Charles Boxing Bar Joy REWRITTEN
VIDEO: Charles Boxing Bar Joy Final.mp4
REWRITTEN: 2026-05-12 11:02:43
SCRIPT 393 OF 686
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Yo what's good evil streets fam you know how we do we back at it again shout out to everybody who's locked in members and subscribers hitting that play button every single day Y'all the heartbeat of this whole operation the reason this channel keeps climbing Anyone trying to get their music brand or business out there hit my line evil streets media at gmail.com Let's make it happen I see all the cash app love coming through too And for anybody wanting to throw support to the channel pull up to evil streets TV on cash app every dollar gets pumped right back into this thing Alright yo let's dive into this grimy shit Today I'm laying out the story of one of the grimiest cats to ever breathe in New York City Coming straight up out of Brooklyn this character Charles Boxing Bar Joy been wreaking havoc for three whole decades Leaving destruction everywhere he stepped But on top of breaking down his saga we gonna dead one of the wildest misconceptions floating around about this man and how he moved through New York's concrete jungle From 1992 all the way to right now 2024 Boxing Bar done spent somewhere between 80 to 90 percent of that stretch caged up in the system now if that name sound familiar to you It's probably from that legendary prison incident he got into with that well-known New York spitter Meno back in 1999 You know the same Meno who be posted up at way up with Angela yee That run-in might've been crazy enough to make noise but let's be a hundred if you really know about Boxing Bar You already know that situation probably one of the tamest episodes connected to his file the rest is pure insanity He came into this world as Chris Hernandez but the law got him down as Charles Joy in the concrete jungle the belly of the beast and even across the internet though He's recognized way more as Boxing Bar if you been tapped into street chronicles or penitentiary folklore You probably ran across footage of either Boxing Bar or Meno breaking down the play by play of their legendary prison confrontation The slicing that popped off and everything that sparked it it's one of them tales that keep coming back up a dirty piece of history linked to both their government names I got to myself Oh the Pomeran I was like oh shit Look at my face And the stitches was like I played like 56 I was in the ball the shop in prison in Comstock and I was sitting like you know like this and I was getting my head cut And you know I had a problem with a dude Prior and I had cut him a couple of years of years before that And now to know another catch after I had cut him You know a couple years before that and I did the fact that I felt like I was overconfident and felt like you know I'm saying that We was yeah I don't know what my mind made me think that we was good I don't understand you understand I'm saying I definitely was rock the sleep and I definitely more let's rock myself the sleep thinking that He don't want no get back off that Just getting my hair cut and I'm like I Just felt something And I know It's mainly man oh shit oh man I shouldn't have been nothing to talk about I've been trying to tell me because like because he asked me like I just did What is that tell me? Yeah I can't take that shit to the bank no I'm saying but yeah that should really happen I Used to be my man I ain't got no say bad bottom thing I'm gonna say bad bottom No he know what time it is I Know what time it is please know I got a really talk too much about that I wish you did the best You know because that's a nigga from my ever Niggas was in the trenches together they just the same shit together they just made it back Good The niggas would be doing what they doing got a floor that I don't know No man trying to throw it they don't know why Me and him just been through some last kids we playing basic tag I don't know We was doing I'm adding over he read it wasn't unlike that niggas wasn't on that New York on a different type of time Yeah that's a fact we was blowing guns in the tail of cameras we came to Jeff we have bases in now So that's the movie going trouble yeah I don't know what that shit mean Other cities But boxing bar's whole story go way deeper than just that one situation The streets ain't just remembering him for that run-in with a bedstuy rapper His name been ringing bells way before that tension and his legacy ain't stop there Whether you talking about the violence the destruction or the street credibility he stacked up behind them walls Boxing bar's existence is way more than just a single episode It's a whole epic that stretch across decades Stacked with the type of stories that don't usually get spoken on but when they do they leave an imprint As grimy as New York City might seem today It ain't nothing compared to the madness and the danger of the era when boxing bar first got on the radar of the authorities I can speak on that with confidence just going off the statistics and the vibe in the streets back then Yeah nowadays with drill music as the soundtrack and firearms everywhere like never before the city feel heavy New York tallied up 386 murders in 2023 Which might sound rough But that's really an 11.9 percent decline from the year that came before it Now take it back to 1992 When boxing bar first got jammed up with major charges He was staring down five to fifteen years for assault weapons possession and reckless endangerment That same year in New York recorded 2020 murders A figure that make the current numbers look sweet and if you roll back just two years before that to 1990 The city hit its darkest point with 2,245 homicides in one single year The early 90s was a whole different animal The crack era had the streets blazing The body count was through the ceiling and blocks all across the boroughs was battlefields That's the landscape boxing bar was raised in A period when