Perrion Roberts on Being a Drug Queenpin & Shooter, Mexican Cartel, Getting 21 Years(Full Interview)

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we have something a little bit different a vlad tv today we have perry on roberts former drug queen pin who had over a 30-year career welcome to vlad tv thank you thank you for having me well it's your first time here so i want to start on the very beginning so you were born and raised in huntsville alabama yes i was 1964. okay so what was huntsville like back then uh back then when i was born you know we had the civil rights going on um as i grew up huntsville is more like a retirement area it's it's not as fast as atlanta or any bigger city um we're known for the rocket city we build rockets and missiles were known for our technology um and back then when i was in in doing selling drugs um huntsville was um the redstone arsenal was was really growing and people was coming in from everywhere to work you know in our technology and stuff so we're known for technology and not crime okay now you're the oldest of four kids uh you have three brothers yes and you had strict parents growing up yes we did very strict parents um my my father was in the military had been and um my mom worked for the military and so it was you know it was very strict you know i couldn't go anywhere you know i wasn't allowed outside of the driveway to play okay well you're growing up in this household but you talked about how you had an abusive father yes i did my father would abuse my mother uh quite frequently um when especially on fridays you know during the week was was fine uh it was just the weekends on fridays when he wanted to go out to the clubs and you know be with different women or or whatever and they would fight before he leave and sometimes my dad would beat my mom with uh belts my dad beat my hit my mother in the head with a pickle jar and when he left she thought she was just sweating she thought it was sweat but it was in fact blood and she had sat on the couch and we called my grandfather my grandfather came and took her to the hospital but when i was born my father pulled my mother's arm through a screen door um and and caused her to not to be able to take care of me and um so he he has been abusive to my mom i think pretty much since i've been in the world okay you talked about at one point he actually pulled the pistol out he did he pulled the pistol on me and my brother this behind me javon's what happened was he was about to jump on our mom and we jumped on him i literally jumped on his back and was beating him and my brother had him by the leg and when he shook us off and we fell i fell on the floor but when when i fell he went in his pocket and he pulled his pistol and we um ran outside and hit up on a tree we had these huge pine trees in the yard and we literally hid up under the tree and he shot at us but he couldn't he didn't know he couldn't see us because it was dark and then when he went back in in the house we ran down the street to neighbor's house and then uh until he left and they called the police and stuff for my mom and for us but they didn't do anything he never went to jail for it so your own father shot at his kids yes yes okay okay it's kind of crazy he shot he also shot my youngest brother in the league uh when he was 16 because my my father had his own construction company and my brother had worked for him well he didn't want to work for him and he wanted him to pay him and so my dad told him he'll pay him when he get ready and so they had a little argument and my brother the youngest one he was he was tall for 16. and so my dad went in his um in his pocket and pulled his pencil out and shot him in the leg and um and then threatened to shoot him in the head if he didn't get up uh you know if he didn't and my uncle had to stop him so that wasn't the first time he had shot up at his kids he shot that one but he shot at us okay and the police didn't arrest him over you know i mean it's one thing to shoot in the air or whatever at somebody not hit him it's another thing to actually have to go to the hospital pull a bullet hole out and say that my father was the one who did this yeah he he went to jail but they dismissed it okay all right so you're growing up in this chaotic household and i guess at one point you went to go live with your grandmother well that was when i it was just me at that time when my dad had um pulled my mother's arm through the through the screen door at that time my parents lived in one of the projects called northwood projects and and so they had these type of screen doors i don't i don't really know what they look like but that that was when we went to live with my grandparents when he did that to my mom because my mom couldn't take care of me and and so my grandmother and my auntie had to literally take care of me we stayed with with them until i was around two years old and then my dad um had a house built in a new subdivision and talked my mom into coming back because he built this how had this house built and so that's how we ended up back with him okay so you're growing up in in huntsville and you know you have quite a bit of chaos at home and then in 1982 you met a guy named champ yes yes okay who was four years older than you yeah chap was four years older than i was i met him at a club we had a club called um uh uh what was it the mall ball room and that's where all the teenagers would go you know there was a little teenage club and