Keir Monteith KC has been working in the criminal courts since the last century; he defends in high profile cases, some of which are of constitutional significance and also sits as a part time Crown Court judge. In this Middle Eight, he argues that, in recent years, the state has increased its use of rap and drill to prosecute Black defendants, that music is being used to plug gaping holes in cases with no forensic evidence, and that this regressive and racist practice has to stop.
‘You know what, those songs about violence and drugs … they caught everyone's attention’. Turn up the volume and listen to the documentary Terms and Conditions.Footnote 1 A gateway video to understanding drill – 10 times better than any law report or middle aged KC trying to explain what ‘Grind half of the figures. O tight all my drillers’ really means.
Terms and Conditions provides an insight into what the drill scene is all about: its history and culture and why the lyrics are shocking, described by the broadsheets as nihilistic, provocative and violent; why there is talk about gangs and that when the first person is used it doesn't follow that the rapper or indeed anyone in the background has killed anyone; possessed a firearm; is a member of a criminal gang or has committed any crime. At the documentary premiere Riki Bleau, founder and co-president of Since ’93 Records, made the point: ‘For 25 years Jay-Z has been rapping about selling drugs but that doesn't mean he's out there right now selling drugs’. However, for the last 25 years the police, prosecution and Courts have turned rap lyrics on their head and have proceeded on a literal interpretation of the words spoken. Their approach has reinforced the stereotyped view that what Black and Brown rappers speak about equates to personal diary entries and confessions of criminal activity they have been involved in.
Summary
In this article I suggest that the establishment approach has created a racist structure within the justice system. After all it is unarguable that the introduction of rap and drill lyrics into the courtroom only affects Black and Brown defendants. It is a fact that this prosecution tactic has allowed prejudicial and highly inflammatory material to be presented to the jury as evidence of what ‘a criminal looks like’, confessions of violence and gang membership. The time has come to ban these fictional lyrics and to concentrate on investigating and prosecuting cases on the basis of forensics, cctv, cell site and witness testimony.
Rap is the most popular form of poetry in the world and has become an important and integral part of many people's lives. In the US R'n’B/hip-hop is the most dominant music genre in the Billboard charts.Footnote 2 Here in the UK rap is not far behind. The reach of drill has extended to philosophical consideration of Plato's cave by reference to the lyrics of drill artists Skengdo x AM.Footnote 3 Drill has been adopted by artists all over the world from ONEFOUR in Australia to UK drill artists guesting on Drake tracks in North America. Back in the UK, during May 2021, Tion Wayne and Russ Millions achieved drill's first number one with their track ‘Body’.Footnote 4
The big brands love rappers and love rap music. Snoop Dogg, aka Calvin Cordozar Broadus Jr, landed a multi-million dollar deal to appear in the ‘Did Somebody Say Just Eat’ adverts, with 17 million views and counting. Travis Scott allegedly made $20 million for his McDonalds collaboration. Jay-Z has promoted Reebok, Budweiser, Puma and Nokia. Drake and Vince Staples worked with Sprite and Lil Yachty teamed up with Nautica. The list goes on. The financial figures are eye watering. In 2020 Kanye West was said to be the highest paid rapper with an estimated income of $170 million.Footnote 5 The global rap market is worth an estimated $20 billion a year. In the UK it's a similar story with Skepta creating a new trainer with Nike, Stormzy ‘joining’ Manchester United to feature in an Adidas commercial and rapper Little Simz heading up a stellar line up of British celebrities to garner JD Sports 20 million views for its hugely successful Christmas advert.
The financial success is mirrored by the number of gongs and prizes that rappers have won over the years. Multi Grammy winning American rapper, Kendrick Lamar, was awarded the Pulitzer Prize for music. Dave's debut album Psychodrama won the Mercury Prize and Album of the Year at the 2020 Brit Awards. Skepta's album Konnichiwa won the Mercury Prize. In 2018, he was nominated for three Brit Awards and appeared on Debrett's 2017 list of the most influential people in the UK. Stormzy won ‘Best Grime Act’ at the 2014 and 2015 MOBO Awards. His debut album, Gang Signs & Prayer (2017), was the first grime album to reach number one on the UK Albums Chart and won British Album of the Year at the 2018 Brit Awards, the year in which he also won the Ivor Novello Album award. In 2019 he was the headline act on the Pyramid stage at Glastonbury. Little Simz was shortlisted for the Mercury Prize and won the awards for Best Album at both the Ivor Novello Awards and the NME Awards. Her fourth album won the 2022 Brit Award for Best New Artist.
