A$AP Rocky dives into Rihanna’s arms as he was found not guilty

A$AP Rocky dives into Rihanna’s arms as he was found not guilty

/ 12:15 PM February 19, 2025

A$AP Rocky (center) waits for his verdict to be read during his trial Tuesday, Feb. 18, 2025, in Los Angeles. Image: Daniel Cole/Pool Photo via AP

A$AP Rocky (center) waits for his verdict to be read during his trial on Tuesday, Feb. 18, 2025, in Los Angeles. Image: Daniel Cole/Pool Photo via AP

LOS ANGELES — A$AP Rocky dove into the arms of Rihanna on Tuesday, February 18, as a clerk read the not guilty verdict at his trial on two felony counts of assault with a semiautomatic firearm.

The Los Angeles courtroom, full of fans of the hip-hop performer and his singing superstar partner, exploded into screaming glee as Rocky leaped from the defense table into the gallery, where Rihanna sat between his mother and sister. They embraced and sobbed.

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After a three-week trial, the jury deliberated for just three hours to reach the verdict that spared Rocky, whose legal name is Rakim Mayers, a prison sentence that could have run more than two decades.

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“Thank y’all for saving my life,” he told the jurors as they left.

Amid the chaos, it took the clerk a while to read the second not guilty verdict, though it was very unlikely the jury would split between the counts.

“Mr. Mayers, you’re excused,” Judge Mark Arnold said.

On the eve of trial, Rocky turned down a prosecution offer of just six months in jail, along with probation and other conditions, if he would plead guilty to one count.

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Insisting on his innocence, Rocky decided to gamble that a jury would feel the same. It paid off. The jurors felt at least that there was reasonable doubt of his guilt.

Rihanna hugged the defense lawyers, as did Rocky. She attended the trial sporadically and brought the couple’s two sons — 2-year-old RZA Athelston Mayers and 1-year-old Riot Rose Mayers — for some of the closing arguments.

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Rihanna arrives at court for the trial of A$AP Rocky on Tuesday, Feb. 18, 2025, in Los Angeles. Image: AP Photo/Damian Dovarganes

Rihanna arrives at court for the trial of A$AP Rocky on Tuesday, Feb. 18, 2025, in Los Angeles. Image: AP Photo/Damian Dovarganes

The couple had to fight through a crush of photographers, reporters, YouTubers, and fans to get into a waiting SUV outside the courthouse after the verdict.

“This whole experience has been crazy for the past 4 years,’ Rocky said amid the mob scene. ”I’m thankful and it’s blessed to be here right now to be a free man talking to y’all.”

District Attorney Nathan Hochman said he respected the jury’s decision.

“Our office remains committed to seeking accountability for those who break the law, no matter their status or influence,” Hochman said in a statement. “Fame does not place anyone above the law, and we will not waver in our pursuit of justice for victims and the community.”

The verdict came at the height of Rocky’s fame, if not the pinnacle of his music career. The three-time Grammy nominee, fashion mogul, and actor has a banner year in the works, and can now look to it without the threat of prison hanging over him. He is scheduled to headline the Rolling Loud music festival in March; he is one of the celebrity co-chairs of fashion’s biggest night, the Met Gala, in May; and he stars with Denzel Washington in director Spike Lee’s film “Highest 2 Lowest,” set for release in early summer.

Prosecutors and their witnesses said that he was beefing with a former friend, A$AP Relli, with whom he had been in a crew who called themselves the A$AP Mob since high school. They said the two men met up in Hollywood on Nov. 6, 2021, and after a scuffle, Rocky pulled the gun and fired twice at Relli, who said one of the shots grazed his knuckle but was not seriously hurt.

Rocky’s lawyer Joe Tacopina said in his closing argument that Relli is “an angry pathological liar” who “committed perjury again and again and again and again.”

Rocky’s lawyers and witnesses they called said Rocky had shot a prop gun that only fires blanks, which he had been carrying for security since taking it from a music video set months earlier. They said he fired it as a warning because Relli was attacking another member of their crew.

The jurors were also instructed that if they found that Rocky reasonably believed that he or one of the two friends with him that night were in imminent danger of injury and that he used reasonable force, they could find the defendant not guilty.

