YNW Melly’s defense will begin strategic motions ahead of the Jan. 21 court date in an effort to stop witnesses from tampering with murder evidence in the trial.
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YNW Melly’s legal team is doing its best to prepare for his witness tampering trial, filing a series of strategic motions aimed at limiting what prosecutors can offer jurors.
The South Florida rapper faces a critical week starting Jan. 6, when a Broward County judge will hear arguments that could determine the outcome of his Jan. 21 trial.
Melly was accused of pressuring witnesses not to testify in a 2023 double murder trial that ended in a mistrial. Now, his defense attorneys are working on multiple fronts to prevent the jury from seeing the damaging evidence.
The most significant motion asks the court to prevent jurors from learning about potential murder charges.
Defense attorneys argued that revealing that YNW Melly faces potential capital murder charges would be “highly prejudicial” and unfairly impact the tampering case.
From a defense perspective, this strategic move makes sense. Jurors who know that YNW Melly is fighting for his life in another murder case may be more likely to believe that he will desperately try to silence the witness.
Another fascinating motion is to inspect his cell at the Broward County facility.
Lawyers want to film the isolation facility that separates him from other inmates, NBC 6 reported. This suggests they planned to argue that physical conditions made witness tampering impossible or unlikely.
The defense also targeted YNW Melly’s artistic expression and asked the judge to exclude his lyrics from the evidence. They argued that the songs were written years before the alleged tampering and were irrelevant to his guilt or innocence.
Additionally, they want social media posts from 2018 and 2019 blocked, claiming content posted four years ago that allegedly committed crimes should not be admissible.
The motions reveal a defense strategy focused on limiting the prosecution’s ability to portray YNW Melly as someone capable of intimidating witnesses.
By excluding murder charges, lyrics and old social media posts, his lawyers hope to present a narrower case focused solely on the tampering charges.
Timing is crucial.
Jury selection is scheduled for January 21, and these pretrial rulings could significantly affect the evidence in court. If successful, the defense would take away much of the context prosecutors might plan to use.
YNW Melly has won a small victory – he will appear in regular clothes rather than prison garb, avoiding the prejudicial impact of an orange jumpsuit.