so everybody from all the different projects they would come and then uh us from the north side you know would come so that was the time we had interactions with people from the projects in in other schools actually and so i met him and um we kind of like hit it off pretty good and um we started dating and we had been together for a minute i worked and i and i started going to a m because i had just graduated high school and so i started going to alabama a m and um plus i was working and he actually wasn't selling drugs at first he and his cousins they would literally take a sledgehammer and knock holes in the side of the wall of of businesses and take everything out at night and so when i found out they was doing that well my dad he has his own brick mason coming he he's a bricklayer and so i would tell my dad that i would tell him you know i was passing by on governor's drive and i seen a hole in the side of the wall i said that's a potential job you should go and look for so when they started doing that and my dad would get the job so i just told my dad about it but my dad never knew that that he that the reason i knew that that job was available so it kind of like worked out a little bit okay well you're 18 champ is 22 and you know you guys are dating and so forth but at one point he actually started uh dealing marijuana right right and we started that um started selling marijuana because his other profession wasn't making money real money and um so we started selling marijuana we started a little bit and until we started growing and the business really it really took off and uh we was making a lot of money we made enough money for me to buy a couple of new cars um and so until he got into it with a guy shot a guy he ultimately had to go to prison for that and when he went to prison um that's when i had to take over the business and um but people knew that i would shoot before i actually had shot that guy because i shot at champ um one time before because he uh he hit me oh i turned up a cardinal juice and he hit it and it went up in my nose because a guy spoke to me and so i promised him i would don't do something to him when we made it because i was driving to his mother's house and so when we go he got out the car when he got out i reached up on his seat and got my pistol and i shot at him going into his mother's house and uh i tripped up and failed and i bust my lip but everybody knew i would literally shoot because i shot at him and so then when when the guy wouldn't pay me it wasn't out of my norm to shoot somebody for not doing something you know that i asked them to do or or if they may be mad or something like that it wasn't out of the norm people knew that i would do that okay and you're talking about you're 19 years old and you know champ is locked up in prison you're taking over the drug operation and what someone owed you money and didn't want to pay you so you shot them well well see i was behind the scene when me and champ was uh selling i wasn't the i wasn't out in the streets with him he was the one out in the streets i was just the one backing it up cutting it up weighing it up and doing you know doing all that and keeping count with the money and then when he went to prison we had he had guys that were selling for him and so he couldn't collect the money so i had to go and they didn't want to pay me because i i guess because i was a young female and they didn't figure i knew to do to do the game or or whatever and so one guy he told me he was gonna pay me a damn thing and so i'd say yes you are and i shot him in the leg and so i took my money and everything else he had in his pocket i guess that's robbery but i took everything he had and for not paying me and making me have to shoot him and um so then you know one thing led to another and then you know people they they paid me i didn't have to worry about ever getting paid ever the whole time i sold drugs everybody paid me i never worried about that okay because word got out that perrian would shoot you the leg if you didn't pay her well i would shoot you yeah it didn't have to be the leg you know i shot a guy in the butt and so it it just varies it just depends on how i felt that day okay all right so here you are you're kind of hustling on your own because champ is locked up and then you hook up with a guy named po boy well no i didn't hook up with po boy uh po boy was actually champ's cousin and he was he was much younger than us um and he used to come up to champion them house and they play with his brother they used to play ball and all that kind of stuff and i used to take him to the mall so i already knew him i ran into him when i had stopped selling and went back to school when champ was uh when locked up because i just got bored with it selling marijuana it wasn't really making a whole whole lot of money it made money and so i went back to school and i ran into him and he told me that he was selling cocaine now and i didn't believe him and because i knew him as a kid so anyways i went to the projects to see what he had going on and he literally did he he really had it going on and so he showed me how to uh sack up cocaine and and and make the bundles for the cocaine and you know stuff like that um and then he had a little crew and i and i liked the fact that he had a little crew and it was really loyal to him and but i didn't have a crew still it was just me i was doing it hand to hand um working at my own self and then when he got killed then they