Gangster rapper turned snitch Tekashi 6ix9ine will have to have to enroll in a mental health program after he’s released from prison, a report said Friday.
The “Kooda” rapper will also have to continue to cooperate with federal investigators as he reports to the outpatient program as part of his plea deal, TMZ reported, citing court documents.
Tekashi was sentenced to two years in federal lockup earlier this week after serving as the government’s all-star witness in cases against members of the Nine Trey Gangsta Bloods, a violent Brooklyn set.
The rapper, born Daniel Hernandez, faced more than three decades following his guilty plea on racketeering and other charges stemming from his time running with Nine Trey.
Before his sentencing, prosecutors urged the judge to go easy on the rapper, writing in a sentencing recommendation that his cooperation was “extraordinary” in charging and securing convictions against several members of a violent Brooklyn Bloods set.
“Hernandez’s cooperation was extraordinary,” the prosecutors wrote in the letter.
“He is a famous rap artist and was a high-profile member of a violent gang. In the face of threats made against him and his family, Hernandez decided to cooperate against his co-defendants and testify publicly in a trial that was widely publicized.”
Tekashi was given credit for time served and may be out of prison in late 2020.
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