Rapper YNW Melly was set to appear in court Tuesday after his double murder retrial was delayed because his defense attorneys said South Florida prosecutors committed felony obstruction of justice.
According to the defense attorneys, the prosecutors did not reveal that the lead detective in the rapperâs double-murder case had been previously accused of being willing to lie as he gathered evidence.
On Tuesday, attorneys for the rapper requested for the hearing to be rescheduled for Wednesday, as one of the defense attorneys was reportedly in the hospital.
Attorneys for Melly, whose legal name is Jamell Demons, on Friday asked Broward Circuit Judge John J. Murphy to remove the Broward State Attorneyâs Office from the case and potentially dismiss it entirely.
Jury selection in the retrial of the 24-year-old rapper was set to start this week, but the judge pushed it back a week on Friday and set hearings to deal with the obstruction allegations.
The request from the defense attorneys comes after Assistant State Attorney Michelle Boutros, who works for the Broward office, testified Friday that she overheard Miramar Police Detective Mark Moretti, lead investigator in the case against Demons, ask a Broward County deputy to lie about being present when Moretti executed a search warrant outside his jurisdiction last October, forcibly seizing a phone from Demons' mother as part of a witness tampering investigation.
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Defense attorney Jamie Benjamin said that information should have been turned over to the defense because they could have used it to discredit Moretti during Demonsâ recent murder trial, which ended in July with a hung jury.
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Prosecutors say the exchange between Moretti and the deputy was a joke, pointing to the fact that an attorney for Demons' mother was present when her phone was taken and would have known the deputy wasn't there.
Assistant State Attorney Kristine Bradley, lead prosecutor on the Demons case, testified Friday that the deputy gave a flippant response when asked about being in the room when the warrant was executed.
Demons' first murder trial ended with a 9-3 vote for conviction.
Melly faces a possible death sentence if convicted of first-degree murder in the 2018 slayings of two childhood friends, Christopher âYNW Juvyâ Thomas and Anthony âYNW Sakchaserâ Williams. Their stage names all include âYNWâ because they belonged to the same hip-hop collective. It stands for âYoung New Waveâ or another phrase that includes a racial slur.
Prosecutors say Melly, after a late-night recording session, shot Thomas and Williams inside an SUV and he and Cortlen âYNW Bortlenâ Henry then tried to make it look like a drive-by shooting. Melly remains jailed without bond. His biggest hit, âMurder on My Mind,â reached No. 14 on the Billboard Hot 100 chart in 2019.