Kodak Black arrested in Florida over MDMA trafficking charge
American rapper Kodak Black, whose real name is Bill Kapri, has again found himself at the center of criminal proceedings in Florida after being arrested in Orange County on a charge connected to MDMA trafficking. According to available court and jail records, the 28-year-old musician was taken into custody on Wednesday, May 6, 2026, and was booked into the Orange County Jail detention system. Initial information stated that he was being held without the right to bail, but local sources following the case later reported that a judge set bail at 75,000 dollars on May 7, after which Kapri, according to jail records cited by American media, was released on bail.
The charge concerns trafficking in MDMA, a synthetic drug also known as ecstasy or molly. The weight of the charge does not relate to an incident on the day of the arrest itself, but to a police intervention from November 2025 in Orlando. According to allegations from the arrest warrant and reports by local media, police at that time responded to reports of a shooting near Children’s Safety Village, a nonprofit educational center intended for children. There, officers found several people and two luxury vehicles, a BMW and a Lamborghini, and a later search of the vehicles and items connected with the investigation became the basis for criminal proceedings against the rapper.
The charge stems from a police intervention in Orlando
According to allegations from court documents reported by American media, Orlando police received several reports of a shooting on November 24, 2025, in the area where Children’s Safety Village is located. When officers arrived at the location, they found a group of people and two vehicles. The reports state that one of the officers smelled cannabis coming from a vehicle, which prompted a search. In that search, according to allegations from the arrest warrant, a pink bag was found containing MDMA, cash and documents bearing Kapri’s name.
American media report that about 37,000 dollars was found in the bag, as well as items that investigators claim they connected with the rapper. Among the details mentioned in the reports are items that police claim resemble those shown in Kapri’s Instagram posts. The reports also mention documents and a bottle of prescription medication on which, according to allegations from the investigation, fingerprints were found. For now, these details represent claims by the prosecution and investigators, not facts established by a court.
Kapri has, according to published information, denied ownership of the bag or the items found in it. His attorney Bradford Cohen, according to reports by American media, questioned in court the strength of the evidence and the circumstances on which the probable cause for arrest is based. The defense, according to available information, claims that Kapri was not in the vehicles at the time of the search and that any evidence connected with fingerprints relates to a legally possessed medication. The case is at an early stage, and the accused, under the American legal standard, is considered innocent until guilt is proven in proceedings.
Bail set at 75,000 dollars
After his arrest and booking into the Orange County jail, Kapri was brought before a court. According to reports by local television stations from Orlando, the prosecution requested a bail amount higher than usual, citing his previous criminal record and the circumstances of the case. At a hearing on May 7, 2026, the judge set bail at 75,000 dollars. Local media then reported that the rapper was released on bail the same day.
This development is important because it changes the initial information that Kapri was in custody without the right to bail. In American criminal procedure, the status of a detainee often changes after the first appearance before a judge, when the conditions for release, flight risk, the seriousness of the charge and prior criminal history are considered. In this case, the court was not deciding on guilt, but on the conditions under which the accused may defend himself while free as the proceedings continue.
According to reports from the United States, Kapri has meanwhile filed a written plea of not guilty and requested a jury trial. This means that the case, unless there is a different legal outcome, continues as a criminal proceeding in which the prosecution will have to prove the connection of the accused with the drugs found and the elements of the criminal offense of trafficking. For the defense, according to the information available so far, the key issue will be ownership, control and the actual connection of the accused with the vehicles, the bag and the items found.
What a charge of MDMA trafficking means under Florida law
A charge of MDMA trafficking in Florida does not necessarily mean that a person was caught selling drugs. Florida law on trafficking in controlled substances also includes knowingly possessing a certain amount of a drug, as well as selling, purchasing, manufacturing, delivering, transporting or bringing such a substance into the state. For MDMA, the relevant threshold starts at 10 grams, and quantities from 10 to less than 200 grams may under the law constitute a first-degree felony.
