C-Murder Retains Civil Rights Attorney Benjamin Crump Amid Hunger Strike for Better Prison Conditions
Corey Miller, the incarcerated rapper who goes by the name C-Murder, has recently made news because of a hunger strike based on the condition of the jail he is currently occupying as a prisoner. Now, it has just been announced that C-Murder has added civil rights attorney Benjamin Crump to his legal team.
The rapper, who is brother to Hip-Hop entrepreneur Percy Miller, better known as Master P, had recently announced via his Instagram account to he was going on a hunger strike to protest the conditions at the Louisiana prison he is in. He is currently serving a life sentence for a murder he says he didn’t commit at Elayn Hunt Correctional Center.
“HUNGER STRIKE PROTEST COVID 19 Louisiana Prison Deaths & Neglect of Terminally Ill”
According to BRProud, Crump, along with attorney Ronald Haley Jr. have released a statement after taking C-Murder as a client:
“No one in the State of Louisiana is sentenced to contract COVID-19 nor die from it. There are far too many people who are unreasonably compromised due to existing medical conditions and older age who will suffer or die due to the spread of COVID-19 and the Delta variant. There is no form of justice that should allow this level of neglect for the health and safety of those who are incarcerated.
“Mr. Miller maintains his innocence and we are diligently working with his legal defense team to free him, but In the meantime, we are monitoring the conditions at Elayn Hunt and are considering taking legal action. We stand with Mr. Miller and everyone who is incarcerated who are in fear of losing their lives due to the pandemic and inhumanity of the correctional system. We demand that the Department of Corrections act immediately.”
C-Murder, who is serving life in prison for a murder he states he didn’t do had stated, “Since the onset of COVID-19, they have continued placing the inmates that have tested positive for the virus in the dorms with inmates that were COVID-19 negative. This has not only spread the virus but has caused abnormally long quarantine times. The COVID-19 positive inmates are put on a two-week quarantine time initially but the prison adds new positive inmates to the dorm daily, which then extends the quarantine time two weeks each day that they add a new case.”