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DJ Akademiks Sends Prayers to NBA YoungBoy as He's 'Unfairly' Treated by Feds
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The Internet personality's post arrived after YoungBoy made a court appearance on May 9, where Judge Spencer D. Walsh in a Cache County, Utah, set a $100,000 bond for him.

AceShowbiz - DJ Akademiks has shown support to NBA YoungBoy a.k.a. YoungBoy Never Broke Again amid his legal trouble. Claiming that the Baton Rouge native has been "unfairly" treated by feds, the blogger sent him prayers via social media.

On Saturday, May 25, the 33-year-old Internet personality wrote on X, formerly Twitter, "My prayers are with NBA Youngboy." He added, "I went to grave digger mountain .. I sat with him talked with him .. argued with him."

"This an artist and a man who been u unfairly isolated tortured and made out as an evil person he isn't that," the podcaster continued. "How Yalll got a case against him and he gotta live in a room for YEARS w/o resolution. He already beat 1 federal case [in July 2022]."

DJ Akademiks' post arrived after YoungBoy made a court appearance on May 9. In photos surfacing online, the emcee could be seen smiling as he wore an orange inmate jumpsuit donning a mustache.

On that day, Judge Spencer D. Walsh in a Cache County, Utah, set a $100,000 bond for YB. The rapper was arrested April 16 after a raid of his Utah home, dubbed Grave Digger Mountain, where he was on house arrest while awaiting trial on federal weapons charges.

Officials alleged that he and his crew orchestrated a large-scale prescription drug fraud scheme, using phony prescriptions to obtain drugs like promethazine and codeine. He faces 63 felonies and misdemeanors related to the fraudulent prescription operation, including identity fraud, obtaining a prescription under false pretenses, forgery, possession of a dangerous weapon by a restricted person, engaging in a pattern of unlawful activity, and possession of a controlled substance.

The arrest stems from an investigation by Cache County, Utah, authorities, who received a tip from a suspicious pharmacist. Investigators believed YoungBoy and others contacted pharmacies using real doctors' names and DEA numbers to call in prescriptions, which were then filled.

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