Skip to content
Search

Fugees’ Pras Michel Denied Bail As He Appeals Foreign Influence Conviction, 14-Year Sentence

Musician granted two-month delay of prison surrender date to appeal bail matter with higher court.

Fugees’ Pras Michel Denied Bail As He Appeals Foreign Influence Conviction, 14-Year Sentence

Fugees rapper Pras Michel failed to convince his trial judge that he should remain free on bail while he appeals his conviction and resulting 14-year prison sentence in his money laundering, illegal lobbying, and witness tampering case.

In a Thursday ruling, U.S. District Judge Colleen Kollar-Kotelly said Michel was convicted of 10 offenses more than two years ago, and his motion for bail pending appeal didn’t meet the burden required to overcome the presumption that he should be detained. But in a small victory for the musician, the judge agreed to delay Michel’s surrender date by two months so he could appeal the bail issue at the federal circuit court level.


While Michel previously was ordered to begin his prison sentence on Jan. 27, he now has a short reprieve and won’t have to report until March 30, the judge said.

Michel, 53, had asked to remain free while he appeals, arguing that a series of reversible errors tainted his conviction. He said the district court improperly referred to him as a “co-conspirator” at least eight times and erred by allowing an F.B.I. agent to offer opinions on at least 25 occasions that he was guilty. But the judge rejected those claims Thursday, saying Michel’s motion largely repeated “the same arguments” that had already been extensively briefed, litigated, and resolved before the jury returned its verdict.

Lawyers for Michel did not immediately respond to a request for comment on the judge’s ruling. The musician “is required to take affirmative action” to pursue his appeal of the bail ruling with the D.C. Circuit in the coming weeks, or “no further extension of his report date will be considered,” Judge Kollar-Kotelly said in her decision.

“This wasn’t a fair trial. This was a coronation of guilt,” Michel’s spokesperson Erica Dumas previously said in a statement to Rolling Stone. “We’re confident the appeals court will recognize this case for what it is, an unprecedented trial that denies Pras’ constitutional right to an impartial jury.”

Federal prosecutors first indicted Michel in 2019, accusing him of making illegal contributions to Barack Obama’s 2012 re-election campaign. Two years later, they expanded the case, adding charges that included bank fraud, concealment of material facts, witness tampering, violations of the Foreign Agents Registration Act, and acting as an unregistered agent of the People’s Republic of China, as outlined in a Rolling Stone feature.

The charges all stemmed from Michel’s relationship with Low Taek Jho, a Malaysian financier accused of stealing $4.5 billion from 1Malaysia Development Berhad, a state fund known as 1MDB. Prosecutors said Michel helped channel money linked to the fund into a lobbying effort aimed at persuading the Trump administration to drop investigations involving Low and a Chinese dissident. Michel denied any wrongdoing. “What benefit would I get trying to break laws?” he told Rolling Stone. “It’s not worth it to me. I’m like a pariah now. I’ve got friends who won’t talk to me because they think there’s a satellite in orbit listening to them.”

Amid the turmoil, Pras briefly reunited with the Fugees for a few months in 2023. He distanced himself from further reunions with Lauryn Hill and Wyclef Jean the following year.

More Stories

The Jay-Z Commemorative Library Card is Back for the ‘Reasonable Doubt’ 30th Anniversary

Jay-Z at the 2026 Met Gala.

Theo Wargo/FilmMagic/Getty Images

The Jay-Z Commemorative Library Card is Back for the ‘Reasonable Doubt’ 30th Anniversary

  1. Jay-Z will add to his already overflowing pile of career achievements a second commemorative library card as he celebrates the 30th anniversary of his debut, Reasonable Doubt.

To mark the occasion this month, Jay announced a string of pop-ups around New York City, as well as a fresh partnership with the Brooklyn Public Library. That includes the release of a new limited edition library card, which will be available June 25 — the same day Reasonable Doubt was released in 1996 — at all BPL locations on a first-come, first-served basis, and while supplies last.

This marks Jay-Z’s second time partnering with the Brooklyn Public Library after his Book of HOV exhibit was put on display at the Grand Army Plaza branch in 2023. The launch of that exhibit also included a special promotion that saw the BPL printing a bunch of limited edition library cards commemorating all 13 of Jay’s solo albums.

