Khaligraph Jones was once in prison, most fans don't know that he lost a brother back in 2009. Losing his little brother still overwhelms him to this day. Photo credit: Instagram/khaligraph_jones

Khaligraph Jones reveals he lost his little brother in 2009 and getting locked up in Industrial Area Remand Prison in a freestyle

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5 mins read

Khaligraph Jones jumped on The Fugees’ hit record ‘Ready or Not’ beat to reveal some rather touching, emotional, and sad stuff we never knew about him and his family.

Khaligraph Jones has always kept his personal life personal and he seldom shares it with nobody except with his close circle which includes his family and very few friends who have been with him through thick and thin like his manager.

Khaligraph Jones, who has enough hit records that we can’t mention them all recently paid homage to CMB Prezzo which as a ripple effect made Prezzo trend on Twitter the entire day the freestyle got released through his social media.

I guess it’s only OG who can do that with his music today, even though it’s not officially done.

Khaligraph Jones excites Kenyans paying homage to Prezzo

The Soundcity MVP Awards winner, AFRIMA, and AFRIMMA Award-winning artiste Papa Jones or simply the OG or the Biggest rapper in Nigeria[sic] has opened up about losing his little brother back in 2009 shocking a lot of people with that piece of information.

Actually, this information wasn’t in the public domain at all and nobody [except for close family friends and family] actually knew anything about the same.

Khaligraph Jones’ arrest

Apparently, Khaligraph Jones real name Brian Robert Ouko was arrested a few years ago, he even had a Court hearing where he was charged for the crime of allegedly stealing a phone.

He disclosed that he was once locked up in Industrial Area Remand Prison popularly known by most people around the country as Inda.

This is some information that nobody would have guessed about the multiple award-winning rap artiste if he himself didn’t disclose the same on the record.

Khaligraph Jones has shared a lot of stuff in the 1-minute-long freestyle than he has ever done in the years he has been dominating in the music and entertainment industry. Photo credit: Instagram/khaligraph_jones

Clearly, and evidently, Khaligraph Jones deserves to be given his roses for him to smell them while he is still alive and here with us because he is one of the many rappers in the country who has gone through hell and back and still came out of the tunnel with his head held high to dominate the rap scene with back to back hit songs, trust me, that’s not something easy to do.

Losing his little brother

If the tell-all freestyle is something we can go with, Khaligraph Jones, who is the little brother to another established rapper who actually put him on the path of hip hop from the days back when, to begin with, Lamaz Span KOB, disclosed that he lost a little brother back in 2009, he was seven years old then.

In the freestyle, Khaligraph disclosed that his little brother(he didn’t disclose his name), drowned in a swimming pool, and to this day, he still mourns him in a way or two and that’s one of the reasons why most of the time if not all the time he usually wears a frown on his face because he has gone through a lot.

He also lost his father to Diabetes, he even wrote a record a couple of months ago about it and dedicated it to his late dad.

Khaligraph Jones teases ‘Diabetes’ song dedicated to his late father

This year, Khaligraph Jones’ little brother would have been 18 years old.

This information has caught the entertainment world in shock because most people only knew about the passing of his father, not about his little brother who would have been 18 years old in 2020.

Our belated condolences go out to the OG, Khaligraph Jones, and his family and close friends after learning the sad news about his brother. Evidently, most of his fans knew nothing about it.

Watch Khaligraph Jones tell his personal story in a 1-minute-long freestyle below.

Musical Side note

The ‘Ready or Not’ beat was produced by Nelust Wyclef Jean, Samuel Prakazrel Michel, Lauryn Hill, and Jerry Duplessis and released officially on August 29, 1996, with the recording taking place in 1995.

 

I am a Pan-Afrikanist to the core and love to let the world know what they are missing in Africa. I might do that through music and some interesting posts from time to time so please bare with me.

I will always be real though, that's a guarantee.

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