I am told that drill like grime and rap resonates with the youth of today. It is certainly produced by creative and talented entertainers, provides an artistic outlet for the next generation and for some it is an escape route out of poverty. Every day amateur rappers upload and circulate their videos to social media platforms all over the world, not realising that anything they do say may be taken down and used in evidence against them.
Knowledge of rap and drill, including its politics and culture, is a prerequisite to properly understanding that the state's deployment of this music as evidence of gang affiliation is racist. A documentary exposé of the American experience is contained in ‘The Racist Roots of Rap on Trial’ which examines how the US government has used rap lyrics to prosecute children and young Black men from the 1990s onwards. Presenter Sidney Carmichael eloquently sums up the situation: ‘It's weak evidence and lazy prosecution and, you know what, it's only happening in hip hop’. Here in the UK Drillminister was commissioned by Channel 4 to use quotes from MPs to create a track entitled ‘Political Drillin’. Within 2 minutes the rapper lays bare the hypocrisy of the establishment. Lyrics courtesy of Right Honourable members include: ‘The moment is coming when the knife get heated, stuck in her front and twisted’; ‘She'll be dead soon’; ‘I will not rest until she's chopped up in bags in my freezer’; ‘The day that it becomes you are hurting us more than helping us, I won't knife you in the back – I'll knife you in the front’; ‘she's a dead woman walking’.Footnote 6
In America the rappers are standing up to the State with a campaign calling for an end of the use of rap lyrics as criminal evidence.Footnote 7 The ‘Decriminalizing Artistic Expression Act’Footnote 8 was signed into law by the California governor in September 2022. However, this legislation only requires a court to consider specified factors when balancing the probative value of rap lyrics against the substantial danger of undue prejudice. Meanwhile the New York and Federal bills provide more effective protection. They start with a presumption that evidence of a defendant's creative or artistic expression is inadmissible and require the prosecutor to prove, by clear and convincing evidence, that artistic material such as rap lyrics should go before the jury. In fact there is precedent for excluding rap from criminal trials with the Supreme Court of New Jersey quashing an attempted murder conviction and ruling that rap lyrics that featured in the trial should not have been read to the jury. The Court, in a 6–0, judgement, stated that such lyrics could not be used as evidence unless there was a ‘strong nexus’ to the crime charged.Footnote 9 It's time for UK lawyers and rappers to follow the American example and demand a change in the law.
In the UK the State's tactical use of rap and drill lyrics as prosecution evidence has become de rigueur and often props up weak gang narratives. The Crown Prosecution Service guidelines state ‘Gangs are increasingly using drill music and social media to promote gang culture, glamorise the gang lifestyle and the use of weapons’.Footnote 10 The facts and figures for this bold assertion are not provided and there is no reference to the fact that Drill is a mainstream musical genre. Police officers go on courses to become ‘experts’ to inform juries what the rapper ‘really’ means, what can be inferred from hand gestures and colours that might be displayed. The guidelines are under review; the use of police officers as experts has been described as ‘no more than the prosecution calling itself to give evidence’Footnote 11 and there have been many calls for greater scrutiny of this so called expert testimony but the practice continues unabated.
