Derrick Groves Is Not Going Back To [Prison]
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00:00Tonight, officials say the breakout at a New Orleans jail was an inside job,
00:07arresting jail maintenance worker Sterling Williams.
00:10They say he turned off the water to this cell, enabling 10 inmates to escape through the wall.
00:16According to the arrest affidavit, Williams told investigators one of the fugitives told him to turn off the water,
00:22threatening to shank him if he didn't comply.
00:24An inmate also tried to take Williams' phone, according to the document.
00:28He intended to assist these individuals to leave that facility.
00:32The sheriff's office says a total of three jail employees are on leave without pay.
00:37The police chief today with this message for anyone who aids the escapees.
00:42If they participate willfully and knowingly, they are going to be charged with serious felonies.
00:49Six fugitives are still on the run, including a convicted killer.
00:53Police say four have been recaptured and arrested, all in New Orleans.
00:57The latest on Monday night, 21-year-old Gary Price.
01:01The sheriff who oversees the jail has been under fire for the response.
01:05Today, she apologized.
01:07I take full accountability for this failure.
01:10According to the jail's timeline, guards didn't notice the inmates were missing for more than seven hours after their escape.
01:17The public wasn't notified for more than 10 hours.
01:19Look, if this jailbreak happened at one, the public should have known at 105.
01:24The public is your best friend.
01:27New Orleans District Attorney Jason Williams prosecuted the convicted killer now on the loose.
01:32He says the sheriff's response puts the public at risk.
01:36Every single day that these men are at large, the public is in danger.
01:42And look, y'all already know me.
01:44You already know.
01:45On this channel, we hold racist institutions accountable because if we don't, who will?
01:49But before I start with this video, if you don't like black people, black issues, black talks, get to stepping.
01:56And I can't even lie.
01:57I have to be 100.
01:58Everything that's going on in New Orleans.
02:00It reminds me of a movie called Set It Off.
02:03Tell me I'm lying.
02:04But check this out.
02:06Shortly after the Annabelle doll was displayed at a paranormal event in New Orleans, a series of unusual incidents occurred, including a prison break and a fire at a historic plantation.
02:16Some individuals and media outlets speculated that the Annabelle doll might have been responsible for these events, attributing them to the doll's alleged paranormal properties and reputation for chaos.
02:29Make that make sense.
02:30And these people told them, whatever you do, do not remove that doll from that museum in Connecticut.
02:35And guess what?
02:36We got a racist museum in North Carolina completely destroyed.
02:40Then you have sundown towns in Kentucky completely wiped out by tornadoes.
02:45I told y'all the game is cold.
02:46Then I said, wait, let me do my research on these inmates.
02:49And one inmate story stood out to me.
02:52Derek Groves.
02:53But wait, this is a warning.
02:54I'm about to show y'all how evil the prison system and these politicians are in Louisiana.
03:00But first, here's a quick history lesson on OPP.
03:04Well, history books.
03:05Come here, let me stretch y'all out right fast.
03:07Because this book would be New Orleans Hood History on the New Orleans City Jail, a.k.a.
03:12Orleans Parish Prison.
03:14Now, Orleans Parish Prison was originally built in 1895.
03:19And of course, back then, it was built for the slaves.
03:21Now, after slavery, it still had slaves in there, but at least they had white people as well.
03:25Back then, it was located in the Treme area of New Orleans.
03:29In the 1930s, they moved OPP over to Tulane and Broad, which way it began its reputation as one of the worst city jails in the country.
03:37In 2005, OPP got flooded and all the prisoners had to be removed and the jail was no longer operable.
03:43Fortunately, they had to build a New Orleans Parish prison, which they built on Perdido Street.
03:48Unfortunately, they still having the same problems they was having before the new jail was built because they understaffed and they still mistreating the prisoners.
03:56In 2022, you can see the prisoners here protesting because they're not eating and getting their medicine.
04:01And look, for a lot of people that don't know, you cannot trust these articles in Louisiana.
04:05They're going to put what they want to put in these articles.
04:07They're going to tell you the first half, go be true, but they ain't going to tell you why someone did what they did because they don't want you to connect the dots.
04:15They don't want you to put the puzzle, put the pieces of the puzzle together.
04:19So check this out.
04:20And shout out to Facebook, man, because Facebook will tell you everything.
04:23You ain't going to learn about this in these news articles.
