ASAP rocky trial Los Angeles: Jury deliberations underway in rappers gun assault case
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LOS ANGELES (KABC) — Jury deliberations got underway Tuesday in the felony assault trial of rapper A$AP Rocky, who’s accused of firing two shots at a former friend on a Hollywood street corner in 2021.

Jurors got the case late Friday after a prosecutor told them in his closing argument that they must set aside their feelings for the hip-hop star, his singing superstar partner Rihanna, and their small children.

The jury of seven women and five men got the case late in the day and began discussing the two counts of assault with a semiautomatic firearm Tuesday following the three-day weekend.

Convictions on both counts could mean up to 24 years in prison.

Rihanna came to court shortly after closing arguments began Thursday, as she did often during the three-week trial. But for the first time she brought their 2-year-old and 1-year-old sons.

Deputy District Attorney John Lewin suggested it was an attempt to manipulate jurors.

“They brought in two adorable children yesterday for closing argument,” Lewin said. “They haven’t been here any other time. And you have to ask yourselves, why children that age would be here in a situation like this?”

He added, “You are not allowed to consider how this might affect Rihanna and his kids. We are all responsible for our own actions in the world.”

Rihanna was sitting with Rocky’s mother and sister, without the children, on Friday. She and Rocky left the courtroom together, surrounded by security.

Rocky’s attorneys argued that he only fired blanks that evening in 2021 from a prop gun he had picked up for security on a music video shoot.

During his closing argument, lawyer Joe Tacopina cast his accuser, who goes by A$AP Relli, as the aggressor and an unreliable liar.

Tacopina showed the jury belligerent text messages from just before the confrontation, later deleted by Relli, where he urges Rocky to beat him up. The prosecution had shown only Rocky’s angry responses to suggest he started the fight. But it was not the opposing lawyers’ fault, he said.

“Their witness lied to them, lied to police, and deleted the messages,” Tacopina said. “He destroyed evidence.”

Tacopina showed jurors the transcript of the moment during testimony that he confronted Relli about the messages.

“At first he said, ‘I don’t recall.’ Then I showed him the messages,” Tacopina said. “What did he say next? His go-to line. ‘It’s fake! It’s fake!’ Anything that crushed him was fake.”

He dwelled on how combative Relli was on the stand.

“That was in front of you,” Tacopina said. “Imagine what he’s like in the street.”

Shifting to the street, Tacopina narrated the surveillance video that partially showed the initial confrontation to say Relli started the fight. He pointed out that the video shows Relli raising his arm to take on Rocky as the first move – though Rocky is out of frame at that moment.

“If you had to make a decision, the most important in your life or that of your family’s, on his word, would you do it? You all know what the answer to that question is,” the lawyer said. Then he pointed at Rocky. “What you’re being asked to do is to make that decision in the most important matter of his life.”

Relli said his knuckles were grazed by one of the shots but he was otherwise not injured.

Even if jurors don’t buy the phony gun argument, they can acquit by finding that Rocky was acting in defense of himself or his friends.

Neither side produced a gun as evidence.

In his rebuttal, Lewin said, “If it is a prop gun, there is no self-defense.”

Lewin told jurors this could be “a five-minute verdict.”

“Once you decide it’s not a prop gun – and it’s not a prop gun,” he said, “the case is over.”

He returned repeatedly to Rocky’s status.

“He is a big, important man, and everybody serves him,” Lewin said.

That includes, he said, two men from his inner circle who testified he had picked up the prop gun at a music video and for months had been carrying it.

“They were just liars, start to finish,” Lewin said.

During a break in the presentation, Judge Mark Arnold told Lewin to stop the references to Rocky’s family.

“The manner in which you did it – I don’t think it was improper,” the judge said. “But you cannot mention again Rihanna being in the courtroom, or the kids being in the courtroom.”

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

Copyright © 2025 KABC Television, LLC. All rights reserved.

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