were a crew without a leader and i was literally a leader without a cruise so we just merged that's how that came about that's how we merged the two together and uh and then that then we went from there okay and how did po boy get killed uh he he he had multiple girlfriends and so this particular girlfriend was at a hotel with a guy and some of of his little crew members called and told him that she was at the hotel with another guy and he went and the guy was literally afraid of him and so he shot him but we it's been speculated that police officer also shot him because he had two different bullets in him he had the one that came from the guy's gun and didn't have 357 uh blow to the back of the head and at that time that's what police officers carried so he literally i guess you could say got killed oh oh a girl okay okay i mean it's pretty common situation when it comes to men unfortunately okay so so now so now with po boy dead you're the head of this cocaine operation and and at the time was it cocaine or was it crack no it was just cocaine powder cocaine crack didn't come to later uh like 89 90 the end of 88 to 89 that's when cracks started hitting the scenes at least in alabama um i think in chicago or other states it may have hit before then or whatever but it didn't get to us until then so it was just powder cocaine at the time okay and at the time where were you getting you know the weight from uh at the time i was getting my weight from uh some people i knew in birmingham um i never did get weight or buy anything from anybody from huntsville because they never really had enough anyways uh and the ones that did have it they were already busted and gone to prison so at the time i was getting my product from from birmingham uh ohio and um where else did i go florida and then later on i got a mexican connection which that was mcallen texas yeah and i want to talk about all that uh as well but i kind of want to talk about where you were at this point so how much were you making a month during this time after po boy died and you kind of took over the operation after he died i was making oh it was average money uh a couple of hundred thousand dollars you know uh not a whole lot i didn't really start making a lot of money until much later okay and during this time as you're building up the operation i mean when marijuana and cocaine are very different types of businesses marijuana is usually pretty easy going you know but once you get to once you get to cocaine that's when you have the robberies the kidnappings the the kick doors you know that type of thing so as you're kind of building up on your own were you dealing with that type of problem as for somebody trying to rob me rob you steal from you shipments not showing up that type of thing no i know i i never uh throughout my stint of selling drugs i've never been robbed um i've never been beat i've never been cut stabbed shot at or anything now i've done all of that except for raw people i never robbed nobody but um no i i've never had to worry about it and no one never tried me you know so i can't say that they might wouldn't this day and time but they didn't then okay so things are starting to build up and you're building up your operation and then in 1992 you got arrested for capital murder i did i but yeah before i got arrested i had got uh busted by one of my one of the guys that was working for me but they didn't that that's when they literally didn't get much of any they didn't get nothing for real but they was they gave me 10 years uh for that so during that time i had to deal with uh this murder that just came up and that was because one of the guys that was working for me he went behind my back and to some guys in birmingham and tried to get some product and he did get it he did get it but he didn't pay them they gave him product and he didn't pay him so they came up here and shot and killed him but by us having an argument people thought i done it we had an argument because you went behind my back not because you owe me no money and so i had literally ordered him to be whipped but not by these guys because i didn't even know that he had done that until they came till they came and they told me what he had done they called me and told me and so he he just said he wasn't going to pay him so they came up here and they shot and killed him i wasn't even in town um when they did that okay so you got acquitted of that murder right um did they just drop it before the trial or did you have to go no no i had to go to trial we literally i had a jury at everything um also it was uh one of his family members was in the courtroom with a duffel bag and in that duffel bag was a sawed-off shotgun and see at that time we didn't have security before you could enter into the courthouse and so my lawyer spotted him and noticed something different and and went and he told my dad to watch him while he go and get the deputies and so then they arrested him on the spot uh before that his dad had um when he got shot his dad laid out at my apartment complex and waited on me he had a sawed-off shotgun but i was even in town so the police came because everybody was telling them that i did it so they came to an apartment that i had that he knew about that they knew about and they found him in the bushes his dad with a saw dog um so um that that's what happened with that anyway okay how did it feel when the jury said not guilty and acquitted you of murder and you were probably facing what life