Judge Just Drew Up Tekashi’s Post Lockup Playbook
We’re told the court isn’t just sending Tekashi 6ix9ine away for three months, it’s scripting what happens the second he steps out. The judge slapped him with 12 months of supervised release that comes with serious strings attached. According to court docs, he has to enroll in a mental health program aimed at anger management. On top of that, he’s ordered into outpatient drug treatment, no excuses, no shortcuts. This isn’t a gentle suggestion, it’s a hard requirement with the feds watching.
Insiders say this kind of double whammy order usually signals the court thinks the underlying issues helped fuel the mess. Translation, the system wants him “fixed” before he’s fully free again. It’s the kind of move that can control where he goes, who he sees, and how he lives day to day. Supervised release means check ins, rules, and plenty of ways to land right back inside if he slips. Tekashi’s camp is acting calm, but let’s be real, this level of oversight is a grind. And it raises the big question, is he ready to play by someone else’s rules.
Here’s the kicker, the treatment focus isn’t random, it’s targeted at anger and substance use, two things that have been swirling around him for years. People close to the case say judges don’t bother with that detail unless they want a long term correction, not just punishment. That could mean mandatory sessions, progress reports, and zero tolerance for missed appointments. If he fights it, it won’t be a debate, it’ll be a violation. We’re told the court wants results, not headlines. And if Tekashi tries to clown this off, he could be walking into a trap he won’t see coming.
January Lockup and the Wildest Fitness Plan We’ve Heard Yet
Tekashi already told us he’s not sweating the prison stint that starts January 6, and we’re hearing he’s treating it like boot camp. He’s bragging that he’ll use the time to get shredded, and honestly, that’s the most Tekashi thing ever. He’s acting like three months is a quick pit stop, not a cage. Sources say he’s been talking nonstop about turning isolation into transformation. But that confidence hits different when you remember he won’t be in general population for safety reasons.

Because of his snitch status, he believes he’ll be kept separate, and he’s claiming that means maximum focus. No distractions, no chaos, just him and his routine. That might sound smart on paper, but prison isolation is no spa retreat. We’re told it can mess with your head fast, especially for someone who feeds off attention. Fitness goals are one thing, but surviving the mental side is another. And if he’s already headed into anger management after, maybe the court is thinking the same thing.
Now let’s talk about the diet, because it’s straight up bonkers. Tekashi says he’s around 190 pounds and wants to drop to 120 by eating one box of Oreo cookies a day. Yeah, you read that right, Oreos as a prison cutting plan. Either he’s trolling, or he’s setting himself up for a crash that could get ugly behind bars. People close to him are whispering this is more performance art than real strategy. But if he’s serious, what happens when the body hits the wall and the mind follows.
Snitch Tag, New Trouble, and the Feds Still in His Backyard
Let’s not forget how we got here, Tekashi’s been on probation since he got out in 2020 after that racketeering case tied to the Nine Trey Gangsta Bloods. He testified against them, said they crossed him, and walked out of court branded forever. That label doesn’t fade, it follows you into every room and every cellblock. We’re told it’s a major reason he’s considered a high risk inmate now. So even if he’s acting fearless, the reality is he’s still living with the fallout of that decision.
Then came the raid earlier this year, and sources say the feds found drugs on his property. That discovery is a big part of why he’s back in the hot seat now. It also explains why the judge is pushing outpatient treatment like a non negotiable condition. Probation plus new contraband equals a legal nightmare, and he knows it. People around the case say the government’s patience is thin and the leash is short. One more screw up and the story changes in a second.
What’s wild is how fast this saga keeps looping back on itself. Every time it looks like he’s on a comeback track, something pulls him back into court. The supervised release rules will be designed to stop that cycle, but Tekashi has never been known for staying in lines. We’re hearing the next year could be the most controlled period of his life since fame hit. If he can’t handle treatment, oversight, and the spotlight at once, the crash could be brutal. And the way this is shaping up, the real fireworks might not start until he gets out.