Lil Kim Jailed

THE KOD

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Victory Lane
Jailed Lil' Kim Casts Herself As Victim
By NEKESA MUMBI MOODY
AP Music Writer

NEW YORK ?
Lil' Kim rose to fame as a tough, raunchy gangsta girl, the Queen Bee of female rappers with rhymes that cast her as a powerful figure ? a female Don in the male-dominated world of rap.

Now, as she prepares to release her latest album Tuesday while behind bars, the diminutive diva has added a new element to her persona ? victim. In Kim's eyes, she's been preyed on by an overzealous government trying to punish hip-hop and jealous former friends who ratted her out in the courtroom.

"There's no reason why I should be going to jail. There's no reason why. There's no reason. I didn't shoot anyone, I didn't do anything wrong the way they would say," she told The Associated Press in her waning days of freedom. "It's not as bad as it could have been, but do I think it was fair? No."

Kim reported to a federal detention center in Philadelphia on Monday to serve 366 days for lying to a grand jury investigating a 2001 shootout involving members of her entourage and a clique loyal to her archenemy, rapper Foxy Brown.

On her new album, ironically titled "The Naked Truth," Kim casts herself as a scapegoat of a government bent on cracking down on gangsta rap through investigations and prosecutions. In recent years, the "government against hip-hop" theme has become a rap mantra, as reports of police surveillance of rappers have surfaced and prominent rap figures have gone to jail or been indicted for various crimes.

"Unfortunately, me as a woman, I had to take one for the team, and when I say for the team I say hip-hop, because I was the poster child for the federal government, for their investigations," she said, curled up on a couch in a posh Manhattan hotel suite, enjoying one of the last comforts of celebrity life before heading to prison.

Lil' Kim, born Kimberly Jones, rose to fame more than a decade ago as a member of Junior M.A.F.I.A, an oversexed female sidekick in the rap clique created by her lover and mentor, the Notorious B.I.G. The 4-foot-11 rapper stood out with her flamboyant, Mae West-like personality and B.I.G.-written rhymes.

After Biggie's death, Kim continued to shine, serving up platinum albums while morphing into a glamorous, outrageously clad style icon, through the miracles of high fashion and extensive plastic surgery.

But things fell apart for Kim after she was indicted for perjury for refusing to acknowledge the obvious presence of two friends at a shootout outside New York's top rap radio station.

She was convicted in March. Though several high-profile rappers have been sent to prison after attaining fame, Kim is the first prominent female to do time ? a fact not lost on her.

"There were so many more criminal cases in the industry that aren't paid attention to, but yet I'm on trial for allegedly lying to the government ... I'm going to jail for a year. Does that makes sense to you? You've got people who get convicted for gun charges that don't do a day," she said bitterly.

It's a rare flash of anger from a woman who offers no tears, confessionals or regrets about her situation. During her trial, she wore a stone face to the courtroom, and displayed no emotion before cameras tracking her every move.

"I think that whole situation was emotional. But that's who I am. I handle it in my own way in my personal time," she said. "Basically how I handled that whole thing is I kept God first. That was the main thing that helped me get through the whole thing and helped me to be able to walk into the public with my head held up high."

Recording "The Naked Truth" was another way of handling the stress of her conviction.

"My record company (Atlantic Records) was like, 'We're going to give you a week," Kim recalled. "I was like, 'What? I want to go into the studio tomorrow.' That's my passion, and that was the one thing that popped right into my brain, like studio, I need to go. It was more a release, not much really a relief, but a release, definitely."

The album features collaborations with Snoop Dogg and The Game. She hopes it will showcase her versatility and prove her skills as a lyricist. She boasts that she writes all her own rhymes and beams when she mentions her latest single, "Lighters Up," which has drawn vocal comparisons to Lauryn Hill.

"The reason why I love that comparison is because she's so universal, she's so versatile, and that's what I've always been and I am and I've also tried to convey that. But for some reason people didn't understand it, but now they do."

Still, "The Naked Truth" is about more than artistic merit ? it's about settling the score with those she sees as her betrayers. Though none of her enemies ? Foxy Brown and her former Junior M.A.F.I.A. partners among them ? are mentioned by name, they are the subject of piercing jabs.

In the interview, Kim declined to discuss them, curtly dismissing Foxy Brown by saying: "Let's not mention her ... she's not on my level to me and I don't deal with that."

She also holds out for another reason: more details about her feuds will be revealed in an upcoming DVD which she promises will "explain what I went through, what really happened, and how deep it really is."

With good behavior, Kim could be free in nine months. While some have suggested that doing time might make her seem even more gangsta ? and therefore increase her record sales ? Kim reacts with disdain at the mere mention that prison might enhance her rep.

