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Malcom E.K.K.S

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Came across this article, its old but had me laughing my lungs out...


A 14-year-old rapper who was arrested and then suspended for two years by The Riverside Beaver County School District in Pennsylvania for posting his battle raps on the internet has been awarded a $90,000 settlement over his expulsion from school.

Anthony “emceeaccident” Latour, member of an upcoming rap group Just Business, was handcuffed and arrested in middle school in April of 2005, after another student rapper’s mother saw lyrics the two were posting back and forth on the internet.

Latour was charged with terroristic threats over the lyrics to the rap songs.

The same day Latour was arrested, seven police officers with a K-9 dog searched his parents home and confiscated $10,000 worth of recording equipment Latour’s parents had purchased for him.

The rapper spent a week in a juvenile detention facility over the incident and was eventually expelled for two years because of the violent lyrics that allegedly threatened other students.

“I live in a small town and they really don’t understand rap music,” Latour told AllHipHop.com. “I didn’t really know what was happening, it blindsided me.”

The Pittsburgh chapter of the American Civil Liberties Union filed a federal lawsuit on behalf of Latour in August of 2005, claiming the school had violated his First Amendment rights.

One of the songs that helped get Latour expelled was titled “Murder He Wrote,” which lawyers for the ACLU deemed “a third party narrative song about the incident at columbine [high school in Colorado] reflecting Anthony’s attempt to imagine what could have been going on in the heads of the students who perpetuated the tragedy.”

Latour, who said he considers Eminem, Necro and D-Block as his main influences, said he hails from a small town here people don’t understand Hip-Hop music.

At a May expulsion hearing, the student Latour was battling admitted he was never threatened and that the two never intended to harm each other.

In August, attorneys from the ACLU argued that the rapper was battling and that his lyrics didn’t threaten anyone specifically.

"Anthony's rap music -- by which he flexes his lyrical muscles -- is not a true threat, but is art enjoying full First Amendment protection,” argued Kim Watterson, a lawyer based in Pittsburgh with the international law firm Reed Smith, which handled the case on a pro bono basis.

Watterson also called noted Hip-Hop author Bikari Kitwana to testify on behalf of Latour. Kitwana explained that battle rap can “get pretty nasty in terms of the language," but was still simply “a verbal challenge.”

On Monday (Nov. 23), Chief U.S. District Judge Donetta W. Ambrose ruled the songs were protected by the First Amendment and that they were posted from his home, not school.

The Riverside Beaver County School District must now pay Latour and his family $90,000.

The school district has also agreed to write a letter acknowledging that the 14-year-old did not threaten “the school or the students by way of his songs."

Latour said he plans to use the majority of his settlement money to upgrade his home recording studio.


'Battle Rap' Brings Arrest at School

In April, Latour was removed from cla** at Riverside Middle School by North Sewickley Township police and charged with making terroristic threats and hara**ment because he named another student in a rap called "Ma**acre."

"Anthony and this student engaged in a battle of verbal content," said Kim Watterson, an attorney a**igned to represent Latour. "It was a battle rap — send me your discs, send me your songs, see if you can rhyme better than I can."

One of Latour's songs, cited by The a**ociated Press, went: "You're a rook, I'm the king, and I'm cookin' ya quick / I'm lookin' to stab, don't even look for the strap."

Another song contained the lyrics: "So watch what you say about me, I'm everywhere son / And the word of mouth is that I'm carrying guns / Now that I'm comin' for you — what the [expletive] you gonna do / I come double with the pump tons of slugs that will punish you."

Walczak admitted the lyrics are violent, but told reporters they're meant to be metaphorical.

Latour, who goes by the name "emceeaccident," has been composing rap songs for several years, a hobby supported by his parents — though his father isn't a fan of the style.

"My grandparents didn't like Elvis, and my parents didn't like Pink Floyd,'' Anthony's father, John Latour, told the Pittsburgh Tribune-Review. "Rap isn't my taste in music, [but] Anthony's mother and I support his pa**ion for it.''



Peep his soundclick page.....

http://www.soundclick.com/emceeaccident

 8O  8O



briCK

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What is wrong with these people?
Trapped In The 90ies Nigga.


afterbirth

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they is living in a police state...  :lol:
we can easily forgive a child who is afraid of the dark. The real tragedy of life is when men are afraid of the light
--Plato