Meek Mill will have a adventure to be released from prison house when he appeared at his new bail hearing set for Nov 27.

Lawyers representing the Philly rapper have been working overtime to find even the smallest of crevice in the justice system that would get him free from prison. If you have been living under a stone for the past two weeks, Meek Manufacturing plant is currently in a Pennsylvania state prison house serving 2-4 years for probation violation. But the case drew so much scrutiny and widespread outcry that from some big-name celebrities like JAY-Z.

Come up November 27, Meek Mill will over again exist in forepart of approximate Estimate Genece Brinkley for a bail hearing and no one knows yet where things volition go from there just the fact that he is getting a bail hearing while he is serving a sentence in prison house likely means that the judge had some time to recollect about her heavy-handed sentencing and want to right her wrong.

Meek Mill has been on probation for years following his drug and gun conviction in 2008. Earlier this yr, he was arrested in St Louis for allegedly getting into a fight at the airdrome. He subsequently told authorities that he was simply breaking up a fight. He was arrested once more in August In New York City for popping a wheelie on a clay bike while shooting a music video. Cops say they arrested him for reckless endangerment amongst other traffic violations.

Both cases were subsequently dismissed after he took a plea bargain and was given merely community service. JAY-Z, who signed Meek Manufactory to his management company Roc Nation, penned an stance piece in the New York Times today where he spoke out in depth nearly the justice system preying on black people for years.

"The specifics of Meek's instance inspired me to write this," JAY-Z wrote. "But it'due south fourth dimension we highlight the random ways people trapped in the criminal justice system are punished every day. The organization treats them as a danger to order, consistently monitors and follows them for any minor infraction — with the goal of putting them back in prison."

The rap fable argued that tax payers will have to spend thousands of dollars to keep Meek Manufacturing plant in prison for the duration of his sentence merely for a small crime that could see him doing community service and giving back in some way to his community. "Taxpayers in Philadelphia, Meek Mill'south hometown, will have to spend tens of thousands of dollars each year to keep him locked upwards, and I bet none of them would tell y'all his imprisonment is helping to proceed them safer," Hov wrote.