04:25People on Facebook, they can find anything, bro, and connect the dots.
04:30So check this out.
04:33Derrick Groves, a 27-year-old New Orleans native who was convicted of two counts of second-degree murder for a fatal Mardi Gras shooting in 2018.
04:41He escaped from a New Orleans parish jail on May 16, 2025, along with nine other inmates and remains at large.
04:49Groves was found guilty of murdering Jamal Robinson and Byron Jackson, and his escape has raised concerns about public safety and jail security.
04:57A $20,000 reward has been offered for information leading to his capture.
05:03Make that make sense.
05:04And let me tell y'all something.
05:05For the people who just trust anything these articles say or for the people that put a lot of trust in cops, look, you cannot trust Louisiana cops.
05:14They're going to tell you $20,000.
05:15If you're from Louisiana and you're black, trust me, they're not giving you no goddamn $20,000.
05:21If they give it to you, it's not going to be $20,000.
05:24They're going to give you the runaround because they think people in Louisiana are slow.
05:28They think you are dumb, so they're going to say $20,000 to make you tell on somebody.
05:33And I'm about to tell you why he did what he did, but they're going to offer you $20,000.
05:38Even if they give you money, it might be like $3,000.
05:41If they give you that, and if you know, you know.
05:44They're not going to tell you everything to put the pieces together, to connect the dots.
05:49So sometimes you've got to go to Facebook, sometimes you've got to go to Instagram, sometimes you've got to go to TikTok and find out the information because they don't want you to connect all these dots and understand why Derrick Groves did what he did.
06:01Check this out.
06:03A New Orleans police unaligned Derrick Groves' grandmother almost 30 years ago.
06:08Make that make sense.
06:09So basically, he couldn't get to the cop because the cop was already in prison.
06:12The cop that set it up, he couldn't get to him.
06:15So guess what he did?
06:16He went to his family members and got them.
06:18And look, I don't condone violence, but make that make sense.
06:22And I ran across something.
06:23It's one of his family members.
06:25I don't know if it's Auntie or if it's his mother, but they had an article.
06:28Her name is Jasmine Groves.
06:30She wrote an article back in 2020.
06:32And I'm going to put that article in the description.
06:34I really need y'all to go read that and you will find out how New Orleans police really are.
06:40That's the truth.
06:41They all crooked.
06:42But I told y'all, these people are always on the same team.
06:46But the rabbit hole gets even deeper.
06:48Check this out.
06:49And now we move on to the cop that had his grandmother murdered, Lynn Davis.
06:54Check this out.
06:56And this article is by NOLA.com.
06:58It was published January the 7th, 2025.
07:01Lynn Davis, New Orleans corrupt cop, asked Judge to reinstate his death sentence.
07:06Lynn Davis, a notoriously corrupt New Orleans police officer whose federal death sentence for the 1994 murder of Kim Groves was commuted last month to life in prison by President Joe Biden.
07:19Davis is asking a judge to reinstate the death penalty that a jury leveled against him nearly three decades ago.
07:25In his filing, Davis wrote that he has always maintained his innocence and argued that the federal court had no jurisdiction to try him for civil rights offenses.
07:36Keeping his death sentence would help draw attention to the overwhelming misconduct he claims.
07:42Prosecutors committed against him.
07:43Davis added, make that make sense.
07:45So this dude, he feels like by keeping his death sentence that people will actually care about his case, like people will actually look into his case and help him.
07:56Look, Lynn Davis, a.k.a.
07:57Alonzo, it's time to go home.
08:00Nobody care about you, brother, because you was a real demon.
08:04Check this out.
08:04A patrol officer known as the Desire Terrorist, Davis, for years, led a small ring of New Orleans officers.
08:11Remember that part?
08:12He led officers so it wouldn't just him.
08:14Remember that part is so important.
08:17He led officers pushing cocaine and providing a cover to drug dealers, often inciting violence and falsifying evidence, according to prosecutors.
08:26He was convicted in 1996 for ordering the murder of Kim Groves, a 32 year old mother of three who had accused Davis and his partner of brutally beating a young boy in the neighborhood.
08:37Make that make sense.
08:38And four trials.
08:39It took them four trials to convict, to find Derrick Groves guilty because those cops knew what he did, but they had to get their story together.
08:48I tell you all the time, all these cops, politicians, judges, they all on the same team.