in prison no the jury didn't find me not guilty the judge made the ruling um what happened was the state couldn't prove their case because i wasn't even in town and their witness turned out to be my witness so the state witness turned against them for me and so the judge said asked the asked the um my lawyer and the prosecutor to approach the [ __ ] this was the second day and he asked did they have did they have any more witness he said no asked my lawyer did we have witness he said no so he said that he went to the scene of the crime and from where they said that it happened and where i was because i had been at the another gas station getting gas but i couldn't see what was going on over there but that had been hours ago and so he said ben that um that i couldn't see where how she could have possibly seen that he said but i do know that it's other people that was up and down my street that night and i don't see them being charged forward and he said he didn't have a choice but to acquitted me in case dismissed and that i could not be brought up on any more charges but it was capital it was it was capital murder that i went to court on so you have two sentences for that and you know that's life without or the death penalty it found guilty so it felt really bad to be charged for something that i didn't do okay so you ended up beating that case and then after that you met a mexican guy who's affiliated with one of the mexican cartels yes but i that was after i because remember i had the tenure so i had to go and do some time on that which was 18 months i did 18 months and then when i got out that's when um i met met the mexican guy and then that's when everything blew up and i'm making loads of money i was selling 100 200 keys at a time okay so now you're linked up with the mexican cartel uh can you say which cartel it is no okay i had to had to ask had to ask okay but but now but now you're linked up with the big boys and now you have a real plug uh how many kilos were coming uh a week oh oh wow i'mma say when i first when i first started i i got like four or five keys and that's just to see how fast i could turn it and to you know testing your loyalty i guess to say before they really started giving it to me so um i didn't go in weekly it was like every two weeks or so and i would i would start getting like a hundred and then the most i got before everything started crumbling i got about 200 keys about 200 kilos and that's because i would have to go down to mcallen and um i would go down there to pay them but i didn't have to bring it back they would bring the mule samuel to to bring it to me and so around roughly around 200 keys towards the end okay and you were making up to what two million dollars a month ever yeah i made two million but i made more than that um when you break it down when you break it down if uh because i i would get the keys for a lot less than what normal people would get get to get them for because usually around that time it was about 25 000 a key so of course i'm not going to sell a key for 25 000 but if i did if i sold 200 keys at 25 000 that's 5 million dollars so i really made more and i'm not going to sell it by the keys anyway i'm going to break it down and i would sell it a ounce a quarter ounce or a big eight or a quarter or whatever and a half uh or sometimes i have broke it all the way down and sew straight twenties out of a whole key so i've made way more money than that i i don't even know how much money i really made we didn't do no counting we just made money spending money and we didn't do a whole lot of saving either but uh but uh i i had my run okay now with that much money coming in and so much profit like what were the most like outlandish things that you were buying i i bought a jaguar um i bought a porsche and a bmw about a week or two apart um i bought houses i had lots of apartments and i had a lot of other cars and stuff that i call them my trap cars so i had them scattered all over alabama i had a lot so i had wasted money and and you know um and not only that i was taking care of a whole lot of families so just not just my family but a lot of other families so well and i guess you actually had cops on your payroll i did i had a couple three um on my payroll it started with one and i ended up with three but um yeah i had paid them weekly but uh yeah they they would give me good valuable information so i stayed on the radar i really wasn't under the radar i was on the radar but i stayed under the radar because of them also and and then they they taught me a lot they taught me how how the police operate how they think and how they go about cuz because they were on the stack team a couple of them was on the on the stack team and so um i knew how they moved and i knew who they were i knew their cars i knew everything about them and they helped me to develop that even after they wasn't on the payroll okay i mean when you're dealing with a fellow criminal you know the relationship is a certain type of way everyone knows that if things fall apart everyone's going to prison but when you're dealing with cops seems like a very different dynamic because these are people that could turn around and just bust you and then just deny the whole thing or you know just set you up to get killed and just get away with it like how does that relationship work i don't know they just all like me you know you know me and like women and and so um they they just all like me i i didn't date them or anything