HoneyKomb Brazy has entered a plea deal in his most recent criminal case which has the potential of significantly reducing the sentence he was initially facing.

According to FOX10 News, the Mobile, Alabama native pleaded guilty on Thursday (July 25) to being a felon in possession of firearm, which is a federal charge. As part of the plea agreement, Brazy’s attorneys and prosecutors agreed come together to recommend a sentence of two and a half to three and a half years.

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Ultimately, however, U.S. District Judge Kristi DuBose will decide the rapper’s fate on October 25.

This latest in HoneyKomb Brazy’s long list of legal troubles stems from a traffic stop back in December of last year, during which a Mobile County sheriff’s deputy pulled him over, along with two men who told authorities they were providing security services for the rapper, born Nahshon Terral Jones.

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Neither Brazy, nor Miguel Wayne Hall and Mason Demetrius Fuller were allowed to be in possession of the gun, thus leading to the arrest.

While he stands to be handed a reduced sentence in this case, HoneyKomb Brazy found himself on the opposite side of the law three years ago.

HoneyKomb Brazy's Grandparents Said To Have Been Killed Over A 'Social Media Insult'
HoneyKomb Brazy's Grandparents Said To Have Been Killed Over A 'Social Media Insult'

In July 2021, a judge revoked the Rap-A-Lot Records artist’s probation and ordered him to serve out the rest of his original 15-year sentence.

Brazy was put on probation after serving just 18 months and released in November 2020, but prosecutors asked the judge to send him back to prison for violating the terms of that probation, presenting 15 video clips showing him with guns or drugs in the process.

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Although the defense argued they were simply props for music videos and other career-related stunts, the judge said that still didn’t explain why he was involved in a Montgomery shootout.

Prosecutors also accused HoneyKomb Brazy of skipping multiple meetings with his probation officer, but the defense claimed he was in fear for his life after his grandparents were killed under suspicious circumstances in February of that year.