NEW YORK, NY (April 3, 2025) – REFORM Alliance is extremely disturbed by the Fulton County District Attorney’s recent move to revoke Jeffery Williams’ (the artist known as Young Thug) probation based solely on deleted social media posts.
Mr. Williams is currently serving a 15-year probation sentence in Georgia, a result of a “blind plea” he accepted under immense pressure and extraordinarily difficult circumstances. We warned at the time of sentencing that numerous and overly complicated probation conditions can easily become a trap. We feared then, as we see now, that Mr. Williams’ freedom could be jeopardized not by new criminal conduct, but by non-criminal, technical violations.
“Let’s be crystal clear,” said Erin Haney, Chief Policy Officer at REFORM Alliance, “Mr. Williams retweeted a publicly available photo of an investigator receiving an award and called her dishonest. He did nothing illegal or inciting. There is far worse conduct on display on X every day. But because he’s on probation, they’re threatening to lock him up, citing other people’s online threats as his fault. That’s insanity. If simply stating you think someone’s lying is enough to land you in prison when you’re on probation, we’ve got a massive problem on our hands.”
Haney continued, “This is terrifying. Probation is supposed to be an alternative that allows people to rebuild their lives, but here we are, watching it become a direct pipeline back to prison. It’s no longer about justice or public safety; it’s about asserting the court’s authority and sending a chilling message that your freedom can be stripped away if you dare voice an unpopular opinion online.”
“In my long tenure as both a defense attorney and now an advocate for supervision reform,” Haney said, in closing, “I’ve witnessed my share of questionable calls and, frankly, ridiculous overreach. But seeking to revoke probation over this is beyond the pale. It absolutely crosses the line into absurdity. This is clearly not the type of conduct that warrants incarceration, let alone the potential loss of freedom for decades.”
This case highlights some of the most fundamental flaws in our supervision system: vague and overly complicated conditions that allow for broad interpretation and too often become trapdoors to incarceration rather than genuine support for successful reentry and rehabilitation. Probation should focus on public safety and empower individuals to rebuild their lives, not subject them to arbitrary rules that send them right back behind bars. At REFORM Alliance, our mission is to transform this broken supervision model so that probation becomes a pathway to work, wellness, and stability, not a pipeline back to prison.
In response to news that Fulton County District Attorney is attempting to revoke Young Thug’s probation because of deleted social media posts, REFORM Chief Policy Officer Erin Haney offered the following statement:
“Mr. Williams retweeted a publicly available photo of an investigator receiving an award and called her dishonest. He did nothing illegal or inciting…But because he’s on probation, they’re threatening to lock him up, citing other people’s online threats as his fault. That’s insanity…This is clearly not the type of conduct that warrants incarceration, let alone the potential loss of freedom for decades.”