like that but they they just they just like me and they always want it was like it was like it was a need for everybody to protect perry on you know and so and then it was making money to do that and so i i i don't know we just had a great relationship we we were friends before we were friends afterwards so okay interesting uh well at one point i guess around this time they started actually using a nickname for you uh the black widow yes izzo started that he did um he started calling me that because he couldn't catch me and i that and they always uh said you know i beat a murder case and that's rare that anybody be a capital murder case you know uh a murder case period really is very hard to beat and so he just started he started calling me that he said because i was a a woman that that would dominate dominate men and he just called he just started calling me the black widow he started everybody calling me there and he's he's the captain of the police force now which he was my arresting officer my last arresting officer okay so businesses is growing and building up and you're doing your thing and i guess you're hiding the money uh through i guess uh cleaning services i had a cleaning service i did and and so i would literally fund my business with with the with drug money and i would literally uh file taxes um on it because i had a real business you know and i was making real money just not cleaning but i was cleaning up the streets i was cleaning but not ah well then some years later uh i guess you're around 33 years old you uh fell in love with another drug dealer a guy named tony yes okay tell me about tony ah i won't say i fell in love with him uh tony was at one time uh a big drug dealer he played football he he almost went pro but he didn't but he was at one time at the height of his game in the men division and uh but he ended up going to prison so it was short run and um he could he had connections and so i felt like by pairing up with him we could be this super big drug couple and that's not that wasn't the case that was fantasy it didn't happen like that okay and then at one point uh you know you you prayed uh you know you're trying to get out of the drug business and you're praying to god to you know help you find a way out of this business and then you end up getting arrested yes yes i um i got tired i had lost my mother and my grandmother a few years before that and um it still was heavy on me real bad and uh i just got to a point where i had just i had i had reached a height that no one else had and no one else could even get to to where i had as long as i had and i just got bored i i i got tired of watching over my shoulder i just got tired of the game period because at the end of the day the only one that's playing the game is me um i have conquered and knocked down all the other players and removed them off the board so you know as in growth not as you know physically doing anything to them but um it was nobody up there but me and nobody on the board but me playing so i just got tired of playing the game by myself and and and competing against myself and so i um my mother i grew up in the church and my grandmother and mother taught me how to pray and so i say anytime you want something you just you you know you pray and ask god for it so i went home and i prayed and i asked him for a way out and so my i was asking him like how do normally when you're in a gang i didn't call us a gang i said a crew buzz but when you're in a gang you have a repercussion so therefore you can't really get out of the game without consequences so my question was to lord is how do you get out when you are the repercussion how do you get out i said and i didn't know how to to stop it was like i thirst to sell drugs it was something that i i just had to do um and so two weeks after that prayer um i did what i told my guys not to do and that's the ever sell in a in a parking lot uh in a grocery store parking lot because you can't watch the entire parking lot you can't you can't possibly know who's in every car and to not to ever do that and so i did do that and i did get busted and that day and they had helicopters they had so many polices at me that day and uh when they got me out the car i just you know i i didn't resist i just got out the car put my hands behind my back and looked up in the sky and i was like this is not what i meant you know and so yeah and uh that's when we went to court well when i got busted okay so what year was this when they actually busted you they busted me in 2001. all right so here you are 2001 at that point you've been you know drug dealing for decades and what are they charging you with it at this point trafficking trafficking okay okay was there a certain amount i mean are they charging with a certain number of kilos no it was not even no kilos uh actually i had a truck coming so they kind of like missed the big the big bust so it was only a half a kilo that they caught me with and uh but they charged me with traffic and that's the most they ever caught me with so you know they thought that was that was a big deal so but um no they they they couldn't have caught me with nothing else anyway they caught me with nothing else anyway okay so they catch you after trying to catch you for years and didn't you get off for like 99 years they offered me 99 years um for that but before i went to court i didn't go to court for three years after they busted me and that was during that three-year time is when captain