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'''Lil’ Kim''' (born July 11, 1974) is an American rapper, songwriter and actress known for her work with Junior M.A.F.I.A. and her solo albums ''Hard Core'' and ''The Notorious K.I.M.'' In July 2005 she began serving a federal sentence for perjury and conspiracy after lying to a grand jury about a 2001 shooting outside a New York City radio station. She served about ten months in custody before entering home confinement. <ref name="DOJ">U.S. Department of Justice. “Lil’ Kim Sentenced to Prison for Perjury.” July 6, 2005. https://www.justice.gov</ref>
{{Infobox Person
|name = Kimberly Denise Jones (Lil' Kim)
|birth_date = July 11, 1974
|birth_place = Brooklyn, New York
|charges = Perjury, Conspiracy
|sentence = 1 year and 1 day
|facility = FDC Philadelphia
|status = Released
}}


== Early life and career ==
'''Kimberly Denise Jones''' (born July 11, 1974), known professionally as '''Lil' Kim''', is an American rapper, songwriter, and actress who did roughly ten months in federal prison. She was convicted of perjury and conspiracy for lying to a federal grand jury about a 2001 shooting outside a New York radio station.<ref name="biography-kim">Biography.com, "Lil' Kim: Biography, Rapper, Musician," https://www.biography.com/musicians/lil-kim.</ref>  
Kimberly Denise Jones was born in Brooklyn, New York. She grew up in Bedford-Stuyvesant and attended Brooklyn College Academy. <ref name="Wiki">Wikipedia. “Lil’ Kim.” https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lil%27_Kim</ref> At age 17 she met Christopher Wallace (The Notorious B.I.G.), who helped mentor her and brought her into the hip-hop group Junior M.A.F.I.A. The group’s 1995 debut album ''Conspiracy'' introduced her sharp delivery and confident style. Her verse on “Players Anthem” helped establish her identity as a standout figure.


In 1996 she released her first solo album, ''Hard Core'', which reached the top 15 on the Billboard 200 and was noted for explicit lyrics, a bold persona and collaborations with major producers. <ref name="Wiki" /> Through the late 1990s and early 2000s she released multiple albums, toured internationally and appeared on high-profile remixes and features. She also worked in fashion, modeling projects and film.
As a pioneering hip-hop figure, she rose to fame with the Junior M.A.F.I.A. collective and achieved multiplatinum success as a solo artist. In March 2005, a jury convicted her of three counts of perjury and one count of conspiracy. She'd lied to protect her manager and bodyguard, who were present at the shooting.<ref name="wapo-sentence">Washington Post, "Lil' Kim Gets 1 Year, Fine For Perjury," July 7, 2005, https://www.washingtonpost.com/archive/lifestyle/2005/07/07/lil-kim-gets-1-year-fine-for-perjury/cb8a60ef-526a-4eac-a93f-22e232262340/.</ref> The sentence came down to one year and one day in federal prison, plus a $50,000 fine. This made her one of the first high-profile female rappers to serve time in a federal prison.<ref name="today-prison">Today, "Lil' Kim begins serving her prison sentence," September 2005, https://www.today.com/popculture/lil-kim-begins-serving-her-prison-sentence-wbna9402781.</ref>


Her rise included commercial success and public feuds, as well as close professional and personal ties to The Notorious B.I.G. After his death in 1997 she managed her career independently, appearing in major collaborations including “Lady Marmalade,” which won a Grammy Award in 2002. <ref name="Grammy">Grammy.com. “44th Grammy Awards Winners.” https://www.grammy.com</ref> Her public image combined glamour, toughness and creative influence across rap, fashion and celebrity culture.
She got out in July 2006 and never stopped making music.


== Federal offense and prosecution ==
== Summary ==
On January 19, 2001, a gunfight broke out outside the offices of radio station WQHT-FM (“Hot 97”) in Manhattan. Several individuals connected to Lil’ Kim’s entourage and to rival rapper Foxy Brown were involved. When a federal grand jury later investigated the shooting, prosecutors alleged that Lil’ Kim lied under oath about the involvement of members of her entourage and her knowledge of who carried weapons. <ref name="NYT">The New York Times. “Lil’ Kim Convicted of Perjury.” March 17, 2005. https://www.nytimes.com</ref>


In March 2005 a jury found her guilty of three counts of perjury and one count of conspiracy for making false statements during the investigation. Co-defendant Damien Butler, a longtime friend, testified that he was present with armed individuals during the confrontation. <ref name="NYT" /> Prosecutors argued that Lil’ Kim’s false testimony “obstructed justice” and undermined a federal investigation.
The perjury conviction traced back to a federal grand jury investigating a February 2001 shooting outside Hot 97, a New York radio station. Members of Lil' Kim's crew had confronted Capone-N-Noreaga over a song with insults aimed at her. The situation escalated fast. Shots went off, and one person got hurt.


