Showing posts with label C-Murder. Show all posts
Showing posts with label C-Murder. Show all posts

February 19, 2016

Boosie BadAzz & C-Murder - Penitentiary Chances (Artwork + TrackListing)


Album will drop on April 15 and the first single, “Under Pressure,” will arrive on Feb. 23. The 20-track effort features Snoop Dogg and local southern acts like Calliope Bub, Vs, Cuttboy G, Dinero and 2Meka and production from T-Rhythm and Moneybeats.

Check out the full tracklist below:

1. The Beginning
2. Under Pressure Feat. Calliope Bub
3. In The Pen
4. Dear Supreme Court
5. 4, 3, 2, 1
6. Dear Cee, Dear Boosie
7. Strapped Up Feat. Vs
8. Black Babies Don’t Mourn
9. Don’t Rush 2 Grow Up Feat. Calliope Bub
10. A Political Prisoner Speaks
11. God I’m Sorry
12. Blame My Mother
13. Wehn We Came 2 The Can Feat. Calliope Bub
14. 2 Legit Feat. Calliope Bub
15. Remember Me Feat. Yella, Cuttboy G, Dinero and 2Meka
16. This Ain’t Living Feat. Vs
17. Miller Time Feat. Mac Milli
18. It’s Hard 2 Be Black Feat. Snoop Dogg
19. For My Homies That’s Dead Feat. Calliope Bub
20. The End

March 31, 2015

C-Murder - Aint No Heaven In The Pen (New Album)


01. Intro (feat. Callipoe Doefus)
02. Don’t Test Me (feat. Al, Big Be & Bloc Boyz Click)
03. For My Homies Dead & Gone (feat. Boosie Badazz & Lil Kano)
04. Who Really Cares (feat. Montez)
05. What You Lookin At (feat. Al, Calliope Doefus, G-Dinero & Shy Glizzy)
06. Hard 2 Be Black (feat. Snoop Dogg & Boosie Badazz)
07. Interlude (feat. Calliope Doefus)
08. All I Wanted 2 Be (Remix)
09. Yall Heard of Us (feat. Lil Soulja Slim)
10. Lifes Hard (feat. Adrian E, Big Be & Bloc Boyz Click)
11. Tru Justice Movement (feat. Jigga)
12. Outro (feat. Calliope Doefus)

https://play.google.com/store/music/album/C_Murder_Aint_No_Heaven_in_the_Pen?id=B2uhrtlg4gkykmlhkruo74gmmpe&hl=en
https://itunes.apple.com/us/album/aint-no-heaven-in-the-pen/id972403331

September 5, 2014

May 15, 2014

I am Corey Miller Documentary (Crowfounding Project)

This page has been set up in order to raise funds to complete the "I Am Corey Miller" documentary. The documentary entails the life of Corey Miller (aka C-Murder) and the friends, family, and musicians that truly know the man behind his entertainment persona.

February 19, 2014

Advertisement; C-Murder Message From Prison!


To all yall niccas out there still using my TRU name and logo and affiliations, please STOP immediately!. Why are you still misguiding the world like we are a team when the truth is, its only me, if you are trying to figure out if Im talkin about you, then simply ask yourself this one question; are you doing one fucking thing to benefit me? Please stop stunting and faking and leave my name and company out ya motherfuckin mouth! and take all TRU logos and such of your websites and advertisements. If not, I will follow up verbally and speak directly to single you out. If your name is not G-Dinero, JP or MO, then Im talking to you, this will be my last being Mr. Nice Guy, this does not include my fans. 

Peace and reman TRU.

C-Murder

July 18, 2013

C-Murder Facing Civil Trial Regarding 2002 Murder Case

A judge finds C-Murder civilly liable in the 2002 death of a Louisiana teenager, will soon face a civil trial.

Although incarcerated rapper Corey “C-Murder” Miller is currently serving a life sentence after being found guilty of second degree murder in 2009, his legal woes have yet to cease. According to New Orleans’ The Times-Picayune, C-Murder will now face a civil trial in the death of Steve Thomas, the teenager whose murder was at the center of the rapper’s trial nearly four years ago.