izzo and i had met and seen each other in a furniture store he was with his family and i was with my daughter um my daughter um was making friends with his with his daughter and anyways we talked we talked for like four hours and when we finished talking he said you know you're not the person that they said that you are he said i'ma help you i'm gonna help you and he's my arresting officer he was my arresting officer and when he went to the d.a to offer five years split eight months he told him the d.a told him no i'm gonna get i'm offering her 99 years and so everybody was like tripping you know and um but anyways um we went to court and he he came with another offer he came with 21 years and said that if i didn't take the 21 years and we take it to court and then get tried for it then he's going to automatically give me as the judge for the 21 for the 99 years so being that they caught me with something i couldn't take the chance and going to court because i know i'm okay i'm guilty so i took the 21 i prayed about it but i also told him that the lord had told me that i was only going to do two years and so i told them in the courtroom because they asked me do they have anything to say and i went to prison march 06 and i'm march 04 and i made parole march 06. so that was two years on the 21 which i was the first person at the time to get a 21-year sentence um in alabama and the first person to get out on a 21-year sentence in two years well if you got sentenced in 2004 you were 40 years old at the time uh so you're being told that you're going to get out at 61 years old almost a senior citizen exactly uh now you're now now you're saying that you know god told me i'm only going to get two years but but according to the law you just got 21 years correct so how did it feel as a 40 year old to be told that you're going to be in prison for over two decades i didn't i don't know i didn't think about it i didn't i didn't think that i wasn't going to get out in two years i don't know uh because when i went to prison uh they gave me my setup they give um when you go uh two weeks after you go they'll give you a parole set up and when i got there my parole setup was for two years so i didn't think that i wasn't going to make parole and so i never thought thought that i would be there until 2025 because that would have been my uh in the sentence and um so it wasn't you know so well you know most people who look at someone who got 21 years and get out in two they assume the person cooperated they gave up their plug they gave up their workers they they did whatever did any of that happen no no what happened was probably what helped me get out is i filed a lawsuit against alabama department of corrections and i won the lawsuit and that was about their medical the prison condition um they killed the girl in front of me and i had called the feds in on them um ultimately the officers got fired later on the warden resigned so i i was making i was making a lot of noise in prison and against the prison system that they want to keep quiet and so i guess the best way to keep me quiet is to send me home okay and you know you're talking about a women's prison right and you know you talked about how in a women's prison a lot of times the women will trade sex uh you know for privileges with the guards they did that a lot they they did they did a lot well we had a couple of girls to come up pregnant we had a 15 year old that was there and she came up pregnant and um and there's no way she could have been pregnant unless it was by officer because she had been there for a year or two so you know she wasn't pregnant when she came in and so that was that was uh that that was some stuff that was addressed to too in the lawsuits and stuff that i filed against them okay and then by 2014 you got a full pardon from the state of alabama i did i did and i was uh i was i was the only person uh then it was 9 000 plus applicants and uh for a pardon they only granted alabama only granted 242 applicants and me being the only one in north alabama to receive a full of heart how did it feel to walk out of prison after two years relieved relieved and um i knew that that my life was completely going to be turned around i was not going back the path that i had came down because that was something that i had promised myself uh my dad and my grandfather was the only one i had living and and god that you know i would not go back down that path so i felt i felt good i felt relieved i felt free i could you know i could breathe i didn't have to worry about if i passed about police cars he gonna turn around because he noticed it was me and you know come shake the car down or busting in my house i feel good i feel real good well you're leaving the business at this point but you know along the way there was a lot of chaos that you had participated in and you know people feel some type of way people have gotten shot people have gotten you know beat up and so forth under your watch was there a certain level of what if some of those people come back no um it's funny i always say reform don't mean cured so i you know i and then i didn't put myself in a position or uh for anyone to come after me or or anything like that um whatever happened to a person and and i had to do whatever i did it was warranted and they knew it so um if you didn't have a beef then don't don't have one later you know the time for beefing is is at that particular time and that's just how i i ran everything so no i didn't