A business meeting in between Gucci Mane and Pooh Sheisty in Dallas turned into an armed kidnapping. Federal prosecutors laid out the details on April 2 at a press conference led by Ryan Raybould, U.S. Attorney for the Northern District of Texas, and what emerged was a case that has rattled the hip-hop industry and raised uncomfortable questions about how record deals get made and unmade.
The victim was Gucci Mane.
How the meeting became a robbery
The incident took place in January, when Gucci Mane and two associates traveled to a Dallas studio for what they understood to be a business meeting. The gathering had been arranged by rapper Pooh Sheisty, whose legal name is Lontrell Williams Jr., to address his recording contract with Gucci’s 1017 Records label.
What followed bore no resemblance to a negotiation. Sheisty arrived with a group of eight others from Memphis. According to Raybould, the group executed an armed takeover of the meeting. Sheisty allegedly produced an AK-style pistol and forced one of the victims to sign a release from the recording contract under threat of violence. The group then robbed Gucci Mane and his associates at gunpoint, taking Rolex watches, cash, and jewelry before leaving.
Eight arrested. One still at large
Federal authorities identified and arrested multiple suspects in connection with the Gucci Mane robbery. Those charged include Sheisty, Big30 (Rodney Wright), Kedarius Waters, Damarian Gipson, Demarcus Glover, Kordae Johnson, and Darrion McDaniel. In a detail that drew widespread attention, Sheisty’s father, Lontrell Williams Sr., was also taken into custody. A ninth suspect, Terrance Rodgers, remains at large.
Investigators used cell phone records, rental car data, and surveillance footage to track down the suspects. Electronic monitoring data tied to Sheisty indicated he had been violating home detention orders around the time of the incident. Several suspects allegedly posted photos with stolen items on social media in the days that followed.
Sheisty had been released from federal prison in October 2025 after serving three years on gun charges. He and the other defendants now face potential life sentences if convicted, according to NBC News.
What the case reveals about the music industry
The federal charges arrive against a backdrop of ongoing tension between artists and label structures, particularly for younger musicians from low-income backgrounds who sign deals with limited legal guidance or negotiating power. The contract dispute at the center of this Gucci Mane robbery case points to a broader pattern that industry observers and advocates have flagged for years.
Sheisty’s path through the legal system has been well documented. His prior conviction, his time on home detention, and now a federal kidnapping case paint a picture of someone whose relationship with the industry and the law has never stabilized. The involvement of his father in the alleged robbery added a dimension that has been particularly difficult for many in the community to process.
The Gucci Mane robbery case is ongoing. No trial date has been set.

