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Tory Lanez pleads not guilty in Megan Thee Stallion shooting

Tory Lanez and Megan Thee Stallion
Tory Lanez and Megan Thee Stallion.
(Scott Roth, Charles Sykes / Invision/Associated Press)
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Rapper Tory Lanez pleaded not guilty through his attorney Wednesday to felony assault charges in the July shooting of hip-hop star Megan Thee Stallion.

Lawyer Shawn Chapman Holley entered the plea on behalf of Lanez, 28, who was not at the hearing in a downtown Los Angeles courtroom. Lanez was charged with assault with a semiautomatic firearm and carrying a loaded, unregistered firearm in a vehicle

Lanez was told to return for a Jan. 20 hearing, and an order keeping him from making any kind of contact with Stallion was extended.

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Tory Lanez, a Canadian rapper, was found guilty of shooting Megan Thee Stallion outside a Hollywood Hills mansion in 2020. Here’s everything you need to know about the trial.

In a criminal complaint, prosecutors said Lanez, whose legal name is Daystar Peterson, fired on a victim identified as “Megan P.” after she got out of an SUV during an argument in the Hollywood Hills on July 12, and “inflicted great bodily injury” on her. Stallion’s legal name is Megan Pete.

If convicted, Lanez faces a maximum sentence of about 23 years in prison.

The Canadian rapper was charged in October after months of speculation and publicity surrounding the incident. At first, police reported the incident only as shots fired, a woman with foot injuries and a man arrested on a weapons allegation.

Megan Thee Stallion unveiled the track list for her new album, including “Shots Fired,” after accusing Tory Lanez of shooting her over the summer.

Stallion revealed a few days later that her foot injuries came from gunshots, and more than a month later said in an Instagram video that it was Lanez who fired them. She slowly revealed more via social media in subsequent weeks.

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“The way people have publicly questioned and debated whether I played a role in my own violent assault proves that my fears about discussing what happened were, unfortunately, warranted,” she wrote.

The day after he was charged, Lanez tweeted that “the truth will come to the light,” and “a charge is not a conviction.”

Lanez has not reached the stardom that Stallion has, but his album “Daystar,” released in September after the shooting but before he was charged, reached the top 10 on the Billboard album chart, and he has had a successful run of mixtapes and major-label records since his career began in 2009.

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Stallion was already a major up-and-coming star at the time of the shooting, and since then, her guest stint on the Cardi B song “WAP” helped turn the track — and music video — into a huge cultural phenomenon. She also appeared on the season premiere of “Saturday Night Live.”

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