08:54They might have a fall guy.
08:55And Lynn Davis was the fall guy.
08:57Actually, they were setting him up.
08:59They don't always set up the black cop.
09:01They were setting him up the whole time.
09:03He was the only one.
09:04I think he was the only one that went to prison for all this stuff while they were setting him up.
09:10And you have to realize, like I told you, they all on the same team, especially in Louisiana.
09:15They go stick together.
09:16That's why I don't feel bad when my people are running from the cops, because guess what?
09:21They go stick with they people.
09:23I'm going to always stick with my people.
09:24But you have to realize something.
09:26The prisons in Louisiana are still like plantations.
09:30If you escape those slave catches coming for you, because you have to realize they make money from every black man that's in prison.
09:37They get millions and thousands and billions of dollars.
09:40That's why in Louisiana, they want to keep building these prisons because they get money.
09:44They get easy money.
09:45They can eat crawfish.
09:46They can chill.
09:47They can play bingo.
09:49They can go golf.
09:50They can go play baseball.
09:51Go watch LSU football and not worry because they locking Negroes up.
09:56That's why I always say, man, you got to be careful with these laws in the South.
10:00Of course, you can get a gun now with no paper on it, because they want you at 18 to get a gun with no paper on it.
10:06And you unallowed somebody.
10:07Guess what?
10:08You going to Angola.
10:09They getting paid.
10:10It's just that simple.
10:11But look, when it gets real, they don't want you to escape the plantation.
10:15But when it gets real, they will leave you high and dry.
10:19Run the tape.
10:20Motherfuckers think being in prison is the worst thing, Gabba.
10:22Now imagine being in prison while a motherfucking hurricane is happening.
10:25Now this is Paris Prison, where 517 inmates vanished.
10:28In 2005, Hurricane Katrina struck New Orleans.
10:30Inmates was left to dry.
10:31Chest high water trapped in a seal.
10:32And the New Orleans men ordered a mandatory evacuation, but the sheriff said he's not doing that shit.
10:36He said we're going to keep the prisoners where they belong.
10:37And the sheriff said they're going to be good because they got backup generators just in case the power go down.
10:41And I got to thinking, what the fuck backup generators going to do if the whole prison is getting flooded with water?
10:44They was housing 6,500 inmates at the time the storm hit.
10:47The prison ended up losing power shortly after the storm made landfall.
10:50And then all the cells on the first floor started flooding.
10:51That's when the sheriff asked for help evacuating the prison.
10:53It took them 7 days to evacuate the whole prison.
10:55The prisoners said it felt like there was abandoned and left to be unalived.
10:58And while there was rain to be evacuated, they were stuck in the prison with no water, no food, no power.
11:02Well actually, they were stuck around a lot of water, but that water was dirty, undrakeable water.
11:05And the sheriff said the prisoners is lying and it wasn't that bad, but the prisoners said it was literally bodies floating around in the water.
11:09They said when the inmates tried to escape to save their life, the guards started to shoot them.
11:12And I don't think the prisoners is lying.
11:14Because it was bad on the outside.
11:15Like people was literally getting unalived from the storm and they had freedom.
11:17So I know the motherfuckers who was stuck in the prison got unalived.
11:20And if they didn't get unalived by the guards, them being stuck inside a prison while a hurricane is happening most definitely will.
11:24And I have to really calm down when I say this.
11:26I have to really calm down because it's not adding up.
11:29It's not making sense.
11:31They so eager to catch these black men.
11:33And look, I don't condone violence.
11:35If you hurt someone innocent, if you took advantage of somebody, I don't condone it.
11:39But in the same sentence, where's that same energy for these racist Louisiana cops when they murdered Ronald Green?
11:46This is an innocent man.
11:47They murdered him on video.
11:48This man was begging for his life.
11:50This man told the cops, I'm your brother.
11:52And they still murdered him on video.
11:56Still on video.
11:57These cops got no prison time.
11:59It was no outrage.
12:00So where is that same energy?
12:02Look, you can offer me 20K.
12:04You can offer me 40K.
12:05You can offer me 60K.
12:06I will never help a slave catcher because when it's time to hold their people accountable, they never do.
12:13I'm out.
12:14But before I go, in the words of Jenny, run, Forrest, run.
12:19Man, they never go find Derrick.
12:21He a man on a mission.