On July 6, 2005, U.S. District Judge Gerard Lynch sentenced her to twelve months and one day in prison, three years of supervised release and a $50,000 fine. <ref name="DOJ" /> The sentence length reflected the statutory requirement for a term of at least one year to trigger federal good-conduct time credits. She surrendered later that month.
When prosecutors called her to testify, Lil' Kim denied her manager Damion Butler and bodyguard Suif Jackson were there. Problem was, surveillance footage showed both men clearly present at the scene.<ref name="cnn-sentence">CNN, "A year and a day for Lil' Kim," July 7, 2005, https://www.cnn.com/2005/LAW/07/07/ctv.lilkim/.</ref>


== Incarceration and prison experience ==
The case sparked serious debate in hip-hop circles. It raised questions about the "stop snitching" code that kept people from working with law enforcement and whether she deserved prosecution for protecting her team. Prosecutors said lying to a grand jury damages the whole justice system, regardless of why you're doing it. Supporters countered that she was getting punished simply for loyalty. The one-year sentence was nowhere near the 20-year maximum she faced, but it sent a powerful message: grand jury perjury has real teeth.<ref name="prison-direct">The Prison Direct, "Why Did Lil Kim Go to Prison," https://theprisondirect.com/why-did-lil-kim-go-to-prison/.</ref>
Lil’ Kim reported to federal custody on July 25, 2005. <ref name="CNN">CNN. “Lil’ Kim reports to federal prison.” July 25, 2005. https://www.cnn.com</ref> She initially entered the Federal Detention Center in Philadelphia. She later transferred to the federal women’s facility at [[FCI_Danbury_(low-security)|FCI Danbury]], where she served the bulk of her time.


At Danbury she participated in required education and work programs and lived in dormitory-style housing. Reports at the time described her holding typical inmate jobs, taking courses that supported re-entry and remaining in contact with family through monitored communications. Her management team issued periodic updates to fans about her adjustment to prison routines, which included early wake-ups, roll calls and structured movement.
She became one of the first major female rappers to actually serve prison time, a distinction that drew enormous media attention and deepened her controversial reputation. Her incarceration didn't kill her career. She dropped her fourth studio album while locked up and kept recording after release.<ref name="crime-museum">Crime Museum, "Lil Kim," https://www.crimemuseum.org/crime-library/celebrity-mugshots/lil-kim/.</ref>


Kim earned good-conduct time and was released after ten months on July 3, 2006. <ref name="Billboard">Billboard. “Lil’ Kim Released from Prison.” July 3, 2006. https://www.billboard.com</ref> She then completed thirty days of home confinement followed by supervised release.
== Background ==


== Life after release ==
=== Early Life and Rise to Fame ===
After release Lil’ Kim returned to the studio and appeared in multiple events tied to her comeback. She released mixtapes, launched tours and continued to collaborate with artists in hip-hop and R&B. Her later music emphasized independence, resilience and reflections on her legal experience.


She also appeared in television projects, fashion events and social-activism projects. Media outlets continued to cover her influence on style and her legacy as a pioneering female rapper. Interviews following her release focused on accountability, the impact of prison on her perspective and the pressures of being a public figure.
Kimberly Denise Jones was born on July 11, 1974, in Brooklyn, New York. Her childhood was rough. Her parents split when she was small, and she dealt with homelessness during her teenage years. She honed her rapping and took the stage name "Lil' Kim."<ref name="wiki-kim">Wikipedia, "Lil Kim," https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lil_Kim</ref>


In the years after her sentence, Lil’ Kim navigated business disputes, new music projects and occasional legal or financial issues. Despite these challenges, she maintained a consistent role as one of the foundational women in hip-hop and continued performing internationally.
By the mid-1990s, she'd become a prominent member of Junior M.A.F.I.A., a rap collective assembled by The Notorious B.I.G. (Christopher Wallace). Her explicit lyrics and provocative image stood out in the male-dominated hip-hop world, and she was one of the group's most visible members.<ref name="hip-hop-scriptures">Hip Hop Scriptures, "Lil Kim Biography," https://www.hiphopscriptures.com/lilkim.</ref>


== Notable associates and related cases ==
=== Solo Career ===
* The Notorious B.I.G. – collaborator and early mentor.
 
