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Born and raised in Mineral Wells, Tx. located west of Fort Worth in the DFW. Sports have really been the premise of my life as I lettered in 5 different sports in high school so I am very competitive. I've been writing music, poetry, and rapping since age 13. Now 22 years old and with two mixtapes under my belt, I'm pressing harder than ever to make music I love and look toward recieving a deal soon. I love and appreciate everyone who's supported me and in return I will deliver real music. With your support I will make everyone fall in love with hip hop once again.

Wednesday, December 8, 2010

Wesley Snipes Visits Larry King To Speak On His 3 Year Jail Sentence

In probably his last interview before he reports to a federal prison for three years, Wesley Snipes sat down with Larry King.

Snipes was convicted of failure to file taxes in 1999, 2000 and 2001, a misdemeanor. He is scheduled to report to McKean Federal Correctional Institution on Thursday to begin his sentence.

The 48-year old actor told Larry that he felt he was being made an example of by the judge and prosecutors in the case. He explained that his financial advisors were given power of attorney, in order to handle his taxes for him.

Prosecutors said Snipes earned $40 million since 1999 but had filed no returns and had been involved in a tax resisters group

"This is another thing that has been misreported. It has been framed that I was a conspirator and that I was an architect in a scheme by an organization that has been characterized as tax protesters. The press hasn't reported that I was a client of people who I trusted [who] had knowledge and expertise in the areas of tax law that would protect my interests," Snipes said.

Frank Tuttle, who served as a juror in Snipes' trial, told CNN that several jurors had already made their minds up that the actor was guilty before the trial even began.

"There was one juror that said they knew Mr Snipes was guilty when they saw him during jury selection. I told the juror that was not right, and it went against what the judge had told us before the trial was to begin. Two others then agreed, and said that they thought he was guilty when they first saw him, before the trial began.

We were deadlocked on our decision about Mr Snipes before this happened. I was not expecting to hear that from a juror and most jurors felt the same. That's when a deal was made to find him guilty on the failure to file taxes [a misdemeanor]. And not the federal tax evasion charge. We did not think he would go to jail
." Tuttle stated.

Snipes became a household name by starring in the films, New Jack City, White Men Can't Jump and Blade.

His only hope of avoiding jail time is a last minute reprieve by the Supreme Court.

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