US rapper ASAP Rocky to face assault trial in Sweden
STOCKHOLM: ASAP Rocky will be tried for an alleged assault next week over a June street brawl, a Swedish court said on Thursday, in a decision likely to infuriate fans already indignant over his three weeks in custody.
"Today I have pressed charges against the three suspects for assault, because in my judgement what has happened amounts to a crime, despite the objections about self-defence and provocations," prosecutor Daniel Suneson said in a statement published on Thursday morning.
The 30-year-old rapper, whose real name is Rakim Mayers, was arrested on July 3 along with three other people, following the brawl in Stockholm on June 30. One of them, the rapper’s bodyguard, was later released.
Part of the fight was captured in an amateur video published by US celebrity news outlet TMZ. The rapper later published videos of his own to Instagram purporting to show the lead up to the fight.
Mayers has claimed he was acting in self-defence, saying he was responding to harassment and provocations by the plaintiff.
But Suneson said in his statement: "I have had more material to consider than what has been available on the internet."
According to the charge document filed with the Stockholm District Court, the evidence includes surveillance footage, witness testimony and text conversations that the prosecutor says prove there was no need for self defence and that a bottle was used as a weapon in the alleged assault.
On July 5 the court ordered that Mayers should be kept in custody pending investigation of the case as he was considered a "flight risk".
The court originally gave the prosecutor two weeks to decide on whether to press charges, and later granted a week-long extension.
Suneson’s decision to press charges means the rapper can be kept in custody until his trial, which the court has set for next week.
The trial is scheduled to take place over three days, starting on July 30 and then continuing on August 1 and 2, the Stockholm District Court said in a statement.
Mayers can request to have his detention reviewed by the court and argue for conditional release until the trial is held.
Assault carries a maximum penalty of two years in jail in Sweden.
Mayers’ lawyer Slobodan Jovicic told reporters on Thursday that the decision was "expected" and that his client maintains that he is innocent.
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