The civil trial has been brought about due to a lawsuit filed against C-Murder by Thomas’ parents, Delores and George Thomas. Before the trial began, C-Murder revealed his financial struggle with fans and as an inmate at Louisiana State Penitentiary at Angola it’s reported that he only receives about 10 cents per hour for any work done at the prison.

"A judgment against him in this proceeding is of little consequence to him," C-Murder’s attorney, Roy Maughan Jr. revealed. "What can you take from a man who has lost his liberty? He's lost his liberty. There's no money to be taken." Since the judge in the matter, Judge Glenn Ansardi, has already decided that C-Murder is civilly liable, the civil trial will essentially determine if the Thomas’ will be awarded damages and if so, how much. Trey Mustian, the attorney for the Thomas’, also shared his thoughts on the upcoming trial as he revealed that Judge Ansardi’s decision to place civil liability on C-Murder will make the civil trial much “easier.”

As of now, a set date for the civil trial has yet to be announced.


November 21, 2012

Mac & C-Murder Full Pardon Petition to Obama Admin.

EVERYBODY PLEASE SIGN THIS PETITION

WE petition the Obama Administration to:

Grant a full pardon to McKinley Phipps Jr and Corey Miller.

Convicted by a corrupt/racist Louisiana judicial system!

In September 2001, McKinley Phipps Jr was wrongfully convicted of manslaughter and was imposed a 30 year sentence. Even though 1 of the 2 witnesses recanted her statement on the stand. The other witness a felon with new charges looming over him, lied so he could work a deal with the then DA office to avoid jail time.

 In September 2007, Corey Miller was wrongfully convicted of murder. Although the sole witness perjured himself on the stand and the forensic experts stated that there was no physical evidence to tie Mr Miller to the crime. He was sentenced to life. 

Both are high profile music artists that had strong ties in the community, especially the youth. 
Both became victims of the super corrupt Louisiana judicial system.Both lost considerable time from their families.
We seek full pardon!

January 3, 2012

C-Murder’s Appeal Denied by Louisiana Court

Enlace

C-Murder's appeal denied! He was convicted of murder in 2009 No dice for jailed rapper C-Murder, who has lost his latest appeal to overturn his 2009 murder conviction.
C Murder, born Corey Miller, was sentenced to life in prison in 2003 after he was found guilty of the 2002 murder of 16-year-old Steve Thomas in a nightclub in New Orleans, Louisiana.

The conviction for second degree murder was overturned in 2006 and a second trial took place in 2009. But Murder/Miller was once again sentenced to spend the rest of his life behind bars. Miller, the younger brother of rap star Master P, claims he is innocent. He initiated an appeal earlier this year, claiming he didn't receive a fair trial because jurors were allowed to hear unsubstantiated testimony about witnesses allegedly being threatened by him.

But a three-judge panel at Louisiana's 5th Circuit Court of Appeal rejected the motion on Wednesday and chose to uphold the ruling against Miller and his lengthy sentence. So C Murder will remain incarcerated.

What do you think of this case?

October 5, 2011

C-Murder's attorneys argue his appeal for a new murder trial


Two years after Corey "C-Murder" Miller was convicted and sentenced to life in prison for killing a teenage fan in 2002, his lawyers appear before a panel of appeals court judges in Gretna Wednesday morning to argue that he deserves a new trial. The argument ranges from allegations that the trial judge pressured jurors to reach a verdict, to prosecutors using unsubstantiated claims that the New Orleans-born rapper threatened witnesses to remain silent.

"No DNA," Miller's appellate team wrote in one of two briefs filed at the 5th Circuit Court of Appeal. "No fingerprints. No gun. No ballistics. No testing for gunshot residue. No incriminating statements. Not one piece of physical evidence directly linking Corey Miller to the shooting. The irreconcilable tales of two flip-flopping, deal-driven and reluctant (to testify) witnesses is the only evidence propping up the state's case."

Miller, who turned 40 this year while confined at the Louisiana State Penitentiary at Angola, will not attend. But family of the teen he is convicted of killing are expected to observe the argument.

Miller twice has been convicted of second-degree murder in the Jan. 12, 2002, death of Steve Thomas, a 16-year-old fan of the rapper's who was shot in the chest while being beaten by a throng of men in the now-closed Platinum Club in Harvey.