According to the Florida statute governing criminal offenses of drug trafficking, for a quantity of MDMA from 10 to less than 200 grams, a mandatory minimum prison sentence of three years and a fine of 50,000 dollars are prescribed if a person is convicted. This does not mean that such a sentence has already been determined in Kapri’s case, but that it is the legal framework that could become relevant in the event of a conviction. In American criminal proceedings, the final outcome depends on evidence, procedural decisions, possible plea agreements and the decision of the court or jury.
It is also important that the term "trafficking" in this kind of legal context differs from the everyday meaning of the word. In public discourse, the term is often associated exclusively with organized sale or transport of large quantities of drugs, but Florida regulations tie the threshold for certain substances to the quantity and circumstances of possession. That is precisely why cases of this type often focus in court on the question of whether the accused had actual or constructive control over the substance found, or whether it can be proven that he knew of its presence and had the ability to exercise control over it.
A rapper with a long history of legal problems
Kodak Black has had a successful music career for years, but also a series of publicly recorded legal problems. He is known to a wider audience for songs such as "Super Gremlin", "Tunnel Vision" and "Zeze", and American media, in reports about the new arrest, note that he has sold millions of singles and built a large audience in the hip-hop scene. At the same time, his biography in recent years has often been marked by criminal cases and proceedings connected with weapons, drugs and the conditions of earlier sentences.
One of the best-known legal cases concerned a federal conviction for providing false information when purchasing a firearm. The sentence in that case was commuted in 2021 by then American President Donald Trump, who issued a series of pardons and commutations on the last day of his first term. Kapri’s legal history again came into focus after a 2022 arrest in Florida, when he was charged in a case connected with oxycodone. Part of later charges in a separate 2023 case was dismissed after it was established that the substance initially described as cocaine actually related to a prescription medication, but other cases continued to be mentioned in his legal record.
In the new case from Orlando, the prosecution will probably rely on physical evidence, police observations and circumstances connected with the items found. The defense, judging by the first publicly available statements, will seek to challenge the connection between Kapri and the drugs and items found in the vehicle or bag. Since this is a proceeding that has only just been opened, it is not possible to reliably assess what the outcome will be, nor should the mere fact of arrest be presented as proof of guilt.
The case drew attention because of the circumstances of the investigation and the status of the accused
The case has received considerable media attention for several reasons. The first is Kapri’s recognizability in the American music industry, and the second is the circumstance that the charge is connected with an incident near an institution for children’s safety education and reports of a shooting. The third is the legal context: a charge of MDMA trafficking in Florida carries serious consequences, especially when statutory thresholds for mandatory minimum sentences are applied. In addition, media particularly emphasize that, when setting bail, the court also took into account the accused’s previous criminal record.
According to available information, the publicly published reports so far contain no allegations that Kapri was charged with the shooting itself for which police initially went to the scene. The key part of the case concerns what was found during the subsequent police intervention and the investigators’ claims that the found items can be connected with him. This difference is important for understanding the case because the initial reason for the police arrival and the criminal charge that was eventually filed are not necessarily the same.
The proceedings will continue before the competent court in Orange County. The next steps could include additional hearings, discussions about evidence, possible defense requests to exclude certain evidence, and decisions on moving the case toward trial or a possible agreement between the parties. Until that happens, the case remains open, and all claims from the arrest warrant and police reports should be viewed as allegations that still need to be proven in court proceedings.
Sources:
- Associated Press – report on the arrest, MDMA trafficking charge, not-guilty plea and bail (link)
- FOX 35 Orlando – local report on the arrest, the background of the November 2025 case and release on bail (link)
- ClickOrlando / WKMG – report on the bail hearing, the amount of 75,000 dollars and allegations from the police investigation (link)
- CBS News Miami – report on the criminal complaint, written plea of not guilty and request for a jury trial (link)
- The Guardian – report on the court proceedings, allegations from the arrest warrant and the defense position (link)
- Florida Legislature, Online Sunshine – text of Florida Statute 893.135 on trafficking in controlled substances and mandatory penalties (link)
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