Man pleads guilty in murder of Run DMC's Jam Master Jay

Members of the musical group RUN-DMC (L to R) Jason Mizell (Jam Master Jay), Darryl McDaniels (DMC) and Joseph Simmons (DJ Run) pose for photographs after being inducted into Hollywood's Rockwalk, in Los Angeles, on Feb. 25, 2002. Monday, a man pleaded guilty in the murder of Jam Master Jay.

Members of the musical group RUN-DMC (L to R) Jason Mizell (Jam Master Jay), Darryl McDaniels (DMC) and Joseph Simmons (DJ Run) pose for photographs after being inducted into Hollywood's Rockwalk, in Los Angeles, on Feb. 25, 2002. Monday, a man pleaded guilty in the murder of Jam Master Jay. (Adrees Latif, Reuters )


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KEY TAKEAWAYS
  • Jay Bryant pleaded guilty to involvement in Jam Master Jay's 2002 murder.
  • Bryant admitted to aiding entry for the shooters at Mizell's studio.

NEW YORK CITY — A New York man on Monday pleaded guilty to taking part in the ​2002 murder of pioneering hip-hop star Jam Master Jay of famed group Run-DMC as part of a dispute over a drug ‌deal, according to federal prosecutors.

Appearing in court in Brooklyn, Jay Bryant, 52, admitted to playing ⁠a role in the fatal shooting ​of Jason Mizell, better known by ⁠his stage name Jam Master Jay, and faces up to 20 ‌years in prison, the ‌United States Attorney's Office for the Eastern District of New ⁠York said in a statement.

Bryant was accused ⁠of opening a locked fire-escape door to allow two armed men to enter Mizell's New York City recording studio, where one of them shot the hip-hop star dead.

The two men, Karl Jordan and Ronald Washington, were found guilty in 2024 of murdering Mizell while engaged ‌in drug trafficking.

A U.S. federal judge last year overturned ​Jordan's conviction, ruling that prosecutors had failed to satisfactorily prove their case.

Mizell and his Run-DMC bandmates helped take hip-hop into the pop mainstream in the 1980s with hits like "It's Tricky" and a cover of Aerosmith's "Walk This Way" off the best-selling 1986 album "Raising Hell."

As Mizell's showbiz success waned in the 1990s, he turned to dealing cocaine to help ​fund his music career, according to evidence presented at trial.

In 2002, Mizell bought ‌cocaine for distribution ‌in Maryland ⁠by Jordan, his godson, and Washington, his longtime friend, as well as others. Mizell cut Jordan and Washington out of the almost $200,000 drug deal due to a dispute between Washington and one of the Baltimore co-conspirators, ‌prosecutors alleged.

The disagreement led to ​Mizell's murder at the age of ‌37, with Jordan firing ⁠the shot that ​killed him, according to prosecutors.

The Key Takeaways for this article were generated with the assistance of large language models and reviewed by our editorial team. The article, itself, is solely human-written.

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