Some artists process pain in therapy. Gucci Mane processes it in the studio. Just days after a federal judge ruled that his former signee Pooh Shiesty must remain in custody pending trial, Gucci dropped a new track that makes his feelings about the situation abundantly clear. The song, titled Crash Dummy and produced by longtime collaborator Zaytoven, arrived on April 10 and wasted no time addressing what many in the hip-hop world had been watching closely for months.
The release follows a January incident in which Gucci was allegedly lured to what he believed was a routine business meeting, only to find himself in the middle of a robbery and kidnapping. Pooh Shiesty, one of the flagship artists on Gucci’s 1017 Records label, is among those charged in connection with the alleged attack.
What the song says without saying it
Gucci does not lean on vague metaphors or coded language in Crash Dummy. The track moves through the events of that night with a directness that sounds less like rap beef and more like a firsthand account. He describes walking into a room and sensing something was wrong, the tension in the air before things turned dangerous, and the particular sting of being betrayed by someone he had brought into his orbit and supported professionally.
The title itself functions as a verdict. Calling someone a crash dummy is dismissive in the sharpest possible way, suggesting recklessness without intelligence, someone who absorbs the damage of a bad plan they were foolish enough to follow. The fact that Gucci ties that label to a person still legally bound to his record label adds another layer of irony that the song does not let the listener miss.
He also appears to make reference to Big30, another artist connected to the alleged incident and one of eight individuals facing serious federal charges alongside Pooh.
A legal situation with heavy consequences
The stakes in this case are not small. Pooh Shiesty and eight co-defendants, a group that reportedly includes his own father and Big30, face charges tied to the alleged Dallas kidnapping and armed robbery. Prosecutors contend that the group used the promise of a business meeting as bait, drawing victims to a studio before the alleged crime took place.
A federal judge in Dallas found probable cause in the case this week and ordered Pooh to remain detained while proceedings continue. An earlier attempt to secure a bond of $100,000 was blocked almost immediately after it was granted. The charges carry the possibility of life in prison.
What makes the situation even more layered is that Pooh was already operating under significant legal restrictions at the time of the January incident. He had been serving home confinement under an ankle monitor connected to a 2022 federal conviction for conspiracy and drug trafficking when the alleged robbery took place.
What this means for 1017 Records
The fallout extends beyond the personal. Gucci built 1017 Records into one of the most recognizable independent labels in hip-hop, and Pooh Shiesty was among its most promising investments. The legal cloud now hanging over that relationship puts the label in an uncomfortable position, one that Crash Dummy seems to acknowledge without fully resolving.
Gucci has never been one to shy away from conflict, whether on the street or on record. But this one cuts closer than most. It involves trust, business, and a betrayal that allegedly happened in real time. The song is his answer, and for now, it is doing most of the talking.

