They asked you what your favorite song by your dad is. >> News just surfaced that Ex-Tentacian's killer allegedly sent a disturbing video to his young son after his release. Now people are questioning the motive, the timing, the energy behind it. But what was really in that video and why send it to the child? Let's get into the details. The video, the money, and the son they forgot about. >> Pause right there. Look at that. Look at those men on that bed throwing stacks of hundreds in the air like they just won something. Laughing, celebrating, filming themselves. And here's the part that should make your stomach drop. That money they're throwing around like confetti. That's the $50,000 they robbed from Extention on the same day they murdered him. They didn't even wait until the next morning. They didn't lay low. They didn't act like men who understood the gravity of what they had just done. They divided the cash, got in front of a camera, and started performing. That video was eventually shown to a jury. It became one of the most damning pieces of evidence in one of the most high-profile rap murder trials this country has ever seen. And years later, after the convictions, after the life sentences, after one of the men involved walked out of prison, that same energy resurfaced, not just with that cash video, but with something that hit even harder, something involving a child. Because while those men were on that bed counting blood money, there was a baby on the way. A boy who would be born seven months after his father was murdered. A boy who would grow up pointing at photos on the wall and explaining his father's death the only way a little kid knows how through superheroes and comic book logic and a kind of innocent heartbreak that the internet has never been able to fully look away from. And one of those killers found that boy's video and posted it with laughing emojis. This is the full story and we are starting from the very beginning. On June 18th, 2018, Josa Dwayne Ricardo Enroy, known to the world as Extention, was 20 years old and on the absolute come-up. His album had debuted at number one on the Billboard 200 just months before. Sad was on its way to Going Diamond. He had a $10 million deal lined up, and somewhere in that same window of time, just 2 weeks before he was killed, he found out he was going to be a father. Extention learned that his girlfriend, Genesis Sanchez, was pregnant just 2 weeks before he died. He was murdered on June 18th, 2018 in an apparent robbery as he was leaving a motorsports store in Deerfield Beach. >> He knew two weeks before he passed away. >> Two weeks. That's all the time he got with that knowledge before four men in a rented Dodge Journey took everything from him outside a motorcycle dealership. And in those two weeks, he did something that cuts deep when you really think about it. He picked out names for his unborn child, made them up himself. One for a boy, one for a girl. For a boy, he chose Gikume, a word he invented entirely from scratch. Pulling letters from characters in his favorite video game, Kingdom Hearts, and combining them into something that had never existed before. He defined it himself, too. Gekkum, a different state, the next universe of thought. >> Um, he took a couple of letters from these different characters from his favorite video game, Kingdom Hearts, and he just mashed it all together. >> A name he coined for a son he would never get to hold. That's the kind of detail that doesn't leave you. Gakume Anfroy was born on January 26th, 2019, 7 months after his father was shot dead outside Reva Motorsports in Deerfield Beach, Florida. His mother, Genesis, had spent the entire pregnancy largely out of public view. Her identity kept under wraps for months, living in a Parkland townhouse owned by Extentian's mother, Cleopatra Bernard. The birth itself didn't go as planned. There was supposed to be a home delivery with a midwife. >> Sanchez wasn't even supposed to leave the house for the birth. there was a midwife ready to deliver the baby. >> The original plan was to have a home birth. Um, and it didn't really work out. Now, at this point, we're at 26 hours in labor, and they were like, "I'm sorry, but we're going to have to do an emergency C-section." >> She was rushed to Bokeh West Hospital with seven cars worth of family and support pulling up to that emergency room. And when Gigumi arrived, the family announced the name and its meaning publicly, honoring what Jasa had asked for before he died. From the very first day of his life, Genesis made one thing clear about how she was going to raise this boy. He was going to know his father. All of him. The music, the complexity, the love, and the loss. >> I'm definitely going to make sure like I'm not going to ever lie to him. That's for sure. He's going to know about his dad. He's going to hear about his dad 24/7. I'm going to tell him about all the fond memories that I have with with his dad, Jose. I'm going to tell him how much he would have loved him. and she has kept that promise. Gume has grown up surrounded by his father's name, his father's image, and as the occasional family post has made clear to the millions of people watching from a distance, his father's face. The resemblance is genuinely striking. Around his 7th birthday in January 2026, photos surfaced of Gekkum recreating one of Extentation's most iconic looks, the blue purple braids from his late 2017 era. Fans broke down in the comments. People said it felt like watching a ghost step back into the room. But before any of those birthday photos, there was a clip, a short video of a small boy walking through a house, pointing at pictures on the wall explaining who his father was in the only language available to a kid that young. >> They asked you what your favorite song by your dad is. >> Hold on. My dad is Batman. He tried to keep the Joker, so he died. My dad died. >> I'm going to I'm going to save my dad for the Joker because I'm just because because I'm Spider-Man right now. >> Yeah, you're Spider-Man. You're a superhero. >> His dad is Batman. The Joker got him and one day he's going to save him because right now he's Spider-Man. That is how a child processes a murder. That's what grief looks like when it's filtered through a 4-year-old mind that doesn't have the words for what actually happened yet. And that video, that