Former Judge Martha Sassone of the 24th Judicial District Court, who presided over the Miller case until voters ousted her in 2008 in a campaign that included attacks on her decisions in the rapper's case, tossed the first conviction in 2003 in siding with Miller's attorneys. They argued that prosecutors hid evidence that would have helped their case.

While the 5th Circuit upheld the conviction in a split vote, the state Supreme Court sided with Sassone in 2005, setting the stage for a second trial. However, a second jury convicted Miller in August 2009, in a 10-2 vote that capped off hours of contentious jury deliberation in which one juror allegedly emotionally collapsed and turned to reading her Bible and another juror said she voted to convict only to end deliberations.

A panel of three judges is scheduled to hear argument beginning at 11 a.m., from among the team of Harvard and New Orleans attorneys who signed on voluntarily to carry Miller's appeal, and Assistant District Attorney Terry Boudreaux, who heads District Attorney Paul Connick Jr.'s appeals division. Each side is expected to be limited to 15 minutes of oral argument, after which the judges will take the case under advisement until a ruling is released, perhaps months later.

Miller's appellate attorneys, who include John Adcock of New Orleans and Charles Ogletree, Ronald Sullivan and Robert Smith from Harvard University in Cambridge, Mass., accuse Judge Hans Liljeberg of basically forcing jurors to continue deliberations, despite their being hung.

Three of the jurors voted Miller innocent, one shy of a legal verdict to convict. One of them wrote a note to Liljeberg saying she changed her vote to guilty "under duress" to end deliberations. Liljeberg sent jurors back to deliberate more, and the jury returned hours later convicting Miller in a 10-2 verdict, the minimum allowed under Louisiana law. "The circus-like atmosphere of the deliberations themselves scream mistrial," Miller's attorneys wrote. "Sending the jury to deliberate further after one of its members provided the decisive tenth vote to convict 'under duress to get out of here' created an incalculably high risk that the same juror would return to the jury room and vote guilty despite the evidence so she could 'get out of there.'"

Liljeberg, the attorneys claim, should have declared a mistrial.

"The only message the jury could have received from the judge's repeated instruction to continue deliberating was: The only way to get out of here is to reach a verdict," the attorneys wrote.

In a Times-Picayune interview following the trial, Mary Jacob confirmed she was the juror who changed her vote "under duress," but later voted guilty because she felt that way. The day after the trial, she said she regretted the decision and believed prosecutors did not prove Miller was guilty. Miller's attorneys reference the newspaper story in a footnote, insofar as Jacob was quoted as describing the deliberations.

Boudreaux, in his response brief, defended Liljeberg, saying the judge has discretion in determining how long a jury deliberates. "There is no requirement that a judge declare a mistrial at the initial sign of trouble," Boudreaux wrote. They say Liljeberg also erred in not allowing the jury to hear again during deliberations a recording of a 911 call in which the caller provides information suggesting someone else shot Thomas. Authorities believe that the caller was one of the prosecutors' two witnesses who at trial claimed they saw Miller shoot the teenager.

No one else called 911, and no one identified Miller as the shooting in its immediate aftermath. Yet, Miller's attorneys say, the prosecutors "insinuated that nobody said anything because Miller intimidated everyone, leading the jury to believe that but for Miller's intimidation, the prosecution would have had more witnesses to support their case." Miller's attorneys also accuse prosecutors of cutting African-Americans during jury selection. They say prosecutors used eight of their 12 peremptory strikes to cut black potential jurors. The appeals attorneys don't break it down, but three of the jurors during Miller's trial were black, and two of them voted the rapper was not guilty.

They also argue Louisiana's allowing a non-unanimous jury decision to convict is unconstitutional. Only Louisiana and Oregon allow at least 10 jurors to agree in order to convict.


May 15, 2011

Jason Lyric - The Whole Truth (Mixed by Dj Hektik)


Here is the new mixtape by Jason Lyric.
'The Whole Truth' is the tittle and it's hosted by Dj Hektik.

Features from Y.Luck, M-11, C-Murder, The Show and many more!

March 29, 2011

C-Murder Jail Contact Info


Corey Miller #556633
Louisiana State Prison J-Bass 17544
Tunica Trace Angola, La 70712

FREE C-MURDER