they got raided for mix cds. an undercover cop bought a G-Unit mix, then a few minutes later a bunch of detectives rolled in and arrested all the employees who were behind the counter when the sale happened and 2 managers and took them to jail overnight. the cops confiscated all the mix cds. i'm guessing some djs will get cease and desist letters from the RIAA but that is just speculation.
an undercover cop bought a G-Unit mix, then a few minutes later a bunch of detectives rolled in and arrested all the employees who were behind the counter when the sale happened and 2 managers and took them to jail overnight. the cops confiscated all the mix cds.
Gives new meaning to the lines
I'm in the town where the young boys is clappin' You running around town with the Lieutenant and Captain
and
Oh yeah, you got sixty-five niggaz on your team And they're not from Southside Jamaica, Queens They're the boys in blue, and I'm just speaking the truth
they got raided for mix cds. an undercover cop bought a G-Unit mix, then a few minutes later a bunch of detectives rolled in and arrested all the employees who were behind the counter when the sale happened and 2 managers and took them to jail overnight. the cops confiscated all the mix cds. i'm guessing some djs will get cease and desist letters from the RIAA but that is just speculation.
But, see, that's just stupidity on behalf of the RIAA. Do you know how many city kids listen to mixtapes? This is a valid part of the industry hype machine and, in my book, leads to sales.
My old company had beef with the company Macrovision because we sold DVD players which we disabled the Macrovision on so you could make copies of your DVDs. They raided our office, took our DVD players, we had to waste like $25K on lawyers and the FBI ended up dropping the charges. It was some stupid bullshit.
Comments
Gives new meaning to the lines
I'm in the town where the young boys is clappin'
You running around town with the Lieutenant and Captain
and
Oh yeah, you got sixty-five niggaz on your team
And they're not from Southside Jamaica, Queens
They're the boys in blue, and I'm just speaking the truth
But, see, that's just stupidity on behalf of the RIAA. Do you know how many city kids listen to mixtapes? This is a valid part of the industry hype machine and, in my book, leads to sales.