A$AP Rocky: New Video Captures Sound of Alleged Shooting, Flight from Scene

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A$AP Rocky in November 2023. - Credit:  Michael Kovac/Getty Images for LACMA
A$AP Rocky in November 2023. - Credit: Michael Kovac/Getty Images for LACMA

A judge ruled Monday that A$AP Rocky must proceed to trial on two felony gun assault charges linked to his alleged shooting of former friend A$AP Relli on a California curbside two years ago. The judge said prosecutors only had to present a “scintilla” of evidence to convince the court there’s probable cause to believe the “Praise the Lord” rapper opened fire at the corner of Selma Ave. and Vista Del Mar Ave. in Los Angeles on Nov. 6, 2021. She made her decision after prosecutors unveiled new video Monday linked to the alleged altercation.

“The court agrees with the defense that you don’t see an actual shooting on the video. Later, in another section of video, you do hear two shots,” Los Angeles County Superior Court Judge M.L. Villar said as she delivered her ruling. The judge said she further agreed with prosecutors that “tempers were heightened on both sides” during the incident. In addition to video, the judge said she considered the extensive testimony by Relli, born Terell Ephron, regarding the alleged shooting and his belief he was grazed by a bullet on his left hand. “In any event, Mr. Ephron does what appears to be a dance around the other individuals to avoid being shot. His testimony is that he was shot,” Judge Villar said.

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Rocky — the boyfriend of Rihanna who shares two children with the superstar singer — sat quietly at a defense table for his two-day hearing that started Nov. 8. He was ordered back to court Jan. 8, 2024 for his re-arraignment. “Yes, your honor,” the musician, whose legal name is Rakim Mayers, said when asked if he agreed to wait that long for his next appearance.

“A scintilla of evidence is enough. It’s a probable cause hearing. The trial is going to be very different,” Mayers’ bulldog lawyer Joe Tacopina — known for representing high-profile clients including Meek Mill, YG, and Donald Trump — said after the hearing. He suggested Relli perjured himself when he testified under oath two weeks ago that he never asked for millions of dollars in exchange for making the criminal case disappear.

“He swore under oath (that) no, he did not. That’s not going to bode well for him at trial,” Tacopina said of Ephron. He said it’s possible Mayers will testify in his own defense. “Common sense is going to prevail and we’re going to get (Mayers) through this, and he’s going to be vindicated,” Tacopina said. “The evidence we have that they don’t know about is going to be devastating — devastating.”

The new video shown publicly for the first time Monday builds on the footage played in court two weeks ago during the first half of Mayers’ preliminary hearing. While the grainy footage of the alleged shooting revealed two weeks ago was soundless and hard to make out, one of the new clips from a camera around the corner captured two loud pops with a time stamp matching the alleged shooting. The new video showed only a view of neighboring buildings. Seconds after the alleged shots are heard, a man identified by prosecutors as A$AP Rocky is seen rounding the corner and slowing down to a walk in front of the buildings.

LAPD Det. Frank Flores was the only witness Monday. He was called to authenticate the footage collected from private security cameras at four different locations. Flores testified that security footage collected from a parking garage on Argyle Ave. appeared to show a gun in Mayers’ hands when he and Relli first met face-to-face outside the W Hotel.

Under cross examination by Tacopina, Det. Flores conceded no weapons were ever recovered in the case. The detective also acknowledged the grainy video recorded at the intersection of the alleged shooting was inconclusive. “(There’s) nothing clear that shows it,” Flores testified, referring to the purported shooting. The detective tried to add that all the videos taken “collectively” tell a plausible story, but Tacopina shut him down. “I’m not asking for opinion,” Tacopina interrupted, asking again if the blurry video of the alleged gunfire clearly showed a shooting. “Nothing definitively shows,” the detective answered. The investigator said no fingerprints were found on the two shell casings allegedly found at the scene by Relli and handed over to police on Nov. 8, 2021.

Mayers, 35, is battling claims he met up with Relli outside the W Hotel, engaged in a verbal confrontation, and then opened fire after the men moved about a block away. Mayers has pleaded not guilty to two counts of assault with a semiautomatic firearm filed by the Los Angeles County District Attorney last year. He remains free on a $550,000 bond.

At the first half of the preliminary hearing on Nov. 8, Tacopina introduced the grainy video of the alleged shooting on cross-examination of Ephron. The video purportedly shows Mayers, Ephron, and two other A$AP Mob members — Illijah Ulanger, also known as A$AP Illz; and Jamel Phillips, also known as A$AP Twelvyy – engaged in some sort of quarrel. The men are tiny figures appearing mostly in a small corner of the screen. Captured by a camera across the street and beyond a parking lot, the video ends with one member of the group sprinting away and the rest scattering. “It’s a little blurry, but you can make out everybody,” Ephron testified Nov. 8.