Some rappers have even gone so far as placing ‘warnings’ in their songs that remind the listener that ‘It might sound real, but it's fictional’,Footnote 12 but that hasn't stopped the State from adducing the evidence. For white musicians there is no need for such cautionary labelling as there is no suggestion that the violence they sing about could ever be true. No one thought Mick Jagger meant it when he sang in the Midnight Rambler ‘I'll stick my knife right down your throat baby and it hurts’. When the Beatles harmonised ‘I'd rather see you dead, little girl, than to be with another man’, no one cared. Johnny Cash's rousing chorus ‘I shot a man in Reno just to watch him die’ raised no eyebrows. The White Stripes sang ‘Give you a punch through that barbed wire fence … When I hit you, baby, you know I make no sense’ in ‘Your Southern Can Is Mine’. In the number one hit ‘Delilah’ Sir Tom Jones sings ‘I felt the knife in my hand and she laughed no more’. To this day the song continues to be sung in many football and rugby stadiums up and down the country.Footnote 13
Once in the courtroom, the rap music is remixed with the police ‘expert’ evidence and the prosecution's gang narrative. Racist stereotypes abound. Research demonstrates that juries are adversely affected by rap music and are much more likely to convict. In Dunbar and Kubrin's Reference Dunbar and Kubrin2018 study the authors concluded ‘it appears that those who write violent “rap” lyrics are more easily associated with crime and violence than those who write identical violent lyrics labelled as different genres. In particular, participants are more likely to assume that a rapper is in a gang, has a criminal record, and is involved in criminal activity than are artists from other music genres, and this is based merely on the genre of the lyrics’.Footnote 14 The participants had been presented with musical lyrics from a 1960s folk song which included the following:
Well, early one evening I was rollin’ around
I was feelin’ kind of mean, I shot a deputy down. Strollin’ on home, and I went to bed.
Well, I laid my pistol up under my head.
Well, early in the morning ‘bout the break of day, I figured it was time to make a getaway.
Steppin’ right along but I was steppin’ too slow. Got surrounded by a sheriff down in Mexico.
All the participants in the study read the same lyrics but were told they were from a country, heavy metal or rap song. They were randomly provided with the race of the songwriter by way of a photo of a young man. ‘Finally, participants were tasked with judging the character of the songwriter, including traits such as his violent nature and criminal disposition’.
The judge's textbookFootnote 15 on managing trials contains numerous model directions on how juries should treat certain types of evidence with care and caution. There is nothing about rejecting racist stereotypes that are inextricably linked with the topics of rap and gangs. There is lukewarm guidance about ‘gang evidence’ from the Court of Appeal but even when judges get this wrong the conviction stands. In R v Rashid [2019] the Court of Appeal ‘concluded that the only complaint of substance was the direction as to how the gang evidence [videos] could be used. Although the direction did not focus on the correct way in which the evidence could be used, it did make three crucial points. First, the jury had to be sure that the defendant they were considering was a gang member. This was a point specifically raised by Tshoma who said he was not. Secondly, even if they were gang members that did not mean they were violent or that they committed the offences with which they were charged. Thirdly, and linked to the second point, the jury should not in any event be prejudiced against the defendants because they were gang members, but they might give it weight’.Footnote 16
But how did the jury determine whether the defendants were gang members? By watching rap videos and listening to the opinion of a police officer who had watched the very same videos. In their appeal the defence submission was that the video and social media evidence was insubstantial.Footnote 17 However, there was no complaint about the complete absence of judicial direction to the jury that they should disregard racist stereotypes, myths or confirmation bias. There was clearly a risk that stereotypes, myths and/or confirmation bias formed the basis of the police officer's opinion and/or such views would be used by the jury to convict. After all the judge had directed the jury that the police expert believed all the defendants were in a gang. The officer spoke of (a) the clothing they wore, (b) how they acted and that (c) the lyrics and gestures depicted in the music videos were designed to incite violence.Footnote 18 During the run-up to their final conclusion the court of appeal judges reiterated that watching two rap videos was sufficient to prove the membership of a gang: ‘Proof of gang membership could be inferred from the particular videos in which [Tshoma] appeared and gang membership was celebrated’.Footnote 19 At the appellate level and below there is no proper recognition of the racism that is used to mould rap music as evidence or guidelines on how judges or juries should disregard racist stereotypes, myths or confirmation bias.
At sentence these myths and stereotypes are regurgitated as fact. These ‘facts’ are then repeated by the media and the vicious circle continues. Rap and drill are the soundtracks that accompany Black and Brown males as they are disproportionately stopped and searched, prosecuted and then jailed.
