logo
Jelly Roll Should Be Pardoned for Drug and Robbery Offenses, Board Says

Jelly Roll Should Be Pardoned for Drug and Robbery Offenses, Board Says

New York Times23-04-2025
Jelly Roll, one of the top names in country music, should be pardoned for his past robbery and drug possession convictions, the Tennessee Board of Parole unanimously determined on Tuesday.
The decision now rests with Gov. Bill Lee.
Jelly Roll, 40, a Tennessee native whose real name is Jason DeFord, started his career as a rapper but rose to prominence in 2023 with his country album 'Whitsitt Chapel' and its popular songs 'Save Me' and 'Need a Favor.' He was named the best new artist at the Country Music Association Awards that year and has been nominated for four Grammys. His most recent album, 'Beautifully Broken,' reached No. 1 on the charts.
The singer has been open about his criminal history, including convictions for robbery and drug possession with intent to sell. He was incarcerated when his daughter was born.
The Associated Press reported that Jelly Roll was sentenced to a year in prison after entering a house and demanding money in 2002; he was unarmed but two other men were carrying guns. In another case, The A.P. reported, Jelly Roll was sentenced to eight years of court-ordered supervision after the police found cocaine and marijuana in his car.
Jelly Roll told The New York Times that he was 13 when the police brought him to jail after an unresolved cannabis citation.
'I'm learning to forgive myself for the decisions I made when I was that young,' he said. 'They were wrong and I knew they were wrong, and I was doing them with a sense of pride and excitement.'
In recent years, Jelly Roll has performed at correctional facilities and testified before Congress about the fentanyl crisis. In an interview with Jon Bon Jovi last year, Jelly Roll said he still had issues performing outside of the United States because of his legal troubles.
'We're working on that,' he said. 'I think it's going to work in my favor.'
The Tennessee Board of Parole unanimously voted to recommend granting a pardon during a nearly two-hour meeting in downtown Nashville on Tuesday. One of the seven board members, a former law enforcement officer, recused himself from the case.
Representatives for Jelly Roll and a spokesman for Mr. Lee did not respond to requests for comment. A spokesman for the parole board said there was no timeline for when the governor would announce a decision.
Mr. Lee, a Republican, has pardoned more than 90 people since becoming governor in 2019 and typically announces his decisions in December. In addition to drug offenses, the pardons have included convictions for arson, attempted second-degree murder, domestic assault, driving under the influence, identity theft and shoplifting.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

NBA star Jaylen Brown's father arrested in Las Vegas parking lot stabbing incident

time4 minutes ago

NBA star Jaylen Brown's father arrested in Las Vegas parking lot stabbing incident

BOSTON -- The father of Boston Celtics All-Star Jaylen Brown was arrested in Las Vegas and charged with attempted murder after reportedly stabbing another man in a parking lot. According to TMZ, Quenton Marselles Brown admitted dinging the victim's car with his door when he got out of his Lincoln Navigator. An argument ensued and Brown stabbed the victim in the back and stomach, the website reported. Court documents listed Brown as an inmate in the Clark County Detention Center on attempted murder charges. A person with knowledge of the incident, speaking on the condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to discuss it, confirmed that the man arrested is Jaylen Brown's father. The Associated Press requested the police report from the Las Vegas Metropolitan Police Department but was told it wasn't immediately available.

Richard Lee, Oaksterdam University founder who paved the way for legal weed, dies at 62
Richard Lee, Oaksterdam University founder who paved the way for legal weed, dies at 62

San Francisco Chronicle​

timean hour ago

  • San Francisco Chronicle​

Richard Lee, Oaksterdam University founder who paved the way for legal weed, dies at 62

