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Mystikal Lands In Angola Where No Limit Label Mate C-Murder Serves Life

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Mystikal is about to experience the same brutal reality that’s been consuming his former No Limit Records label mate for over two decades.

The Grammy-nominated rapper just landed at Angola Prison in Louisiana, where he’ll serve his 20-year sentence in protective custody, and he’s walking into a facility where C-Murder, another No Limit artist, is already doing life without parole.

This reunion nobody wanted is happening behind bars at the most notorious maximum-security prison in America.

Mystikal pleaded guilty to third-degree rape in March 2026 after spending four years locked up in Ascension Parish Jail while his case dragged through the court system.

He was sentenced in June, and according to TMZ, he’s now in a single-occupancy cell in protective custody due to his celebrity status.

The transfer happened on July 7, 2026, and it marks the beginning of what will be a long, difficult stretch for the rapper who once dominated the charts with hits like “Shake Ya Ass” and “Tarantula.”

C-Murder, born Corey Miller and the younger brother of Master P, has been serving a life sentence at Angola since his conviction for the 2002 murder of a 16-year-old fan.

Both men came up under the No Limit Records umbrella during the 1990s, and now they’re both trapped in the same prison system.

C-Murder’s been fighting the conditions there for years, going on hunger strikes to protest the treatment of inmates and the brutal working conditions that have defined Angola since its days as a slave plantation.

Angola spans 18,000 acres and houses over 5,000 inmates considered the worst of the worst in Louisiana.

Inmates have filed complaints about extreme heat, inadequate medical care, and grueling manual labor on the farm lines.

The facility’s been hit with lawsuits over working conditions, and according to reports, there were 18 inmate deaths in 2026 alone, most related to violence and drug-related incidents.

The prison’s history is dark, marked by stabbings and deaths that made it infamous in the 1970s and 1980s.

Mystikal’s protective custody arrangement might shield him from some of the general population chaos, but he’s still going to be living in one of America’s most dangerous and unforgiving prisons.

The Louisiana Supreme Court denied C-Murder’s appeal in February 2026, meaning he’s got no way out, and Mystikal’s looking at two decades of the same fate.

Both men are now part of Angola’s permanent population, serving time for crimes that destroyed lives and ended their careers in the music industry.

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