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Yo Gotti and Team Roc to hold prison reform rally in Mississippi

Yo Gotti announces prison reform rally in Mississippi
Yo Gotti and Roc Nation to hold prison reform rally in Mississippi 06:30

Rappers Yo Gotti and Jay-Z have teamed up to bring legal action against the Mississippi Department of Corrections after five prisoners died violently in the state's troubled prison system in the past month. In his first interview since the lawsuit was filed, Yo Gotti told CBS News he will be holding a prison reform rally in Mississippi next week in support of the inmates. 

"We're in the process right now of setting up a whole rally down there, so the word is being heard," Yo Gotti told CBSN. "We're trying to make sure that they feel us and that they feel we're trying to do something about it."

CBSN has confirmed members of Yo Gotti's team will be in attendance and spearheading the rally. 

The pair helped file a federal lawsuit against the commissioner of the Mississippi Corrections Department, Pelicia E. Hall, and the superintendent of the Mississippi State Penitentiary, Marshall Turner, on behalf of more than two dozen inmates. The suit claims people are dying because the state "has failed to fund its prisons." Critics say a shortage of guard staff has left the facilities vulnerable to rampant violence and gang activity.

When asked about the government's role in the condition of the prisons, Yo Gotti, whose real name is Mario Mims, told CBSN that "it's a lack of responsibility." 

"Everybody is still human. They can't live in inhumane conditions," Yo Gotti said. "Some people are awaiting trial, some people can't afford bonds. I don't think it's their fault."

The lawsuit filed Tuesday calls the recent deaths a "culmination of years of severe understaffing and neglect." New York lawyer Alex Spiro, who represents Jay-Z and his Roc Nation label, filed the suit in Mississippi's federal court.

On January 9, Team Roc wrote a letter to the governor's office and Hall, expressing that if "immediate steps" weren't taken to address the problem, the team was "prepared to pursue all potential avenues to obtain relief for the people living in Mississippi's prisons and their families."

The letter called the prison deaths "predictable — and entirely preventable — consequences of Mississippi's utter disregard for the people it has incarcerated."

According to the lawsuit, prisons in the state do not even provide basic necessities, such as a place to sleep. Inmates are allegedly forced to live amid flooding, overflows of raw sewage, black mold, rat infestations and lack of running water and electricity.

"I grew up in a family where my brother was in prison. My father was in prison," Yo Gotti told CBSN. "These are real humans in there."

Prison Unrest Mississippi
This undated photo taken by an inmate at Mississippi State Penitentiary at Parchman and provided to The Associated Press shows inmates seen lying on the floor next to a full toilet. After violence at the prison on Jan. 2, 2020, guards and state troopers marched some prisoners at Parchman into Unit 32, a cell block closed in 2011 as part of a settlement; the inmate says the unit has no running water or mattresses, and is plagued by mold and issues. Anonymous / AP
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