The situation is exacerbated because some defence teams don't object to the prosecution playing rap before the juryFootnote 20 and/or fail to instruct their own experts to help inform cross examination, educate the courtroom and rebut the prosecution case.Footnote 21 Why do these omissions occur? Why is it different for Black and Brown children and youth? How do first person lyrics become confessions? How does rapping about guns and gangs amount to evidence of a disposition, propensity or an intent to endanger life?Footnote 22
The State's approach to Black youth is often racist and has been heavily criticised by academics, campaign groups, lawyers and human rights organisations. JUSTICE,Footnote 23 a registered charity and all-party law reform and human rights organisation, described ‘the misuse of drill music to secure convictions’ as ‘one of the most profound examples’ of systemic racism in the UK.Footnote 24 Academics Tony Ward and Shahrzad Fouladvand explain ‘rap lyrics and videos are overwhelmingly used against young, black defendants to construct a narrative that resonates with stereotypes about black criminality’.Footnote 25 Law scholar Dr Abenaa Owusu-Bempah suggests at play may be a ‘racist assumption that [Black arts] cannot reach the same levels of sophistication as their white counterparts’, and, as such, can be taken literally and attributed to one's character in a way which other genres are not.Footnote 26
An example of this discrimination is the method the police use to compile their so called ‘Gangs Matrix’ by reference to racist stereotypes. For example, ‘grime music videos featuring gang names or signs [are] considered a key indicator of likely gang affiliation’.Footnote 27 People who have never been involved in violence are added to the Matrix and the number of Black people that have been included is disproportionate.
In October 2017, 78% of the people on the Matrix were Black, an even more striking statistic in light of the fact that only 28% of those responsible for serious youth violence were Black. Amnesty International called out the Matrix over 4 years ago.Footnote 28 In the same year, the Information Commissioner's Office found the Gangs Matrix was potentially breaking data protection laws and failed to distinguish between victims of crime and offenders, and issued the MET with formal enforcement notices to improve. A 2018 report for the Mayor of London found the list overly targeted young Black men.Footnote 29 In the same year it was revealed that more than 40% of young people on a Matrix list from Haringey were scored as posing ‘zero’ risk of causing harm. Some were assessed as being much more likely to be victims than offenders. In 2021 the police removed hundreds of names from the Gangs Matrix, but the question remains: why were those names on the matrix in the first place? In February of this year Liberty announced they are challenging the lawfulness of the Matrix, arguing that it discriminates against people of colour, particularly Black men and boys, and breaches human rights, data protection requirements and public law principles.Footnote 30
Over 20 years ago Sir William Macpherson, a retired high court judge, labelled the Met as being institutionally racist. In 2019, when Cressida Dick was asked about such a description she said ‘I simply don't see it as a helpful or accurate description. This is an utterly different Metropolitan Police’. In the very same year Black people were 40 times more likely to be stopped and searched in the UK than white people.Footnote 31 These continual stops and searches are unlawful, humiliating and a stark reminder of the powerful steer that these stereotypes provide. Another vicious circle is created by this unlawful detention and public shaming. It reinforces and provides an ongoing example of the racist approach of the State. At the Met's current recruitment rate, it will take about 100 years to have a properly representative police force. In a plan to reform the Met and bring about real change it has been suggested that they will have to accept they are institutionally racist.Footnote 32 The police have refused to make such an admission.Footnote 33
The police's approach to the Black community provides part of the narrative, ‘justification’ and ‘evidence’ for the subsequent prosecutions. Police officers’ assertions that suspects are gang members, known gang members or associated with gangs are often repeated in Court and sometimes met with little or no opposition. The use of the gang stereotype provides the State with the ability to employ the prosecutor's best friend – the joint enterprise doctrine.
When gang evidence including music videos is not opposed, scrutinised, called out or excluded and defence experts aren't instructed, the adversarial system fails the Black and Brown defendants it has in its charge. When the directions to the jury omit the caution that should be employed when considering the prosecution's assertions on rap music, gangs, so-called gang signs and joint enterprise, there are miscarriages of justice. Often the State locks up, for life, numerous Black youths on the back of the actions of a single individual. Black youths end up serving hundreds of years inside for crimes they just didn't commit.
The State's approach to drill music, so-called gangs and joint enterprise and its deliberate focus on Black youth is indefensible. These are racist prosecutions not ‘wrong turns’. Amnesty International considered the Gangs Matrix in detail and they concluded ‘The Gangs Matrix is based on a vague, racialised concept: ‘the gang’. Police officers told Amnesty researchers they were concerned about the conflation of gang crime with serious youth violence, as there is less overlap than commonly presumed. This analysis is backed up by the Mayor of London's Office for Policing and Crime, which found that more than 80% of knife-crime incidents resulting in injury to a victim under 25 in London were deemed to be non-gang-related. ‘Gangs are, for the most part, a complete red herring … fixation with the term is unhelpful at every level’, said one officer.
