Trump’s Hip-Hop Mercy Tour Hits NBA YoungBoy
President Donald Trump granted a full pardon Wednesday to platinum-selling rapper Kentrell Gaulden, known professionally as NBA YoungBoy. The clemency fully absolves the 25-year-old of federal convictions for possessing a firearm as a convicted felon and alleged involvement in a prescription-drug fraud ring.
Gaulden pleaded guilty in 2024 and drew a 23-month sentence in federal prison in Utah. He was released in March 2025 after credit for time served and completed a period of home confinement in April.
In an Instagram Story, Gaulden wrote, “I want to thank President Trump for granting me a pardon and giving me the opportunity to keep building — as a man, as a father, and as an artist. This moment means a lot. It opens the door to a future I’ve worked hard for, and I am fully prepared to step into this.”
The pardon follows Trump’s January 2021 clemency actions in the hip-hop community, when he pardoned Lil Wayne (Dwayne Michael Carter Jr.) after a federal firearm conviction and commuted Kodak Black’s (Bill Kapri) sentence for making false statements during a gun purchase.
Trump also commuted Larry Hoover’s federal life sentence; that move does not affect his 150-to-200-year state term in Illinois, which he must still serve. His next state parole hearing is later this year, with eligibility in October 2062.
Fans flooded social media with #FreeYoungBoy, while advocates warned that individual pardons highlight the need for broader criminal-justice reform.
Gaulden pleaded guilty in 2024 and drew a 23-month sentence in federal prison in Utah. He was released in March 2025 after credit for time served and completed a period of home confinement in April.
In an Instagram Story, Gaulden wrote, “I want to thank President Trump for granting me a pardon and giving me the opportunity to keep building — as a man, as a father, and as an artist. This moment means a lot. It opens the door to a future I’ve worked hard for, and I am fully prepared to step into this.”
Trump also commuted Larry Hoover’s federal life sentence; that move does not affect his 150-to-200-year state term in Illinois, which he must still serve. His next state parole hearing is later this year, with eligibility in October 2062.
Fans flooded social media with #FreeYoungBoy, while advocates warned that individual pardons highlight the need for broader criminal-justice reform.
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