In his full day of testimony, Ephron claimed he was the victim of an armed ambush orchestrated by the Grammy-nominated rapper. Ephron said he sent Mayers an embittered text on Oct. 28, 2021, because he believed Mayers had become “big-headed” and failed to deliver on a promise to pay funeral expenses for one of their friends. “You so fucking fake it’s sad,” the text shown on a screen in court two weeks ago read. Mayers never responded, he testified. (Under cross-examination, Ephron said he eventually learned Mayers paid for the entire funeral.)

“Don’t ever forget who introduced you to this life,” Ephron wrote in another text. He told the court he was the one who brought Mayers into the A$AP fold when they were high school students in New York.

After his texts went unanswered, Ephron said he was riding in a car with A$AP Bari, whose real name is Jabari Shelton, when he purportedly overheard Mayers talking about him on a phone call. “He said he’d beat me up, that I’m emotional,” Ephron testified. According to Ephron, Mayers finally reached out to him directly the evening of Nov. 6, 2021, with calls and texts asking where Ephron was staying during a trip to Los Angeles. They agreed to talk face to face, and Mayers allegedly showed up to their meeting flanked by Ulanger and Phillips.

Ephron testified that Mayers pulled out a firearm during their initial confrontation at the parking garage and threatened, “I’ll kill you right now.” Ephron said he dared Mayers to shoot him. “Shoot that shit. Why you brought a gun if you’re not going to use it? You don’t scare me,” he allegedly told Mayers. Ephron testified that people were walking nearby, outside the W Hotel in Hollywood, so Mayers allegedly put the gun in his waistband and started to walk away. Ephron told the court Phillips appeared to be concealing a knife.

“I was talking a bunch of shit,” Ephron said. “I was letting (Mayers) know how much he failed everybody, because nobody else was brave enough to say how they feel about this man.” Ephron said he told Mayers one of their friends was suffering from a crack addiction while another was living in the projects. “I wasn’t doing anything physically. I was just so mad. It didn’t sit well with me, and I wanted him to hear my side. I knew I was never going to see this man again,” Ephron testified. He claimed Mayers eventually turned around and fired an initial shot that “grazed” his left hand. He claimed he rushed to grab Ulanger to use him “as a shield.” He said Mayers fired two or three more times before everyone fled the scene. He said he returned later that night and found two 9mm shell casings that he photographed and gave to police.

Mayers is also fighting a lawsuit brought by Ephron alleging assault, battery, negligence, and intentional infliction of emotional distress. As first reported by Rolling Stone, the blockbuster civil complaint filed in August 2022 unmasked Ephron as the alleged victim in the shooting investigation that led to Mayers’ arrest in April 2022.

Ephron, a former A$AP Mob member, alleged Mayers “lured” him to an obscure location in Hollywood to discuss a disagreement and then fired multiple shots without warning, allegedly striking him with “bullet projectile/fragments” in his left hand.

Tacopina later claimed to Rolling Stone that his client didn’t shoot anyone and was the victim of a failed shakedown. “Rocky didn’t shoot him by any stretch,” Tacopina said, calling the assault allegation a “false scenario” at the heart of “a plain and blatant classic attempt at extortion.” The lawyer said Ephron had been badgering Mayers for money and initiated a physical altercation at the face-to-face meeting.

“He’s a failed associate — ex-associate — of Rocky’s, and he’s jealous,” Tacopina said of Ephron. “He was trying to get money from Rocky. He wanted Rocky to support him. He made it clear. There were repeated attempts where he tried to ask for money in lieu of not causing problems for Rocky. That’s what he said. We have all this memorialized in text messages and otherwise, so it’s an extortion.”

Ephron’s former civil lawyers Jamal Tooson and Brian Hurwitz previously told Rolling Stone that the “merits” of the case against Mayers were “thoroughly investigated by both law enforcement and the Los Angeles District Attorney prior to the decision to not only arrest A$AP Rocky but charge him.” Ephron’s new lawyer on the civil case is Camille Vasquez, the attorney who represented Johnny Depp in his defamation trial against ex-wife Amber Heard. Vasquez and Ephron filed a second civil complaint against Mayers in September, alleging he and Tacopina defamed Ephron with the extortion allegation.

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