When it opened in 2007 as a cannabis-focused trade school, Oaksterdam University in uptown Oakland had all the attractions of a major college campus. There were two coffeehouses in funky little storefronts, a gift shop offering logoed sweat shirts, a student union, a university museum, a bike rental and glass-blowing shop — and a founding president, Richard Lee, who was as eager as an incoming freshman. Lee, who had used a wheelchair since suffering a spinal cord injury during his prior occupation as a roadie for Aerosmith, was the perfect ambassador for medical marijuana, which he required to ease chronic pain. He also had the right combination of erudition, determination, a self-effacing sense of humor, and the boyish good looks — complete with bangs — to be the face of the nationwide drive to legalize marijuana. 'The university is a political institution. Its mission is to legitimize the business and work to change the law to make cannabis legal,' he told the Chronicle in 2008, in an interview for an innovators column called 'Bright Ideas.' Lee's mission is still not fully accomplished, but Oaksterdam is still at the forefront. He retired in 2012 after four federal agencies raided both his apartment on Lake Merritt and his office at Oaksterdam, confiscating everything but the furniture. He was never charged, and the university quickly reopened, but Lee said he had become a target for law enforcement and felt that both he and the university would be continuously harassed. Eventually he moved home to care for his aging mother in Houston. He died July 27 at a hospital there, according to Oaksterdam Chancellor Dale Sky Jones. Cause of death was metastasized cancer that had gone undetected and spread throughout his abdomen, Jones said. Lee was 62. 'Richard's courage to fight when it wasn't easy, when it wasn't safe, and when few others dared, led to a domino effect of change that we are still witnessing today,' said Jones. 'He didn't wait for the system to catch up. He worked relentlessly to make it right.' Lee was already an Oakland operator, with two coffee houses that served as marijuana dispensaries and a pot growing business on the side, when he hit on the idea to open a school that taught aspirants what he'd learned on the ground. The light-bulb moment came from a sign that read 'Cannabis College,' which he had seen at the Hash, Marihuana and Hemp Museum in Amsterdam. 'I'd seen in California that there were not enough good people who want to work in the cannabis industry in a professional way, who want to pay taxes and obey regulations and help improve their community,' he later told the Chronicle. 'I came back from Amsterdam and the idea just popped into the back of my head and I had to think back later to where I saw it.' He had the idea but not the name, which he cribbed from the nickname for the Oakland Cannabis Buyers' Cooperative, for which he was a cannabis supplier. Oaksterdam U. offered its first classes on Nov. 10, 2007, with 22 students. Soon enough classes were selling out, with students coming from as far away as California and New York to pay $150 in tuition to study the politics, history, civics, legality and science of the marijuana industry. You had to pass those before you could even learn how to grow it. 'We taught you what you needed to know before we taught you what you wanted to know,' said Jones. The school was behind on rent and behind on its enrollment goals when the federal raid happened and Lee stepped down. Since then it has turned around. As of 2025, more than 100,000 students from 116 countries have earned Oaksterdam certification in specific programs dedicated to the business of cannabis, the horticulture of cannabis, extraction, manufacturing. Oaksterdam has trained officials with the California Tax and Fee Administration, and multiple state, local and county regulators of the cannabis industry, a $57 billion business nationwide. 'If you enjoy any level of legal cannabis, Richard and Oaksterdam have touched your life, whether you know it or not,' Jones said. 'The most dangerous thing about smoking weed was always getting caught with it, and that's mostly over, thanks largely to Richard.' Richard Feib Lee was born Oct. 7, 1962, in Houston, where he grew up. He was the fourth of five brothers born to Ann and Robert Lee, a legal textbook salesman who ultimately opened a membership library for accountants and lawyers. Lee attended St. Thomas More Parochial School and St. Thomas High School in Houston, where he was a member of the class of 1981. Richard was part of the drama crowd, and though he got small parts he was drawn to the production side. He was interested in attending clown school and joining a circus, and went so far as to teach himself to ride a unicycle and put on a clown outfit to ride in the downtown parade on Thanksgiving Day. He also considered becoming a commercial pilot, but instead he enrolled at the University of Houston, where he majored in communication but did not graduate. Instead he got a job at LD Systems to install lighting systems for concerts. 'He was a lighting technician and he loved it,' said his brother Don. 'He used to say he was a 'truss monkey' climbing up on the scaffolding above the stage.' While in rehearsal, before a 1990 Aerosmith tour of Europe, Lee fell on his back and 'smashed his spine,' Don said. 'He became a paraplegic with ongoing pain issues.' He was 28 and was prescribed medication to control the spastic movements in his legs. The prescribed medicine made him sick. 'That's when he really focused on marijuana as a medicine,' said Don, a retired lobbyist in Austin. He became the owner of Legal Marijuana - The Hemp Store in inner city Houston. A formative movement came one night when he and a friend went to get takeout food and he was the subject of a carjacking. He'd left his wheelchair at home planning to order at the takeout window, and the carjackers left him on the asphalt, where Houston police found him. 'I'm sitting there on the pavement for 45 minutes, and when I asked them for a ride home, they said, 'What do we look like, a taxi company?'' he told the Chronicle. 'That's what really made me mad. I blame the laws against cannabis for the lack of police protection. They're looking for people like me smoking a joint instead of the violent predators and sociopaths out there.' After that, Lee expanded his outlaw growing operation and developed a steady customer at the Oakland Cannabis Buyers' Cooperative. Rather than take the risk of moving the product across state lines, he moved himself to Oakland in 1997, to join in the growing number of marijuana-related businesses that formed Oaksterdam. In 1999, he opened Bulldog Coffee Shop, which operated on the Amsterdam model of selling coffee in front and cannabis in back. He also started an illicit growing operation, which he called Richard Lee Farms, in a warehouse with hydroponics and grow lights. 'What he was doing was forming a community and an industry,' said his brother. 'He didn't want to be in the shadows, in a black market. He wanted to grow it out in the open, fully engaged in society.' In 2003, Lee opened a second coffee house/dispensary called Coffeeshop Blue Sky. With its proceeds he funded the Oakland Civil Liberties Alliance, a PAC he formed to lobby for passage of Measure Z, an Oakland proposition that made enforcement of marijuana laws the lowest priority for law enforcement. It was approved by voters in 2004. Lee also became publisher of Oaksterdam News, a newsletter that came out quarterly from 2005 to 2007. All of these operations were small compared to Oaksterdam U, a for-profit institution that grew to occupy 40,000 square feet at 1600 Broadway. Lee entered statewide politics as the main industry proponent of California Proposition 19, the first attempt in the U.S. to legalize marijuana for adults, in 2010. It failed but led to the passage of state Senate Bill 1449, which reduced possession of up to an ounce of non-medical marijuana from a criminal misdemeanor to an infraction. Then-Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger signed it into law effective Jan. 1, 2011. Lee later said his activism at the forefront of the drive to decriminalize marijuana is what led to the raid on his home and his business by a combined force representing the Internal Revenue Service, the Drug Enforcement Administration and the U.S. Marshals Service, on April 2, 2012. School computers, laptops and student records amounting to 85 boxes were confiscated and not returned until a year later. Lee's personal and business bank accounts were seized. 'They broke him, at that point,' said Jones, who replaced him as the head of Oaksterdam. 'They separated him from his business and purpose. The feds did what they wanted to do, they shut him up and they shut him down.' Bulldog Coffee Shop closed before the raid and Coffeeshop Blue Sky closed immediately after. The university was wobbly, too, and ended up moving to a smaller campus on Telegraph Avenue and made a comeback without Lee, as a not for profit educational and training institution, with an online component. His last major act was to enlist his parents, conservative Christians, who co-founded Republicans Against Marijuana Prohibition (RAMP) as a lobbying group intent on reducing or eliminating marijuana laws nationwide. There are also more than 100,000 Oaksterdam graduates carrying on the mission of legalizing marijuana in the U.S. and freeing 40,000 people who are in jails and prisons under marijuana convictions. Some 200,000 people were arrested for marijuana possession in 2023, according to data released by the FBI and cited by the Last Prisoner Project. "While the war isn't over," he said, on the day he retired, in 2012 "we have an army to fight it with."