staying alive wasn't just about being hard It was about moving through a reality where death was waiting on every block And the smallest slip could end your whole existence Seven years deep into that five to fifteen year sentence One that he wound up doing 12 years on Boxing bar ended up at the center of a now legendary confrontation with main O It all jumped off in the prison barbershop upstate According to main O the conflict was revenge for a situation where he had cut Boxing bar years before that But Boxing bar had his own view And during a conversation from behind them bars He dropped some light on the circumstances and the confusion around his roots Boxing bar talked about how people seemed lost about where he was really planted While he was known to navigate and operate in different sections of Brooklyn bedside being one of them areas where he stomped He suggested that the friction with mine O might've kicked off in the streets before it carried over into the pen Bar set the record straight though saying that he was from the east east New York to be specific He also brought up another location where he put in time and where cats incorrectly assumed he originated from Coney Island and Coney Island was about to turn into the setting for the next crazy chapter in Boxing bar's story Just one year after wrapping up a 12-year stretch for attempted murder Bar ended up back in the center of some heavy drama It was a hot early morning in late summer of 2004 when Boxing bar became the main target of what would develop into a double murder case The situation played out at the Coney Island houses and rocked the whole city Not just because of the bloodshed but because one of the people killed was the cousin of then New York Knicks star point guard Stefan Marbury The specific details of what triggered the shooting stay a mystery with different versions going around What is confirmed though is that it concluded with the deaths of Stefan Marbury's 32-year-old cousin Yusuf McAdley and 20-year-old Alan Lewis Authorities constructed a version of events that began with an argument between the two men Things got out of hand fast with both pulling out burners and Lewis supposedly firing the deadly shot that killed McAdley But what went down after that is where Boxing bar's name got pulled right into the madness One version of the narrative portrayed Boxing bar as a tight associate of McAdley They said that after McAdley got shot down Boxing bar snatched his dropped weapon and returned fire killing Alan Lewis right there At first bar was wanted arrested and charged with just one murder that of Alan Lewis However the chaos ain't end there Prosecutors eventually tried to stick McAdley's death on Boxing bar too Constructing their argument around the theory that he was the one who drew his weapon first Triggering the fatal chain of events They called the whole thing a gang shootout where 30 rounds were traded leaving two men dead in the wreckage Staring at the pressure of a mandatory life sentence Boxing bar chose to take his odds and push the case to trial In 2006 the bet worked out at least halfway He was cleared of the two murders dodging what could've been a permanent spot behind them walls But walking free wasn't happening just yet the system wasn't about to let him slide away clean Despite beating the bodies his involvement in the shooting and his current parole violation from his 1992 conviction came back to bite him hard The conviction from that earlier beef got reactivated and Boxing bar found himself back in the system facing additional time for the parole violation combined with the weapons charge from the Coney Island incident He caught more years tacked onto his sentence and that's when his story took another turn Boxing bar's whole existence became a testament to the cyclical nature of the streets and the system The violence that defined his early years never really left him even when he tried to navigate his freedom The constant back and forth between release and reincarceration became the pattern of his life Each time he touched down on the pavement it seemed like the gravity of his past pulled him right back into the belly of the beast His legend grew not just from the incidents themselves but from how he carried himself through every chapter From the 1992 assault charges to the legendary prison incident with Meno to the Coney Island shooting and everything in between Boxing bar represented something that New York City couldn't ignore A walking example of what happens when someone comes of age in the most dangerous era of modern urban America Someone who never could quite escape the weight of that foundation no matter how hard the system tried to bury him His story became folklore in the streets and in the penitentiaries a cautionary tale and a badge of honor all at once People talked about Boxing bar not just because of the violence but because of the resilience he showed The way he navigated systems that were designed to break him The way he carried himself with a certain dignity even when surrounded by madness That's what made his name echo through Brooklyn through the prison system and through the consciousness of those who knew the streets Charles Boxing Bar Joy's legacy ain't nothing pretty It's a dark window into what the early 90s did to a generation and what the machinery of the criminal justice system does to men caught in its gears He represents the thousands of cats who came up in that era and never quite made it out no matter how many times they got a second chance His story is New York's story a reflection of the city's hunger its violence and its inability or unwillingness to break its own cycles Boxing bar stood as a monument to that reality A reminder that some legacies are written in blood and years behind bars not in glory or redemption but in the cold hard facts of a life spent mostly caged A life that shaped the streets and the prisons he moved through and that's exactly why his name will never be forgotten