Violent crime is complex, nuanced and requires careful investigation before it is prosecuted. It's not all about gangs, signs and drill music, far from it. In 2017, the London knife crime strategy stated ‘Recent data suggests that the majority of knife crime is not gang-related. Gang-flagged crime accounted for 5% of all knife crime with injury during 2016 – down from almost 9% in the preceding year … focusing exclusively on gangs is not going to solve or adequately impact on our knife crime challenges in London’. Focusing exclusively on drill music in order to prove gang membership is also wrong, counterproductive and will lead to more miscarriages of justice.
The Court of Appeal and rap
The Court of Appeal (COA) has upheld almost every single appeal in cases where a complaint is made about the admission of rap music. The five cases below suggest their lordships’ and ladyships’ approach to rap is literal rather than metaphorical; that when Black defendants are mimicking the firing of a gun they conclude that means they could have a propensity to kill and they have even decided that a defendant can be part of a criminal gang despite the fact they don't rap on the video. On the topic of pretending to fire a gun all judges need to consider the case of rapper Russ Millions who created the ‘gun lean’ move.Footnote 34 This went viral when the drill track ‘Body’ hit the number one spot last year. The move was later mimicked by premier league footballers to celebrate the scoring of a goal and it reached number 10 in the Guardian's list of ‘greatest pop music dance crazes’. Please note Mr Millions wasn't really shot. Here's a tutorial on how to perform it.Footnote 35
In R v Lewis Footnote 36 the COA ruled that a judge was entitled to admit evidence of a rap video to help prove ‘membership of, or association with, a gang or gangs, exhibiting violence or hostility to the police or links with firearms’.Footnote 37 This was in circumstances where the defendant was silent, did not create the video but mimicked, like all good teenage boys do [my words], the firing of a gun to camera: ‘Lewis at that point was standing close to Francis and is shown miming a shooting action’ (para 112); ‘the video involves significant reference to guns with Gray imitating the firing of a gun at one point’ (para 124).
In the appeal of R v Awoyemi Footnote 38 the evidence complained about included handwritten rap lyrics and a YouTube rap videoFootnote 39 where it was alleged that the defendants [they disputed it was them] made ‘threatening gestures with their fingers to indicate guns’ while rapping about gangs and guns. The COA ruled ‘The evidence was prejudicial but inevitably so and not unduly so. It went far beyond simple membership of a gang, the love of RAP music, hyperbole or appearance on a video. It indicated the extent to which the individuals concerned had signed up to gang and gun culture’ (para 33).
In R v Alimi,Footnote 40 the only successful appeal I have been able to find, a conviction for firearms offences was quashed. The Appellant was an ‘extra’ in two rap videos. He did not rap. However, during the appeal the prosecution persisted in submitting that his presence was evidence of bad character.Footnote 41 The judges concluded that the rap video evidence did not prove gang membership in relation to Alimi but had no doubt that the lyrics had been properly admitted against the two co-defendants,Footnote 42 who had rapped about the ‘glorification of violence and guns’.
Even videos produced 2 years prior to the crime have been held to be admissible. In R v Sode Footnote 43 the prosecution stated that the defendant, who was aged just 14 at the time of the video, made a gesture and remarks supportive of a gang [para 18]. Again taking a literal approach, ignoring the fact that the defendant was a child, the Court of Appeal concluded that ’53 … The YouTube video provided a clear and direct link between Green and the Anti-Shower Gang, rivals of the Shower Gang, of which the deceased was a member. The fact the video had been made some two years before does not reduce its impact or diminish its relevance’.
The COA in R v Abdirizak,Footnote 44 their latest judgment on rap and gangs, endorsed the lower court’s approach in admitting rap music that helped plug gaps in a murder case where there was no forensic evidence against the appellants. The Court of Appeal stated: ‘15 … there was no scientific evidence linking him with the stabbing. That does not undermine the circumstantial case that was established by the other evidence’. The last sentence turns science and logic on its head. Indeed, in previous cases the COA has accepted the absence of forensics was powerful evidence in favour of the defence.Footnote 45
In R v Abdi the COA went on to state that the jury could consider three rap videos from YouTube as evidence of gang association. My emphasis is added as it is important to note the watering down of ‘gang member’ to the vague and nebulous concept of ‘gang association’. This approach provides a very low bar for the prosecution to jump and amounts to not much more than prejudicial background evidence.