Post Malone Opens Up About Fatherhood and His 'Hilarious' Young Daughter: 'The Most Beautiful Creature'
Post Malone Opens Up About Fatherhood and His 'Hilarious' Young Daughter: 'The Most Beautiful Creature'

Yahoo

time3 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Post Malone Opens Up About Fatherhood and His 'Hilarious' Young Daughter: 'The Most Beautiful Creature'

Post Malone might be one of the biggest names in music right now—but above all else, he loves being a dad. The superstar—whose real name is Austin Richard Post—has kept a busy schedule as he shoots a campaign for Kim Kardashian's SKIMS brand and performs as part of his Post Malone Presents: The BIG A-- Stadium Tour. However, none of this has stopped him from making time for his three-year-old daughter. Malone, 30, recently gave rare details about life as a dad. In an August interview with GQ, the singer said he takes fatherhood "a day at a time." "I think it's important that way. We're learning every day. I don't know what the h--l I'm doing, and neither does she. She's just figuring it out," he continued. The "I Had Some Help" singer, who now lives in rural Utah, then revealed the "really sweet" activity his daughter enjoys doing in his newly renovated home. "And there's this big hallway where she can ride her bike, and she has this little toy horse, and she rides up and down and just f--king giggles the whole f--king time," he told the outlet. "It is the most beautiful thing I've ever experienced in my life. I'm pretty pumped on that. It's pretty cool. It's bada-- to be a dad." The 18-time Grammy Award-nominee then opened up about his young daughter's sense of humor. Referring to his friend and fellow megastar Jelly Roll, Malone said to GQ, "Jelly was opening up [on tour] and she went out to watch Jelly and her grandparents asked her, 'Who's a better singer, Jelly Roll or your dad?' She goes, 'Jelly Roll.' And I know she's f--king with me. "She does that all the time. She goes, 'I love you.' I say, 'How much?' She goes, 'A little.' I go, 'Oh, you little s--t.' And then she calls me a little s--t, too. It's pretty funny." The "Sunflower" singer then called his daughter, "f--king hilarious." He continued, "It's unstoppable. She's just the most beautiful creature to ever have existed on this earth. And I can't believe that... Well, I don't deserve something like that, but it's pretty cool that's in my life." Despite his success in the entertainment industry, Malone made it clear that he prioritizes family. "I think that's all you really need is just family, at the end of the day… You know I've been on the road for ten years, and I've been doing this pretty vigorously. After ten years, it's time to just take it easy," he told GQ. "And this is where you want to be. You want to be here with a little three-year-old little squirt and just push her into the water and then she calls you a little s--t," he continued. Malone welcomed his daughter—whom he shares with ex-fiancée and South Korean singer Hee Sung "Jamie" Park—in May 2022. This story was originally reported by Parade on Aug 21, 2025, where it first appeared in the News section. Add Parade as a Preferred Source by clicking here.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store