The jurors were escorted from the courthouse and all left promptly without speaking to reporters. It wasn’t clear whether they reached the verdict because they believed he was in fact carrying a prop gun or that he acted in self-defense. They did not have to agree on their reasoning or explain it outside of the jury room. They just had to reach the same conclusion.

A$AP Rocky's accuser set to testify about alleged shooting in the biggest moment at rapper's trial By ANDREW DALTON AP Entertainment Writer A former friend of A$AP Rocky is set to testify Wednesday about the moment the hip-hop star allegedly fired a gun at him on a Hollywood street in 2021. The trial's key witness, known by the name A$AP Relli, will provide what's likely to be the trial's most important piece of testimony when he gets back on the stand. Rocky, whose legal name is Rakim Mayers, has pleaded not guilty two felony counts of assault with a semiautomatic firearm. His lawyer says the shots he fired were blanks from a starter pistol that he carried as a prop. On Tuesday, Relli, born Terell Ephron, described the first part of the confrontation, and was on the verge of describing the alleged shooting itself when court ended for the day. He said he and Rocky, members of A$AP, a crew of creators at a New York high school, had been close but their relationship eroded after fame came for Rocky. He said their relationship had been strained for years and getting worse in the previous days, but he was still "furious" when Rocky pulled a gun on him after a scuffle that began the moment the two met up near the W Hotel. "I told him to use it. Because mentally I couldn't believe it," Relli testified, with his old friend staring at him intently from the defense table. "I physically could not believe there was a gun in my face. That was the breaking point for me." He said he had expected to argue but reconcile with his old friend, and the last thing he wanted to do was get into a fight that could ruin the modest music management business he had built. "He's famous," Relli said. "I'm nobody." The testimony will come on an abbreviated court day. The trial will only be in session for two hours in the morning because of a prosecutor's previous commitment. Relli can expect to face fierce cross-examination from the defense that could begin Wednesday. Raised in Harlem, Rocky's rap songs became a phenomenon on the streets of New York in 2011. He had his mainstream breakthrough when his first studio album went to No. 1 on the Billboard 200 in 2013. The second one, in 2015, did the same. He's set to have his biggest career year as a multi-media star. This Sunday, he's nominated for a Grammy Award for best music video for his song "Tailor Swif," at the ceremony at Crypto.com Arena just two miles from the Los Angeles courthouse where his trial's being held. He's also set to headline the Rolling Loud Music Festival, to star opposite Denzel Washington in a film directed by Spike Lee, and to co-chair the Met Gala in May. But the prospect of a conviction and the possibility of a maximum of 24 years in prison casts a shadow over all of it. Rocky is the longtime partner of Rihanna, with whom he has two toddler sons. She has yet to appear at his trial.

Rakim Mayers, aka A$AP Rocky, and his attorney Joe Tacopina listen to opening remarks by the prosecuting attorney in Mayers’ trial at the Clara Shortridge Foltz Criminal Justice Center in downtown Los Angeles, Friday, Jan. 24, 2025. (Genaro Molina/Los Angeles Times via AP, Pool)

“They saw through this mirage of a case,” Tacopina said. “He turned down a plea for almost no jail time because he was innocent.”

In his closing argument, Deputy District Attorney John Lewin urged the jurors not to be influenced by the celebrity or family aspects of the case and suggested Rihanna bringing the kids to closing arguments was an attempt to manipulate the jury.

“You are not allowed to consider how this might affect Rihanna and his kids,” the prosecutor said. “We are all responsible for our own actions in the world.”

After the verdict, Tacopina said outside the courthouse “Rocky did not want her here, I will tell you that.”

He said Rocky “wanted to shield her from this. Wild horses couldn’t keep her away.”

Rocky was more than 30 minutes late for the reading of the verdict and looked shaken and tense as he waited for it.

“There was a moment when before we heard the words from the clerk, he didn’t know if he was going to be spending the next two decades in jail or going home,” Tacopina said.

Then came the explosion of the emotion, and the leap into the crowd.

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“I didn’t know how athletic he was,” Tacopina said. “That was raw emotion, you guys got to see that. Even for us, it was insane.”

TAGS: ASAP Rocky, Rihanna

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