The judgment continued: ‘In ‘Realist Jo Jo Taking A Trip’ the lyric referred to RB7 [the gang]. The jury had evidence that people identifiable as RB7 members appeared in the video’. Even if the identifications were correct this is guilt by association – a concept which the Supreme Court has confirmed has no place in the Criminal Justice system.Footnote 46 It was then noted that about 2 minutes into the video there was a lyric ‘trying to put a sting in their abs’Footnote 47 and Abdi ‘could be interpreted as performing a stabbing motion towards his chest’. The two remaining videos were summarised in just three sentences: ‘25 … The other videos were called “Ten Toes Tap Drill” and “Realist Jo Jo Raindrop”. In the latter video there was specific mention of RB7 and references to shooting and shank. Shank is a slang term for knife’. Again what exactly is to be reasonably inferred from these lyrics and possible mimics of stabbing in a drill performance? By definition drill videos mention gangs, shooting and stabbing. The absence of any further detail from which to infer ‘gang association’ and no reference to the contents of ‘Ten Toes Tap Drill ‘ speaks volumes … Meanwhile two of the three videos are still available on YouTube and they have had over 500,000 views.Footnote 48
Restrictions on rap artists
The establishment also uses the justice system to censor rappers and threaten them with jail if they don't obey. Skengdo and AM are internationally renowned drill artists who have incorporated French one liners into their tracks. Their 2017 ‘Mad about Bars’ performance on Mixtape Madness has been watched over 31 million times. They have had sold out UK tours and secured number one hits in the ITunes hip-hop charts. In 2018 the police obtained a ‘gang’ injunction against them which among other things prevented the duo from performing music that incited violence. In 2019 they performed an old song called ‘Attempted 1.0’ and as a result they were taken to court. The judge imposed a 9 month sentence suspended for 2 years. This was a legal first. Prior to this no one had ever received a prison sentence for performing a song.
Digga D has had multiple ‘Top 40’ hits, his single ‘Woi’ was nominated for best song of the year, he was featured in the BBC documentary Defending Digga DFootnote 49 and GQ magazine described him as ‘the most influential British rapper of our time’. As I complete my final edits, the headlines are ‘Digga D Blasts to U.K. No. 1 with “Noughty By Nature”; UK drill figurehead has a flow for the ages and “the west Londoner's deepest record yet”’. However, Digga D is also one of the first artists in legal history to be made subject to a criminal behaviour order. This punitive court order means that the state controls the content of his songs. If what he sings is found to have breached the order then he can be sent to prison.
Censorship of rap and drill also continues behind the scenes. Recent figures from a Freedom of Information request demonstrate that the Met asked for 510 music videos to be taken down from YouTube in 2021. Only 3 per cent remain. This represents a year-on-year increase of video censorship of almost 300 per cent. As the police step up their campaign to take down these drill videos it is worth remembering the words of Linton Stephens as he moved a motion on drill music at the TUC Black Workers’ Conference: ‘Music and artistic self-expression are a reflection, and not a cause, of the individual socioeconomic experience. The government's diversion tactic to continually blame music of black origin as a contribution to the cause of the rise in outcrops of violent or antisocial behaviour demonises the young black community and suppresses their voice’.Footnote 50
Coda
The deployment of rap and drill music as prosecution evidence only affects Black and Brown defendants. It is collected and presented by a police force that is institutionally racist and processed by an adversarial system that fails to scrutinise this controversial approach. The censorship of rap and drill follows the same pattern. The establishment's starting point with this fictional form of entertainment and creative expression is that if you're Black or Brown and rap, mimic firing a gun or maybe mimic stabbing then you are in a gang, an associate of a gang, espouse violence and have ‘signed up to gang and gun culture’. This is a racist approach, reverses the burden of proof and has to stop.
Acknowledgements
A few sections of this Middle Eight previously appeared in https://www.gardencourtchambers.co.uk/news/debunking-prosecution-myths-gang-stereotypes-joint-enterprise-and-racist-driven-stop-and-searches