According to published reports, DMX plead guilty in the Queens Criminal Court building in New York on Tuesday (October 25) to violating the terms of his conditional release.
The terms in violation required DMX to stay out of trouble with the law, but he managed to find himself back in court earlier this month for two separate driving-related incidents, but the case was adjourned so both sides could come to an agreement on Tuesday's plea deal.
During a June 2004 incident at New York's JKF International Airport, X allegedly posed as a federal agent and attempted to steal a car. He plead guilty to a reckless-endangerment charge on December 8 and was sentenced to a conditional discharge.
According to MTV News, X is scheduled to return to court on November 17 to be sentenced. His lawyer, Murray Richman, believes X will have to serve a 60-day sentence at New York's Rikers Island, but will likely serve only 40 days under the conditions of the plea agreement.
Although X will be headed to prison, Richman said he was in "good spirits."
"He took it. It's a somber situation. He felt the reality of it and he's moving on," said the attorney. "The man's a class act. He did what he had to do."
Source: BallerStatus.net
The terms in violation required DMX to stay out of trouble with the law, but he managed to find himself back in court earlier this month for two separate driving-related incidents, but the case was adjourned so both sides could come to an agreement on Tuesday's plea deal.
During a June 2004 incident at New York's JKF International Airport, X allegedly posed as a federal agent and attempted to steal a car. He plead guilty to a reckless-endangerment charge on December 8 and was sentenced to a conditional discharge.
According to MTV News, X is scheduled to return to court on November 17 to be sentenced. His lawyer, Murray Richman, believes X will have to serve a 60-day sentence at New York's Rikers Island, but will likely serve only 40 days under the conditions of the plea agreement.
Although X will be headed to prison, Richman said he was in "good spirits."
"He took it. It's a somber situation. He felt the reality of it and he's moving on," said the attorney. "The man's a class act. He did what he had to do."
Source: BallerStatus.net