After months of delays and a legal battle that stretched across years, Pras Michel walked through the doors of the Federal Correctional Institution in Safford, Arizona on Thursday to begin serving a 14-year sentence. The moment marked a painful new chapter for the rapper best known as one third of the Fugees, the iconic hip-hop group whose influence on 1990s music is still felt today.
His team made clear almost immediately that surrendering was not the same as giving up. A spokesperson confirmed that an appeal is actively in motion and that his legal team believes his rights were violated during the course of the trial. The road ahead in court may be long, but those in his corner say this chapter is not his last.
A conviction years in the making
The case against Pras had been building since 2019, when federal prosecutors accused him of a sweeping financial conspiracy. At the center of the allegations was a scheme involving fugitive Malaysian businessman Jho Low, who was accused of funneling massive sums of money through various channels. Pras was alleged to have helped direct funds to a major presidential campaign through straw donors, worked to obstruct an investigation into Low’s financial activities and pushed for the extradition of a Chinese dissident on behalf of foreign interests.
In April 2023 a federal jury found him guilty on 10 counts, including money laundering and illegal lobbying. The trial drew considerable attention in part because of who was called to testify. Low had previously financed The Wolf of Wall Street, which brought the actor who starred in that film into the courtroom as a witness, adding a layer of Hollywood drama to an already extraordinary proceeding.
An AI controversy and a denied appeal
After his conviction, Pras did not go quietly. He filed a motion for a new trial on the grounds that his former attorney had used an artificial intelligence tool to draft the closing argument, producing a statement his team described as deeply flawed and damaging to his defense. It was a novel and striking claim, one that raised broader questions about the role of emerging technology in high-stakes legal proceedings.
A judge ultimately denied the request and in October 2025 Pras was formally sentenced to 14 years in federal prison. He had originally been ordered to report in January, but the date was pushed back twice, giving him additional time before he was required to surrender.
Final weeks spent with family and old friends
In the weeks before he turned himself in, Pras focused on the people closest to him. He spent time with family and made his way to Los Angeles in early April to watch his former bandmate Lauryn Hill perform alongside Kanye West. The appearance was notable given that Pras had only weeks earlier dropped a lawsuit he had filed against Hill related to a canceled reunion tour, suggesting at least a degree of reconciliation between the two.
The Fugees, which also included Wyclef Jean, formed in 1990 and took their name from the word refugees, a tribute to the Haitian heritage shared by Michel and Jean. Their second album The Score, released in 1996, sold an estimated 22 million copies worldwide and produced enduring classics that remain part of the cultural landscape nearly three decades later.
The group disbanded in 1998 but their legacy has never faded. As Pras now begins the hardest stretch of his life, his legal team is already preparing the arguments they hope will eventually bring him home.

