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Trump commutes notorious gangster's sentence... thanks to Kanye West

Trump commutes notorious gangster's sentence... thanks to Kanye West

Independent29-05-2025

President Donald Trump has commuted the sentence of notorious former gang leader Larry Hoover after being lobbied for years by Kanye West.
Hoover, now 74, was the leader of the Chicago -based Gangster Disciples and was convicted in 1997 for running the criminal enterprise.
He was serving a 200-year sentence in a Colorado supermax prison, but after the president's intervention, he will be transferred to a state prison in Illinois to see out the rest of the sentence.
Prosecutors described Hoover as 'one of the most notorious criminals in Illinois history.' In court filings, they said that he was responsible for directing 'violence and drug trafficking in Chicago from at least 1970 until 1995.'
Hoover's attorneys welcomed the move from Trump and said that Hoover has demonstrated 'considerable growth and complete rehabilitation' behind bars.
'Despite the Court's unwillingness to do the right thing, Mr. Hoover has been able to keep his voice alive through the incredible work of many advocates and supporters,' they said in a statement to CBS News. 'Thankfully, Mr. Hoover's pleas were heard by President Trump who took action to deliver justice for Mr. Hoover.'
Hoover's legal team was told Monday that the commutation was going ahead, according to The New York Times.
'This is an older gentleman who has a lot of health concerns and who has aged out of criminality,' Justin Moore, one of his lawyers, said.
Trump was lobbied to commute the gangster's sentence by West, which intensified after Alice Marie Johnson, the president's 'pardon czar,' was appointed to advise the White House, according to Moore.
'WORDS CAN'T EXPRESS MY GRATITUDE FOR OUR DEVOTED ENDURING PRESIDENT DONALD TRUMP FOR FREEING LARRY HOOVER,' West said in a post on X, even though Hoover will remain locked up.
West met with Trump at the White House in 2018 where he said it was 'very important' to him to free Hoover.
' I have to go and get him free because he was doing positive inside of Chicago, just like how I'm moving back to Chicago, and it's not just about, you know, getting on stage and being an entertainer and having a monolithic voice that's forced to be a specific party,' West said, according to a transcript of the meeting.
In 2022, Hoover claimed he is 'no longer the Larry Hoover people sometimes talk about, or he who is written about in the papers, or the crime figure described by the government.'
He claimed he was 'anecdotally' aware that 'some misguided people' had used him as a symbol, adding that he wished 'this were not so.'
'I am no longer a member, leader, or even an elder statesman of the Gangster Disciples,' Hoover wrote. 'I want nothing to do with it now and forever.'
Federal prosecutors claimed that Hoover has continued to orchestrate gang activity in some capacity while imprisoned, and have stated that they believe he would attempt to reclaim his position as the gang's leader if released.
In July 2020, Chicago's top federal prosecutor, US Attorney John Lausch, told the judge that it would be a 'miscarriage of justice to reduce [Hoover's] sentence in any way, shape or form'.

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As World Pride flows straight into the military parade, DC officials say they're ready for anything
As World Pride flows straight into the military parade, DC officials say they're ready for anything

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  • The Independent

As World Pride flows straight into the military parade, DC officials say they're ready for anything

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Musk's attack on Trump sparks fears that 'Dark MAGA conspiracy' is coming true
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Man (36) who murdered partner after beating her 'beyond recognition' jailed for at least 19 years
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BreakingNews.ie

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The judge said that while Scott had said he had suffered injuries, there was no evidence that he had been injured by her hands to any degree of note. He said the evidence showed that when he attacked her, he inflicted extensive and multiple injuries on her before the final assault. The judge accepted the murder was not premeditated but added that it was a foreseeable end result of how he had treated her. He said: 'What on earth did he think might happen to her if he beat her up again and again and again and again? 'She begged the staff in the off-licence not to call the police because she was afraid he would kill her, and that is exactly what he did.' The judge said he had received 'exceptionally moving' victim impact statements from Ms Melendez's mother, two of her aunts, and one of her children. He said her mother found it impossible to put into words the 'suffering the cruel murder has caused' and that her grandchildren had struggled to find peace. Ms Melendez's teenage son said he was made fun of and bullied when his mother's murder was reported. He said: 'I will never know if my mum would have been able to get better and I could have spent more time with her. 'I had to start secondary school without my mum knowing, and I think of all the big things in my life she will miss out on. 'I just feel like my life will never be the same without her and every birthday I see as a constant reminder of her.' Reading a pre-sentence report from the probation service, the judge said Scott had expressed that Ms Menendez did not deserve what happened to her and said: 'I genuinely loved her to bits. 'I want forgiveness I need to do right by her. That's why I pleaded guilty. I took her from her family and kids.' In arriving at the length of the sentence, the judge was asked to take note of delays in proceedings due to the 'unusual' impact of the Covid-19 pandemic. Scott was initially arrested on March 26th, 2020, but was not interviewed until January 2022. In the middle of that 22-month period, he was also in custody in relation to assault of police officers. In effect, the court heard that he was in custody for the matters relating to Ms Melendez alone for approximately 12.5 months – but the exact time would be worked out at a later stage. Announcing his decision, the judge put a provision that that period would be taken off the sentence – as there would be no administrative way for the prison service to declare that as a period of remand. It was not open to the judge to implement consecutive sentences for the other offences to which Scott pleaded guilty, but he was able to use them as an aggravating factor in arriving at the final tariff. Scott was given a life sentence with a minimum tariff of 19 years before his release can be considered. The judge said this would be reduced at a later date to account for the time he spent in custody in relation to the matters during the pandemic, when a final determination on the exact number of days had been made.

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