Detective Testifies Yella Beezy’s Bars Reference Murder-For-Hire
Yella Beezy's rap lyrics become the prosecution's main weapon as a detective testifies they reference paying for violence and putting money on someone's head.
Yella Beezy walked into a Dallas courtroom Friday knowing his lyrics were about to become the prosecution’s main weapon.
Detective Eric Barnes took the stand and spent hours connecting three songs to what prosecutors say is a murder-for-hire plot against MO3, who was killed in 2020.
The detective pointed specifically to “Hitters,” “Keep It in the Streets,” and “On Your Head,” claiming the tracks contained references to paying for violence and putting money on someone’s head.
According to NBC DFW, Barnes testified that these songs supported the state’s theory that Yella Beezy orchestrated the murder.
The detective’s testimony went beyond just the music.
He testified that alleged shooter Kewon White appeared on stage with Yella Beezy at a concert shortly before MO3’s death, suggesting White was trusted by the rapper.
The detective also referenced a history of conflict between the two artists, including a concert where police had to step in because they were worried about public safety.
Barnes made it clear that without cooperation from witnesses, investigators had to turn to social media and YouTube to build their case.
The defense is fighting hard to keep the lyrics out of trial, arguing that rappers use fictional characters and hyperbole as part of the genre.
They brought in an expert to testify that these are just stage personas, not confessions.
But Barnes pushed back, saying that while Yella Beezy and MO3 have stage names, they’re not playing characters.
The prosecution is building a case that treats the music as direct evidence of criminal intent, not artistic expression.
As reported by Fox 4 News, the multi-day hearing has become one of the most significant pretrial battles over whether rap lyrics can be used against an artist in court.
The next pretrial hearing is scheduled for Tuesday, July 24, with the actual trial set to begin on August 24.