She says the bid will make her "a strong woman."

"That's what I am, and that's what it's going to make me ? even stronger. The bottom line is, whoever's tried to ruin me, my career and my life, they've done (messed) up now, because it's only going to make me stronger."
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Uh Lil Kim, there is a reason your going to jail for a year. You lied to a grand jury. Remember Martha Stewart. That is one thing in America that you are still not allowed to do and get away with it.

Another millionaire in jail. What a waste.

But dont worry she will come out more popular than ever. Get her own TV show, and make more money than ever before. Its the American way.
 

THE KOD

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Victory Lane
Report: Palmeiro fingers Tejada after positive test

Associated Press
Published on: 09/23/05
NEW YORK ?

Rafael Palmeiro
said a vitamin he received from Miguel Tejada might have caused the positive test for steroid use that led to the first baseman's suspension, an assertion his Baltimore Orioles teammate dismissed as implausible.

Palmeiro said he received vitamin B-12 from Tejada, a person familiar with Palmeiro's unsuccessful grievance hearing to overturn the suspension said Thursday on condition of anonymity because the proceedings were secret.

"Right now I'm in shock," Tejada, a former American League MVP, said after Baltimore lost to the New York Yankees on Thursday night. "I've never given anybody steroids before. I've been checked out three times already, and I'm clean. I've been clean all my life."

Tejada said he gave Palmeiro the B-12 injection "a long time ago."

"It doesn't bother me because I'm not guilty. I've done nothing wrong. I just gave him B-12, and B-12 is legal," Tejada said. "You don't get caught for B-12."

Vitamin B-12 helps maintain healthy nerve cells and red blood cells, and is commonly found in foods such as fish, meat, poultry and dairy products.

Palmeiro has not publicly discussed details of the testimony he gave during a grievance filed by the players' association to overturn his 10-day suspension, which followed a positive test for stanozolol.

His lawyers, Mayer, Brown, Rowe and Maw LLP, issued a statement Thursday night saying they "are disturbed about the misleading reports being leaked by unnamed sources who claim knowledge of the investigation."

"Rafael Palmeiro has never implicated any player in the intentional use or distribution of steroids, or any other illegal substance, in any interview or testimony," the statement said.

According to the person familiar with the investigation, Palmeiro listed the B-12 as a possible reason for the positive test but did not make any definitive accusation.

Before the game, Orioles interim manager Sam Perlozzo said that if the first baseman had named a teammate in trying to explain his steroid test, it probably would be best that Palmeiro not return to the team this year.

"If in fact that was true, then it probably would not be a good idea" for Palmeiro to return, Perlozzo said. "It's all speculation as far as I know."

Congressional investigators have been interviewing the Orioles following Palmeiro's 10-day suspension, which began Aug. 1. Palmeiro went 2-for-26 with one RBI after his return, and was sent home by Baltimore on Sept. 5 for rehabilitation on his right knee and left ankle.

"I know that he still would like to come back," Perlozzo said. "He doesn't want to be a distraction and all that. I pretty much told him that as far as I was concerned, it was an organizational decision."

Orioles executive vice president Jim Beattie said no decision would be made until Friday at the earliest.

"We're talking to Raffy right now about that," Beattie said in a telephone interview, saying he didn't want to "comment on hearsay."

Perlozzo didn't discuss with Palmeiro what he may or may not have told the panel. "I did not ask him," he said. "I didn't think that was my job."

Palmeiro's situation is complicated, so Perlozzo wanted the front office to make the decision.

"A lot of things factor in," he said. "Is he going to play or is he not going to play? How much is he going to play? And is it worthwhile to take that chance?"

Arn Tellem, Palmeiro's agent, did not return a telephone call seeking comment. House Government Reform Committee spokesman Dave Marin declined comment.

Congressional investigators looking into whether Rafael Palmeiro lied under oath when he appeared before the House Government Reform Committee in March and testified that he "never used steroids. Period."

Baseball has not said when the positive test occurred.

Palmeiro, who turns 41 on Saturday, is batting .266 with 18 homers and 60 RBIs. He got his 3,000th hit on July 15, joining Hank Aaron, Willie Mays and Eddie Murray as the only players with 3,000 hits and 500 homers. Palmeiro's 569 homers rank him ninth on the career list.
......................................................................................

This guy should be jailed right next to Lil Kim for lieing to Congress and in front of the American people.

I emphatically state that I do not and have never taken any steroid ever ever ever..... Do you think I would sit up here with Mark McGuire and lie about it.

Geezz Mark nice biceps. And alot of home runs too.

Where have all the heros gone.
 

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