* Junior M.A.F.I.A. the group that launched her recording career.
After Junior M.A.F.I.A.'s success, Lil' Kim launched a solo career with the 1996 album "Hard Core," which went double platinum. That album established her as a major force in hip-hop. She was known for sexually explicit lyrics and a fashion-forward image. She became one of the best-selling female rappers of all time and shaped the work of countless artists who came later.<ref name="wiki-kim" />
* Foxy Brown – rival involved indirectly in the events surrounding the 2001 Hot 97 incident.
 
Her follow-up albums "The Notorious K.I.M." (2000) and "La Bella Mafia" (2003) sold well and solidified her as a hip-hop icon. But her career wasn't without drama. She had feuds with other artists, particularly with rapper Foxy Brown. That rivalry would indirectly spark the incident leading to her perjury conviction.<ref name="billboard-sentence">Billboard, "Lil' Kim Sentenced To A Year In Prison," July 2005, https://www.billboard.com/music/music-news/lil-kim-sentenced-to-a-year-in-prison-62177/.</ref>
 
=== The Hot 97 Shooting ===
 
February 25, 2001. Lil' Kim and her entourage ran into members of Capone-N-Noreaga outside Hot 97, a popular New York hip-hop radio station. The meeting was tense from the start. They'd released a song called "Bang, Bang" that included disparaging lyrics about Lil' Kim from rival Foxy Brown.<ref name="cnn-sentence" />
 
Things went south quickly. Shots were fired, and one person ended up injured. Law enforcement jumped in, and a federal grand jury was convened to hear what happened that day.<ref name="today-convicted">Today, "Lil' Kim convicted of perjury," March 2005, https://www.today.com/popculture/lil-kim-convicted-perjury-wbna7222867.</ref>
 
== Indictment, Prosecution, and Sentencing ==
 
=== Grand Jury Testimony ===
 
Before the federal grand jury investigating the shooting, Lil' Kim testified under oath. She denied that her manager Damion Butler and bodyguard Suif Jackson were at the scene. That was false. Security footage from the station clearly showed both men present during the confrontation. Prosecutors believed she lied to shield them from prosecution.<ref name="cnn-sentence" />
 
Both Butler and Jackson faced charges related to the shooting. Lil' Kim's false testimony became the foundation for her perjury charges.<ref name="today-convicted" />
 
=== Trial and Conviction ===
 
She was charged with perjury and conspiracy for providing false grand jury testimony. She pled not guilty and went to trial in federal court in Manhattan. March 2005 brought the verdict: guilty on three counts of perjury and one count of conspiracy. One obstruction of justice charge didn't stick.<ref name="today-convicted" />
 
This conviction put Lil' Kim among the most prominent hip-hop figures convicted of a federal crime tied to "stop snitching" culture. That culture discouraged cooperation with law enforcement.<ref name="voa-sentence">Voice of America, "Rapper Lil Kim Sentenced to 1 Year Prison Term," July 9, 2005, https://www.voanews.com/a/a-13-2005-07-09-voa35/307062.html.</ref>
 
=== Sentencing ===
 
July 6, 2005 came the sentence: one year and one day in federal prison plus a $50,000 fine. This was well below the 20-year maximum and lower than the nearly three-year sentence prosecutors had asked for. The judge considered her clean record and charity work but stressed how serious it is to lie to a grand jury.<ref name="wapo-sentence" />
 
The one year and one day (not exactly one year) mattered for a specific reason. Federal law allows good time credit that can reduce actual time served by roughly 15%, but only for sentences exceeding one year.<ref name="billboard-sentence" />
 
== Prison Experience ==
 
Lil' Kim reported to the Federal Detention Center in Philadelphia on September 19, 2005. Few high-profile female rappers had ever served time in federal prison, so the media coverage was intense.<ref name="today-prison" />
 
While she was inside, her fourth studio album, "The Naked Truth," came out. Critics liked it, proving her career could survive imprisonment. BET also premiered "Lil' Kim: Countdown to Lockdown," a reality series filmed before she reported. The premiere was BET's highest-rated at the time, pulling 1.9 million viewers.<ref name="wiki-kim" />
 
