Friday, January 12, 2024 – Chicago rapper G Herbo was sentenced Thursday, Jan. 11, in Massachusetts to three years probation on federal wire fraud charges in a conspiracy to use stolen identities to fund private jets, a Jamaican villa, “designer puppies,” and other exotic services and lied about it to authorities.
G Herbo, whose real name is Herbert Wright III, was ordered
to pay restitution and forfeiture, as well as a $5,500 fine.
The sentence marks a win for his defense team, who had asked
for a probationary period after the music artist pleaded guilty in the case.
The prosecution requested a sentence of one year and one day in prison, along
with 36 months of supervised release.
The sentencing comes more than three years after it was
reported that Wright had been indicted on conspiracy to commit wire fraud and
aggravated identity theft charges.
The 28-year-old was again indicted in 2021 for lying about
the scheme to federal agents.
Wright eventually admitted in his plea to over a million
dollars of fraudulent purchases for goods and services — including private
chefs, car rentals and the puppies. As part of the plea, prosecutors dismissed
two counts of identity theft.
Five others were charged as alleged co-conspirators,
including his promoter and manager Antonio “T-Glo” Strong. Wright’s main
involvement, the prosecution said, was paying Strong to arrange flights and
other accommodations that he knew were bought through stolen credit card
information.
Strong has pleaded not guilty. The defense contended that
Wright’s contact with him was minimal.
In their sentencing memo, the defense noted that Wright
“fully accepts responsibility” in the case. The memo painted his troubled
childhood in a Chicago neighborhood plagued by gang violence and dubbed by
police as “Terror Town.”
Along with his childhood, the defense stressed Wright’s
commitment to his community and family to justify a lesser sentence.
The father of three has established a nonprofit, Swervin’
Through Stress, to provide mental health resources to young people of color in
Chicago. Wright is also willing to undergo substance abuse treatment, the
defense said.
Initially, Wright had denied the charges against him — even
mocking the investigation in a song he released in 2020. “Ask about me, I ain’t
never been a fraud,” he rapped.
Wright also was hit with gun charges after he and three
others were stopped by Chicago police, who allegedly found four firearms in the
vehicle.
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