worry about any of that in fact everyone still like liked being around me and want to be around me even the ones whatever happened to them they they love being around me they want to be in my company so i don't ever have that problem well when you look back on on your drug career and you know for you it was business you were making money you're supporting families and so forth but the hundreds of kilos that you were pushing into your community which you know ultimately got cooked up and turned into crack which created the crack addicts the crack babies uh you know women doing whatever for a hit uh you know kids end up being neglected you know entire entire huge groups of people that were destroyed based on your business how do you look at that these days oh these days i look at it um with severe empathy i'm i'm i'm so sorry uh for doing that um i i i didn't see it then like i see now and i i look at it that i destroyed my own community for really greed for money um you know and i hate that i hate that i even um i hate i even started selling drugs um because i've always like helping people i've never wanted to destroy nobody and i not only destroyed one person but i destroyed a lot of communities throughout alabama and um so my way of trying to restore that or or really i pay it forward i try to give it back um everywhere whichever way i can with helping educating people on voting um you know i also filed a lawsuit against alabama about ex-felons to be able to vote um and help people get jobs um you know ex-felons i was working with a program where we were helping ex-felons to get really good jobs and um that kind of like fell to the wayside when one of our commissions passed away but i still um i still have the thirst to help build the community back up and i'm going to do whatever i have to to help with that effort well uh perry on roberts is quite a story uh i've interviewed lots of drug kingpins over the years from the the freeway rickey's to the little d's to the az faisans uh but never a female you know this is why i said in the beginning the interview like this is a little different for the vlad tv audience the fact that as a woman you can get to those heights and really keep the business going when it is a completely male oriented uh business is uh you know pretty crazy uh but you know ultimately you you did your time uh you know you work the system you know to your advantage legally and it sounds like you have a lot of regret over what you've done and you know i think it really tells a cautionary tale to people who are you know girls who are watching who you know have the d boy boyfriend who are mixed up in the business and you know want to go along the same path you know what would you tell those girls who have the you know the drug dealer boyfriend who's mixed up in his business what would you tell them right now to get out quick oh you you know it ultimately is your decision and who you be with and most of the time drug boys when they get busted and the girl is with them they put it on the girl and then you have a case or you will take a case for him because you don't have a case and that's still wrong and so it's all good because because you're making money now but when you go to prison what are you going to do how will you be able to get your hair done every day or whatever you do or whatever you doing and spending money you know so i would advise them to um find out who they really are and and make a better choice in who you're dating and get your own life and career together because at the end of the day when he's going to get busted it is not going to last forever i think i've made the longest run than anybody in the country in selling drugs uh and that's just not heard of and so in this day and time that's not happening because a lot of people are dying from the drugs that they are pushing nowadays you know their lifespan is three to six months literally so i would advise a young girl to to um if she dropped out of school go back to school get an education um so that you can get a job and don't get no felonies because they're easy to get and very very hard to get rid of so you know and and just persevere with your own life be your own woman yeah i agree i agree and you know of course your story is featured on american gangster trap queens yes yes it is you know which uh which everyone could check out uh well perrian roberts i appreciate you you know sharing your story and you know wish you all the best and it sounds like you got a lot of story left to tell i do i have a a a workbook that i've created also that i want people to um it'll be on you on perrian roberts.com uh to pre-order it's called it's a it's a book it's a workbook to change criminal thinking to responsible thinking also in the back it'll give information once a person is out to who to contact name and phone numbers of people to contact to help them with their transitioning to society and uh so you can also follow me on instagram perry on underscore roberts and uh make sure you check it out well there you go i appreciate you sharing your story and uh i wish you all the best thank you thank you for having me absolutely until next time peace
Info
Channel: djvlad
Views: 362,697
Rating: 4.830503 out of 5
Keywords: VladTV, DJ Vlad, Interview, Hip-Hop, Rap, News, Gossip, Rumors, Drama, Perrion Roberts
Id: t0Ka74hIPAw
Channel Id: undefined
Length: 54min 5sec (3245 seconds)
Published: Wed Mar 31 2021
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