She served around ten months thanks to good time credit for sentences over one year. On July 3, 2006, she was released from federal custody.<ref name="wiki-kim" />
 
== Post-Release Career ==
 
After getting out, Lil' Kim went back to music. She performed, recorded, and stayed visible in entertainment. She never quite hit the commercial peaks of the late 1990s and early 2000s, but she kept her fanbase loyal and kept influencing hip-hop culture. New music, reality TV appearances, and regular industry visibility followed.<ref name="wiki-kim" />
 
Her prison time became part of her public image. It showed her loyalty to her team and her willingness to face consequences rather than flip on associates. Hip-hop culture valued that narrative, though critics pointed out that perjury is a serious crime that harms the justice system.<ref name="prison-direct" />
 
== Public Statements and Positions ==
 
Throughout prosecution and after, Lil' Kim insisted she didn't intend to block justice and that her testimony reflected what she actually remembered. Her supporters saw her conviction as punishment for loyalty, not for any real criminal behavior.
 
The "stop snitching" culture debate often used her case as its example. She became a symbol of the clash between street codes against cooperating with police and the legal duty to testify truthfully under oath.
 
Since release, she's discussed her prison experience in interviews and pointed to it as proof of her resilience and authenticity as an artist who'd faced real consequences for her choices.<ref name="crime-museum" />
 
== Terminology ==
 
* '''Perjury''': Lying under oath. This can happen before a grand jury, in court, or in other official proceedings.
 
* '''Conspiracy''': An agreement between two or more people to commit a crime or reach a legal goal through illegal means.
 
* '''Grand Jury''': A group of citizens who review evidence presented by prosecutors and decide whether to issue indictments.
 
* '''Good Time Credit''': A reduction in a prison sentence for good behavior. Federal law makes it available for sentences longer than one year.
 
== See also ==
 
* [[Fat_Joe|Fat Joe]]
* [[Ja_Rule|Ja Rule]]
* [[Prison_Consultants|Prison Consultants]]
 
== Frequently Asked Questions ==
{{FAQSection/Start}}
{{FAQ|question=Why did Lil' Kim go to prison?|answer=Lil' Kim was convicted of perjury and conspiracy for lying to a federal grand jury about a 2001 shooting outside Hot 97 radio station.}}
{{FAQ|question=How long was Lil' Kim's sentence?|answer=Lil' Kim was sentenced to 1 year and 1 day in federal prison and served approximately 10 months.}}
{{FAQ|question=Where did Lil' Kim serve her sentence?|answer=Lil' Kim served her sentence at the Federal Detention Center in Philadelphia.}}
{{FAQ|question=What did Lil' Kim lie about?|answer=She denied that her manager and bodyguard were present at a shooting, claims disproved by surveillance footage.}}
{{FAQ|question=Did Lil' Kim continue her career after prison?|answer=Yes, Lil' Kim has continued her music and entertainment career after serving her sentence.}}
{{FAQSection/End}}


== References ==
== References ==
<references />
<references />


[[Category:High-Profile_Federal_Offenders]]
[[Category:High-Profile_Federal_Offenders]]
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Latest revision as of 18:18, 23 April 2026

Kimberly Denise Jones (Lil' Kim)
Born: July 11, 1974
Brooklyn, New York
Charges: Perjury, Conspiracy
Sentence: 1 year and 1 day
Facility: FDC Philadelphia
Status: Released


Kimberly Denise Jones (born July 11, 1974), known professionally as Lil' Kim, is an American rapper, songwriter, and actress who did roughly ten months in federal prison. She was convicted of perjury and conspiracy for lying to a federal grand jury about a 2001 shooting outside a New York radio station.[1]

As a pioneering hip-hop figure, she rose to fame with the Junior M.A.F.I.A. collective and achieved multiplatinum success as a solo artist. In March 2005, a jury convicted her of three counts of perjury and one count of conspiracy. She'd lied to protect her manager and bodyguard, who were present at the shooting.[2] The sentence came down to one year and one day in federal prison, plus a $50,000 fine. This made her one of the first high-profile female rappers to serve time in a federal prison.[3]

She got out in July 2006 and never stopped making music.

Summary

The perjury conviction traced back to a federal grand jury investigating a February 2001 shooting outside Hot 97, a New York radio station. Members of Lil' Kim's crew had confronted Capone-N-Noreaga over a song with insults aimed at her. The situation escalated fast. Shots went off, and one person got hurt.

