A video submitted in federal court in Dallas shows rapper Pooh Shiesty (legal name Lontrell Williams Jr.) pressing for his release from Gucci Mane's 1017 Records label while an armed man blocks a door during an alleged robbery at a Texas music studio in January. This was reported by Qazaqyia.kz citing Associated Press.

According to a court record, the video was submitted as evidence in federal court in Dallas, where Pooh Shiesty and eight others have been indicted on kidnapping and extortion charges. Prosecutors say the victims were robbed at gunpoint after traveling to the city to discuss Pooh Shiesty's recording contract with Mane's 1017 Records.

The victims have only been referred to by their initials in court documents. One, R.D., is described as the owner of 1017 Records. Mane's legal name is Radric Delantic Davis. The song "Crash Dummy," which Gucci Mane released this spring, includes the lyrics: "I thought it was a business meeting, but it was a set up."

The court document was filed by prosecutors in response to a motion Pooh Shiesty filed last month proposing home confinement, arguing that the evidence against him did not warrant keeping him in custody pending trial, as was ordered by a judge in April. But prosecutors said in their filing that the motion from Pooh Shiesty should be denied and that evidence against him was "extraordinarily strong."

Prosecutors said they have the cooperation of all five victims and witnesses in the case and cellphone location data. There is also surveillance video placing the defendants at the scene, according to prosecutors, in addition to the video of the owner of 1017 Records being forced to declare that Pooh Shiesty was "dropped" from his label.

Prosecutors said in the filing that just before that video was made, Pooh Shiesty produced a printed contractual release for the record label owner to sign. The man initially refused but signed after Pooh Shiesty allegedly pointed an AK-style pistol his head. Prosecutors also said BIG30, whose legal name is Rodney Wright, recorded the video with his cellphone while another defendant blocked the door holding a firearm that resembled an AK-47 style rifle.