Gillie da Kid says that 17-year-old basketball star was killed in …

Gillie da Kid stunned Shannon Sharpe on Tuesday’s episode of Club Shay Shay When he claimed, Noah Scurry, Philadelphia Teen Basketball Star, who was deadly shot last month in his hometown, was responsible for the death of Gillie’s son, Devin Spady, who went out of young cheese.

The Million dollaz worth of games The host first pointed out how silly it was that people accused Illuminati and claimed he sacrificed his son for success. That’s when Sharpe asked if Gillie had spoken to the person who shot his son. “No, I’ve never met him,” Gillie replied. “Only the reason I knew is because the police called me and told me he was once murdered.

He added, “Because the child had just shot 17 times, he went with his mother and he was murdered and then the police informed me and let me know he was one of the kids who were pretty much about to become Locked to the murder, but he was first murdered.

Later in the conversation, Sharpe-AS apparently did not realize that Gillie had previously mentioned in the conversation that police told him Scurry was responsible for his son’s death-stepped again while discussing Pistolvold in Philly, and where up-and-night athletes were once “protected” in their neighborhoods.

Gillie quietly explained that the person in question was responsible for the death of his son, who was 25 years old when he was shot in July 2023. “That’s there killing my son,” he replied, led to an awkward silence .

Scurry, 17, – a rising basketball star in the area – was deadly shot in January, per. TMZ. He reportedly released his first solo drill song “Swing My Door” under the Rap name on YouTube on January 13 and was shot and killed outside his home soon after.

Gillie explained that his son was “in the wrong place at the wrong time” when a group came to shoot up the block. “My son is not from that block,” he said. “He was just as happened to be in the wrong place at the wrong time. That’s how deep it is.”

“You don’t understand he got videos out where he got a joker mask on, a lot of guns in his hand,” Gillie added. “These kids are influenced by all the wrong things. The shit that doesn’t matter. The shit that once was time when I was growing up in the ghetto, I was influenced by.”

“That’s what we grew up in. These kids don’t know better,” he added. “These kids actually think you can’t do it as a rapper unless you killed someone. Unless you did something here in these streets. This is the mindset.”

The native Phily admitted that he does not know where this current thinking comes from, especially when his idols who grew up were the ones who made money.

Gillie opened earlier on Pivot Podcast About the moment he became a man while performing an Islamic tradition after his son’s death.

“The worst time had to be when I had to wash his body,” he said. “But it was also the best because I became a man that day. I was a little ass boy up to that point. I thought I was a man because I made man shit-i paid bills you know what i mean , I took care of my family.

“It was a gift and a curse,” he continued. “It was a good thing and a bad thing because it was a very painful thing to see your son lay there, cold and stiff but i know i sent him to the right, you know what I mean and in Islam is it a big thing – to send them to the right.