Rap
fans may soon see and hear Lupe Fiaso in a different setting when the Grammy-nominated
emcee heads to court. According
to the Chicago Tribune, Fiasco (born Wasalu Jaco) is expected to testify
in the drug conspiracty trial of his 1st and 15th partner/music producer, Charles
“Chili” Patton and his wife Inita. The
couple was in court earlier in the month during opening statements in the trial,
which is expected to last several weeks. The
Pattons were charged in 2003 with running a drug enterprise that would have supplied
more than 900 grams of heroin to buyers, said Assistant Cook County State’s Atty.
Patrick Coughlin. Court
documents list the street value of the drugs at the time as nearly $950,000. Fiasco
and Patton are partners on Fiasco’s record label, 1st and 15th, which released
the rapper’s debut album Food and Liquor. The
pair struck a deal with Atlantic Records, giving them creative control over their
work, while retaining the major label’s distribution reach.During
opening statements, prosecutors argued that Patton was the brain behind the heroin
ring, which allegedly used cellular telephones and coded language in an attempt
to avoid detection.The
correspondence was picked up by authorities who were listening in via wiretaps
for about a month.Prosecutors
alleged that Inita Patton played an important role in locating a storage facility
in south suburban Glenwood, the Tribune reported. It
was there, Coughlin said, that authorities discovered more than six kilograms
of heroin, after finding a key to the facility during a raid on the Pattons’
home in May 2003.Inita
Patton’s lawyer, Glenn Seiden, countered the accusations by saying her 33-year-old
client allowed a friend to store his furniture in the storage unit and did not
know drugs were in the locker. Former
Chicago Police Lt. Robert Grapenthien testified that during their wiretap investigation
of Charles Patton’s cell phone, investigators heard Patton on March 25, 2003,
set up a drug sale with Jerry Warren. Warren,
who was convicted for his role in the case in October, set up a meeting at Hyde
Park, an area under police surveillance. Patton
was also heard making March 25 Amtrak train reservations for himself and Fiasco
the day prior, the Tribune reported. Although
nine other people were charged with the Pattons, court records show that one person
was acquitted in the case, while the others either pled guilty or were convicted.
If convicted,
the Pattons could face 15 to 60 years in prison, according to prosecutors.