Skip to content
Search

Young Dolph Shooter Pleads Guilty, Concluding Rapper’s Murder Case

Cornelius Smith Jr., who previously admitted to shooting the rapper at a co-defendant's trial, sentenced to 20 years in prison

Young Dolph Shooter Pleads Guilty, Concluding Rapper’s Murder Case

EW YORK, NEW YORK - OCTOBER 30: Young Dolph performs during Rolling Loud New York 2021 at Citi Field on October 30, 2021 in New York City.

(Photo by Jason Mendez/Getty Images)

The Tennessee man who previously admitted to shooting Young Dolph pleaded guilty Friday to charges stemming from the rapper’s 2021 death, bringing the murder case to its conclusion.

Cornelius Smith Jr. pleaded guilty to second-degree murder in a plea deal with Memphis prosecutors, nearly two years after Smith admitted on the witness stand that he and co-defendant Justin Johnson shot Young Dolph during a daytime ambush at a Memphis bakery; Smith served as the main witness at the trial of Johnson, who was later convicted and sentenced to life in prison.


As part of the plea deal, Smith was sentenced to 20 years in prison; Smith previously faced charges of first-degree murder, attempted first-degree murder, convicted felon in possession of a firearm, and employment of a firearm during the commission of a dangerous felony, but those charges were dropped with the plea deal.

Smith also testified at the trial of Hernandez Govan, the alleged mastermind of the Young Dolph shooting; Govan was acquitted of first-degree murder and conspiracy to commit first-degree murder following a trial in August 2025.

One other person allegedly involved in the shooting, Justin Johnson’s brother Jemarcus Johnson, previously pleaded guilty to three counts of accessory after the fact and sentenced to six years of diversion and community service. With Smith’s plea deal, the case against all four people charged in Young Dolph’s murder has come to a close.

“Young Dolph was a beloved member of this community, his death a tragedy, his murder an outrage,” District Attorney General Steve Mulroy said in a statement Friday. “We’re glad to finally have this last part of the case resolved. The sentence properly reflects the gravity of the offense while giving due consideration to the cooperation this defendant provided. We hope this resolution can give Dolph’s family some sense of closure.”

“Smith cooperated in the prosecution and testified that he and Justin Johnson killed Dolph as part of a planned gang-related hit,” Deputy DA Paul Hagerman said in a statement.

“Johnson was convicted as charged of all charges; his appeal has been heard and denied, and he is now serving a sentence in excess of life imprisonment. Today, Smith received a 20-year sentence to be served without any chance of early release and without any parole. Smith’s participation in this crime is inexcusable, but Smith owned up to his crime, told the truth in court despite fear of retribution and threats, and has now accepted responsibility and received this long prison sentence. His cooperation was essential to the State’s case, and this was taken into consideration in this resolution.”

Hagerman added, “As a final note, Dolph was here in Memphis because it was his home, but he was also here to do what had become a tradition for him — a turkey giveaway for his neighborhood. Dolph believed in this place, he believed in his people, and he loved his family. His story is, and has always been, bigger than his death.”

More Stories

Model Suing Kanye West Alleges Rapper’s Behavior on Music Video Set ‘Just Felt Wrong’

Kanye West.

Bellocqimages/Bauer-Griffin/GC Images

Model Suing Kanye West Alleges Rapper’s Behavior on Music Video Set ‘Just Felt Wrong’

Model Jennifer An, who rose to prominence as a finalist on the 2009 season of America’s Next Top Model, is speaking out against Kanye West in a new interview with the BBC. In 2024, she filed a civil suit against the rapper describing how he allegedly choked her and used his fingers to simulate oral sex on her during a shoot for La Roux’s “In for the Kill” music video in 2010. The footage was not included in the final cut. “I feel like he was like trying to touch as much as he could,” she told the news network.

Keep ReadingShow less
Taylor Swift and Haim Sisters Sport ‘Stevie Knicks’ Shirts at Knicks Final Game

Taylor Swift at Game 4 of the 2026 NBA Finals between the San Antonio Spurs and the New York Knicks on June 10, 2026 in New York City.

Dustin Satloff/Getty Images

Taylor Swift and Haim Sisters Sport ‘Stevie Knicks’ Shirts at Knicks Final Game

Taylor Swift, who’s been spotted sitting courtside at Knicks games in the past, showed her support for New York’s team while wearing a “Stevie Knicks” tee alongside Alana and Este Haim when she arrived at Game 4 of the NBA Finals on Wednesday. The Knicks are playing against the San Antonio Spurs.

Swift was often seen at Knicks games in the mid 2010s. More recently, the singer and her football-playing fiancé, Travis Kelce, were spotted sitting courtside at the Eastern Conference Finals in May when the Knicks were playing the Cleveland Cavaliers.

Keep ReadingShow less
Watch Green Day Clown on and Inspire a Band in ‘Nimrods’ Movie Trailer

Green Day

Inaugural Entertainment/Live Nation Studios

Watch Green Day Clown on and Inspire a Band in ‘Nimrods’ Movie Trailer

They could be the “Anal O.G. Dogs” or they could be the “Analog Dogs,” but either way doesn’t matter since these teens got the improbable opportunity to open for Green Day on New Year’s Eve based on a demo tape. That’s the gist of the trailer for Nimrods: A Green Day Comedy, a road-trip movie in which not everything goes smoothly. It opens Aug. 14. Filmmaker Lee Kirk, who wrote and directed the picture, based the story on Green Day’s salad days when they toured in a van before Dookie made them world famous.

“It’s about the experience that Green Day had on the road in the early days of more of a DIY spirit,” Armstrong told The Hollywood Reporter last September when the film premiered with the title New Years Rev at the Tribeca Film Festival. “We played anywhere and everywhere, and a lot of shows would get shut down because the cops would come. But there’s also the mud fight that happened at Woodstock. Lee did a great job of incorporating all of those elements that we’ve had in the past.”

Keep ReadingShow less
Billy Ray Cyrus Reveals He Suffered Temporary Vocal Paralysis After a Near-Fatal Battle With Sepsis

Billy Ray Cyrus Reveals He Suffered Temporary Vocal Paralysis After a Near-Fatal Battle With Sepsis

Billy Ray Cyrus has a lot to celebrate with his new album, The Hill, arriving on June 16, but he had other hills to conquer, including a health crisis, before reaching this point. In a new interview, he revealed that he suffered a near-fatal experience with sepsis in 2024. He noted how the health crisis led to a subsequent diagnosis of temporary vocal paralysis.

In his interview with People, Cyrus didn’t disclose too many details about the health scare, but said he was diagnosed with the condition back in 2024 and consequently faced vocal paralysis, describing the bout as a “very broken moment of my life.” He called his bounce-back a “miracle” crediting his grandson Bear (the 5-year-old son of Braison Cyrus) for helping him see the light in a dark time.

Keep ReadingShow less
Jack White Previews New Album ‘Frozen Charlotte’ With Latest Single ‘Dollar Bill’

Jack White

David James Swanson*

Jack White Previews New Album ‘Frozen Charlotte’ With Latest Single ‘Dollar Bill’

Jack White is back in album mode. The musician has shared the new single “Dollar Bill” from his upcoming seventh studio album, Frozen Charlotte, out Friday, July 10.

“You can’t control me/Unless you owe me/And you don’t own me/Unless I blow you,” White shouts on “Dollar Bill” just after the track launches into an erratic, bluesy guitar solo. The single is the third track to be shared as a preview for the record, following “Derecho Demonico” and “G.O.D. and the Broken Ribs,” both released earlier this year.

Keep ReadingShow less