When prosecutors called her to testify, Lil' Kim denied her manager Damion Butler and bodyguard Suif Jackson were there. Problem was, surveillance footage showed both men clearly present at the scene.[4]

The case sparked serious debate in hip-hop circles. It raised questions about the "stop snitching" code that kept people from working with law enforcement and whether she deserved prosecution for protecting her team. Prosecutors said lying to a grand jury damages the whole justice system, regardless of why you're doing it. Supporters countered that she was getting punished simply for loyalty. The one-year sentence was nowhere near the 20-year maximum she faced, but it sent a powerful message: grand jury perjury has real teeth.[5]

She became one of the first major female rappers to actually serve prison time, a distinction that drew enormous media attention and deepened her controversial reputation. Her incarceration didn't kill her career. She dropped her fourth studio album while locked up and kept recording after release.[6]

Background

Early Life and Rise to Fame

Kimberly Denise Jones was born on July 11, 1974, in Brooklyn, New York. Her childhood was rough. Her parents split when she was small, and she dealt with homelessness during her teenage years. She honed her rapping and took the stage name "Lil' Kim."[7]

By the mid-1990s, she'd become a prominent member of Junior M.A.F.I.A., a rap collective assembled by The Notorious B.I.G. (Christopher Wallace). Her explicit lyrics and provocative image stood out in the male-dominated hip-hop world, and she was one of the group's most visible members.[8]

Solo Career

After Junior M.A.F.I.A.'s success, Lil' Kim launched a solo career with the 1996 album "Hard Core," which went double platinum. That album established her as a major force in hip-hop. She was known for sexually explicit lyrics and a fashion-forward image. She became one of the best-selling female rappers of all time and shaped the work of countless artists who came later.[7]

Her follow-up albums "The Notorious K.I.M." (2000) and "La Bella Mafia" (2003) sold well and solidified her as a hip-hop icon. But her career wasn't without drama. She had feuds with other artists, particularly with rapper Foxy Brown. That rivalry would indirectly spark the incident leading to her perjury conviction.[9]

The Hot 97 Shooting

February 25, 2001. Lil' Kim and her entourage ran into members of Capone-N-Noreaga outside Hot 97, a popular New York hip-hop radio station. The meeting was tense from the start. They'd released a song called "Bang, Bang" that included disparaging lyrics about Lil' Kim from rival Foxy Brown.[4]

Things went south quickly. Shots were fired, and one person ended up injured. Law enforcement jumped in, and a federal grand jury was convened to hear what happened that day.[10]

Indictment, Prosecution, and Sentencing

Grand Jury Testimony

Before the federal grand jury investigating the shooting, Lil' Kim testified under oath. She denied that her manager Damion Butler and bodyguard Suif Jackson were at the scene. That was false. Security footage from the station clearly showed both men present during the confrontation. Prosecutors believed she lied to shield them from prosecution.[4]

Both Butler and Jackson faced charges related to the shooting. Lil' Kim's false testimony became the foundation for her perjury charges.[10]

Trial and Conviction

She was charged with perjury and conspiracy for providing false grand jury testimony. She pled not guilty and went to trial in federal court in Manhattan. March 2005 brought the verdict: guilty on three counts of perjury and one count of conspiracy. One obstruction of justice charge didn't stick.[10]

This conviction put Lil' Kim among the most prominent hip-hop figures convicted of a federal crime tied to "stop snitching" culture. That culture discouraged cooperation with law enforcement.[11]

Sentencing

July 6, 2005 came the sentence: one year and one day in federal prison plus a $50,000 fine. This was well below the 20-year maximum and lower than the nearly three-year sentence prosecutors had asked for. The judge considered her clean record and charity work but stressed how serious it is to lie to a grand jury.[2]

The one year and one day (not exactly one year) mattered for a specific reason. Federal law allows good time credit that can reduce actual time served by roughly 15%, but only for sentences exceeding one year.[9]

Prison Experience

Lil' Kim reported to the Federal Detention Center in Philadelphia on September 19, 2005. Few high-profile female rappers had ever served time in federal prison, so the media coverage was intense.[3]

While she was inside, her fourth studio album, "The Naked Truth," came out. Critics liked it, proving her career could survive imprisonment. BET also premiered "Lil' Kim: Countdown to Lockdown," a reality series filmed before she reported. The premiere was BET's highest-rated at the time, pulling 1.9 million viewers.[7]

