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The defense in a high-profile murder trial seeks to exclude YouTube rap videos as evidence, arguing they are irrelevant and prejudicial.
JACKSONVILLE, Fla. — In the high-profile murder trial concerning the fatal shooting of 13-year-old Prince Holland, the defense team is striving to prevent YouTube rap videos and social media content from being used as evidence, claiming that these materials are irrelevant and could unfairly prejudice the jury.
Marcel Johnson and Kentrevious Garard attended a court hearing on Friday, which could impact the evidence allowed in their forthcoming joint trial.
Holland was fatally shot in 2022 while riding in a car home from football tryouts in the Moncrief area.
According to prosecutors, the videos, which include Instagram Live feeds and YouTube footage, may link the defendants to the crime and potentially help identify the weapon used in the murder. A central point of the prosecution’s case is that these clips depict a firearm that might be the murder weapon.
“The prosecution will argue that while it might not definitively identify the murder weapon, it at least shows a gun that could have played a part in the incident,” stated the leading prosecutor.
Defense lawyers objected, stating that the videos merely show Garrard in the background while Johnson is performing, occasionally holding a gun. They asserted that the footage featured inappropriate character portrayals, consisting of racially insensitive language and gestures unrelated to the crime.
“The risk, Your Honor, is that the jury will be influenced by seeing my client use racial slurs, engage in profane language, mimic gun gestures with his hands, and brandish a weapon not implicated in this case,” explained Johnson’s defense attorney. “This doesn’t identify the actual perpetrator. Instead, it unfairly represents my client as guilty based on the perceived lifestyle he leads.”
The prosecution was unable to present the actual redacted videos in court Friday, prompting the judge to delay a ruling. He said he needs to review the edited footage carefully before deciding what may be shown to jurors.
“I don’t think I can really… until I look at the redacted video,” Judge Jeb Branham said. “Even in the absence of that, we probably have to weigh in to some degree how I think the redacted video meets with my order.”
A final decision on the admissibility of the videos is expected at a follow-up hearing scheduled for Sept. 18 at the Duval County Courthouse.