio.

The “no snitching” crowd on the internet is predictably up in arms because Gucci Mane and his team cooperated with investigators. Let’s be very clear: Gucci Mane didn’t “tell” on a business partner. He reported a group of people who lured him into an ambush, put a rifle to his face, and choked his staff. The “code” doesn’t cover kidnapping your boss because you’re mad about your royalty split. Gucci Mane did exactly what a businessman and a victim of a violent crime should do—he let the federal government handle the trash.

Today, nine men are staring down the barrel of life in federal prison. Pooh Shisty had a second chance that 99% of people never get, and he used it to play-act a high-stakes robbery against his own mentor. He traded a multi-million dollar music career for a Staples-printed contract and a handful of jewelry that the feds probably already have in an evidence locker. It is a legacy of absolute failure, and the only thing “legendary” about it is the sheer scale of the incompetence involved.