She served around ten months thanks to good time credit for sentences over one year. On July 3, 2006, she was released from federal custody.[7]

Post-Release Career

After getting out, Lil' Kim went back to music. She performed, recorded, and stayed visible in entertainment. She never quite hit the commercial peaks of the late 1990s and early 2000s, but she kept her fanbase loyal and kept influencing hip-hop culture. New music, reality TV appearances, and regular industry visibility followed.[7]

Her prison time became part of her public image. It showed her loyalty to her team and her willingness to face consequences rather than flip on associates. Hip-hop culture valued that narrative, though critics pointed out that perjury is a serious crime that harms the justice system.[5]

Public Statements and Positions

Throughout prosecution and after, Lil' Kim insisted she didn't intend to block justice and that her testimony reflected what she actually remembered. Her supporters saw her conviction as punishment for loyalty, not for any real criminal behavior.

The "stop snitching" culture debate often used her case as its example. She became a symbol of the clash between street codes against cooperating with police and the legal duty to testify truthfully under oath.

Since release, she's discussed her prison experience in interviews and pointed to it as proof of her resilience and authenticity as an artist who'd faced real consequences for her choices.[6]

Terminology

  • Perjury: Lying under oath. This can happen before a grand jury, in court, or in other official proceedings.
  • Conspiracy: An agreement between two or more people to commit a crime or reach a legal goal through illegal means.
  • Grand Jury: A group of citizens who review evidence presented by prosecutors and decide whether to issue indictments.
  • Good Time Credit: A reduction in a prison sentence for good behavior. Federal law makes it available for sentences longer than one year.

See also

Frequently Asked Questions

Q: Why did Lil' Kim go to prison?

Lil' Kim was convicted of perjury and conspiracy for lying to a federal grand jury about a 2001 shooting outside Hot 97 radio station.


Q: How long was Lil' Kim's sentence?

Lil' Kim was sentenced to 1 year and 1 day in federal prison and served approximately 10 months.


Q: Where did Lil' Kim serve her sentence?

Lil' Kim served her sentence at the Federal Detention Center in Philadelphia.


Q: What did Lil' Kim lie about?

She denied that her manager and bodyguard were present at a shooting, claims disproved by surveillance footage.


Q: Did Lil' Kim continue her career after prison?

Yes, Lil' Kim has continued her music and entertainment career after serving her sentence.


References

  1. Biography.com, "Lil' Kim: Biography, Rapper, Musician," https://www.biography.com/musicians/lil-kim.
  2. 2.0 2.1 Washington Post, "Lil' Kim Gets 1 Year, Fine For Perjury," July 7, 2005, https://www.washingtonpost.com/archive/lifestyle/2005/07/07/lil-kim-gets-1-year-fine-for-perjury/cb8a60ef-526a-4eac-a93f-22e232262340/.
  3. 3.0 3.1 Today, "Lil' Kim begins serving her prison sentence," September 2005, https://www.today.com/popculture/lil-kim-begins-serving-her-prison-sentence-wbna9402781.
  4. 4.0 4.1 4.2 CNN, "A year and a day for Lil' Kim," July 7, 2005, https://www.cnn.com/2005/LAW/07/07/ctv.lilkim/.
  5. 5.0 5.1 The Prison Direct, "Why Did Lil Kim Go to Prison," https://theprisondirect.com/why-did-lil-kim-go-to-prison/.
  6. 6.0 6.1 Crime Museum, "Lil Kim," https://www.crimemuseum.org/crime-library/celebrity-mugshots/lil-kim/.
  7. 7.0 7.1 7.2 7.3 7.4 Wikipedia, "Lil Kim," https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lil_Kim
  8. Hip Hop Scriptures, "Lil Kim Biography," https://www.hiphopscriptures.com/lilkim.
  9. 9.0 9.1 Billboard, "Lil' Kim Sentenced To A Year In Prison," July 2005, https://www.billboard.com/music/music-news/lil-kim-sentenced-to-a-year-in-prison-62177/.
  10. 10.0 10.1 10.2 Today, "Lil' Kim convicted of perjury," March 2005, https://www.today.com/popculture/lil-kim-convicted-perjury-wbna7222867.
  11. Voice of America, "Rapper Lil Kim Sentenced to 1 Year Prison Term," July 9, 2005, https://www.voanews.com/a/a-13-2005-07-09-voa35/307062.html.