Keep ReadingShow less
Olivia Rodrigo Scores Third No. 1 Album With ‘You Seem Pretty Sad for a Girl So in Love’
Olivia Rodrigo performs at Primavera Sound 2026 in Barcelona, Spain.Xavi Torrent/Getty Images

Olivia Rodrigo Scores Third No. 1 Album With ‘You Seem Pretty Sad for a Girl So in Love’

Olivia Rodrigo‘s new album, You Seem Pretty Sad for a Girl So in Love, debuted at No. 1 on the Billboard 200 chart, marking her third No. 1 LP and her biggest sales week ever. It was also largest week of 2026 for any album by a soloist, meaning You Seem Pretty Sad for a Girl So in Love outperformed Drake’s Iceman.

Rodrigo’s album sold 485,000 units in the United States in the week ending June 18, according to Billboard. By comparison, Drake sold 463,000 for Iceman in May. Drake has held the No. 1 spot since then for four weeks, only to be knocked down by Rodrigo.

Keep ReadingShow less
San Antonio Mayor Calls for Cancelation of Kanye West’s July 4th Alamodome Concert

Kanye West in Istanbul, Turkiye, on May 30, 2026

Muhammed Ali Yigit/Anadolu via Getty Images

San Antonio Mayor Calls for Cancelation of Kanye West’s July 4th Alamodome Concert

The mayor of San Antonio has called for the cancelation of Kanye West’s concert at the city’s Alamodome, scheduled for the Fourth of July.

Weeks after Florida senator Rick Scott urged the Tampa Sports Authority to cancel West’s upcoming concerts at Raymond James Stadium, San Antonio Gina Ortiz Jones similarly lobbied against the rapper performing in the Texas city.

Keep ReadingShow less
Karma: Metallica’s Kirk Hammett Falls Off Stage Days After Enraging Swifties
Dave Simpson/WireImage

Karma: Metallica’s Kirk Hammett Falls Off Stage Days After Enraging Swifties

Metallica’s Kirk Hammett suffered a bit of “Karma” Friday as the guitarist slipped off-stage mid-concert, days after wearing a shirt that inflamed Taylor Swift fans.

At Metallica’s June 13 concert in Budapest, Hammett donned a shirt that read “Taylor Swift Is a CIA Psyop.” Photos of Hammett in the garment eventually caught the attention of Swifties, who lashed out at the guitarist on Reddit and social media.

Keep ReadingShow less
YG Gets Brutally Honest at ‘The Gentlemen’s Club’
Brandon Almengo*

YG Gets Brutally Honest at ‘The Gentlemen’s Club’

In an interview posted on his YouTube account prior to the release of his seventh album, The Gentlemen’s Club, YG recalled a conversation he had with Kendrick Lamar about the importance of quality control. “I’m telling him about what I was doing, like putting out albums just to get out the deal ’cause my deal [with Def Jam] was fucked up,” he told his interviewer, DJ Hed (YG is now signed with 10K Projects through his 4Hunnid imprint). “[Kendrick] was like, ‘Bro, you ain’t never supposed to do that. You gotta give it your all every time.’”

Indeed, The Gentlemen’s Club signals a renewed focus on building narratives with his distinctively aggressive Bompton persona. It evokes his famed run from over a decade ago, when the rapper rose to stardom with 2014’s My Krazy Life and 2016’s Still Brazy by revitalizing the kind of street-conscious perspectives that the West Coast has long produced, from Ice Cube to the late Nipsey Hussle (who co-starred with YG on his deathless anti-Trump anthem “FDT”). But YG hasn’t scored a major Billboard hit since 2018’s “Big Bank.” His music in recent years has been typified by high-carb, low-nutrition radio bait like “Go Loko,” a bizarre number where he and Tyga shuffle along with Speedy Gonzales-styled accents, and “Toxic,” which lifts Mary J. Blige’s “Be Happy” nearly wholesale. (To be fair, his 2019 “Slide” collaboration with H.E.R. is romantic and enchanting.) In 2025, YG signaled a return to less irrelevant work with “2004,” a startling confession where he reveals he was sexually assaulted at 14 by a woman older than him. “Ever since that day, I’ve never looked at shit the same,” he rapped. Yet the stakes around his career can’t help but feel lower now.

Keep ReadingShow less