innocent, gut- punching superhero logic explanation of an unspeakable loss is the exact clip that ended up on a killer's Instagram stories with laughing emojis on top of it. We need to get into all of that. But before we do, we have to go back to June 18th, 2018. Because the robbery that killed Extention, the way it was planned, the way it was carried out, and especially the way those men behaved in the hours immediately after, that is the full foundation of everything that follows. On the afternoon of June 18th, 2018, ex-tention walked into a Bank of America and withdrew approximately $50,000 in cash. He put the money in a Louis Vuitton bag, got into his black BMW i8, and drove to Reva Motorsports in Deerfield Beach with his step uncle Leonard Kerr. Nothing unusual about the afternoon, just a young dude with money checking out bikes. But somebody had already clocked that car. Dedric Devon Sha Williams, street named Chucky, had seen X-tention before. not as a fan, not as someone in his circle. They had both been at the same probation office earlier in 2018. Chucky remembered the face. He recognized the BMW, and the moment he spotted that car pulling into the rival lot, the afternoon shifted direction entirely. Williams and Robert Allen walked into the dealership, confirmed the target, walked to the parts counter, and bought two black masks with cash on camera inside the same store where Extention was standing. Then they walked back out to the rented Dodge Journey where Michael Boatright and Trayvon Nuome were waiting, guns already on deck. For roughly 10 minutes, all four of them sat parked across the street, lying in wait, watching the entrance. At approximately 3:56 p.m., Extention and Kerr walked out and got into the BMW. The Dodge Journey cut them off. Boat Wright and Newsome jumped out, masked and armed, rushed the driver's side, and demanded the bag and jewelry at gunpoint. Newsome grabbed the Louis Vuitton bag with the $50,000 from the passenger side. Kerr fled on foot and escaped. The robbery was done. The money was already in hand. There was no reason, no tactical reason, no logical reason, no human reason to do anything else. Boatright shot Extention three times. Two bullets entered the neck, clipping the lung and grazing the aorta. Extention was pronounced dead at Broward Health North at 4:51 p.m. He was 20 years old. Toxicology came back completely clean. The crew fled. They divided the cash. Boatright, Williams, and Newsome each took roughly $15,000. Allan got $5,000 because he had stayed in the car. And then they started filming. That video on the same day, the same hours, while Extention's family was getting the worst phone call of their lives, these men were on a bed throwing his money in the air and recording it for the internet. That video was eventually shown to a jury in 2023. And when the judge sentenced Dedric Williams, he looked him directly in the face and addressed it. A person who had any measure of human decency or remorse for killing someone would not likely to be seen dancing around and filming themselves with the stolen money. How proud you were of yourself. >> Blood money on camera and years later from inside a prison cell that same energy would show back up. This time aimed directly at the boy those men left fatherless. In part two, we break down the full trial, the sentences, and the moment the judge told the shooter exactly what the rest of his life was going to look like down to the stainless steel furniture in his cell. The trial, the sentences, and the man who got out. The investigation moved faster than any of them expected because these men had been reckless in almost every direction. The masks bought on camera inside the store. The rented car traced through the app, the distinctive orange sandals Chucky was wearing that showed up in both the surveillance footage and his own Instagram posts, the phones pinging off towers near the scene, and the social media videos of them throwing the stolen cash around the same afternoon they committed the murder. Dedric Williams was arrested on June 20th, 2018, just 2 days after the killing during a routine traffic stop. Michael Boatright was picked up on July 5th on a separate drug charge with the murder warrant folded in while he was already in a cell. Robert Allen was arrested on July 26th. Trayvon Nuome surrendered on August 7th. All four were indicted by a grand jury on first-degree murder and armed robbery charges. The case sat in the system for years. Motions, delays, the pandemic slowing everything to a crawl. But somewhere in that stretch of waiting, Robert Allen made a calculation. He had stayed in the car. He hadn't fired a weapon. He hadn't physically grabbed the bag. He had $5,000 in blood money and a first class seat to a murder that was about to define the rest of his life. And so, he made a decision. In August of 2022, Allan pleaded guilty to secondderee murder and armed robbery in exchange for his full cooperation and testimony against the other three. That deal became the backbone of the prosecution's entire case. The main trial, Boatright, Williams, and Newsome, began February 7th, 2023 in Broward County Circuit Court in front of Judge Michael Eusen. It ran for about a month. Allen's testimony was methodical and detailed. He walked the jury through everything, the rental car plan, the mask purchase inside Reva, the 10-minute wait, the shooting, the cash split, and Boat Wright searching accessory to murder on his phone in the days after the killing. That last detail deserves its own moment. Boat Wright's defense attorney actually tried to use that search in opening statements, arguing it meant his client was just an accessory, not the trigger man. But Allan shut it down from the stand. He told the jury that Boatright ran that search to reassure Allan himself, telling him that because he stayed in the car, he could only be charged as an accessory. Boatright wasn't searching to prove his own innocence. He was searching to manage his crew. That strategy collapsed the second Allen started talking. Defense attorneys pushed Drake's name into the proceedings, tried to float theories about outside forces in the music industry. The judge largely shut these down as irrelevant distractions with no evidentiary basis. And between the surveillance footage, the DNA on the masks, boatrights probability rarer than one in 929 non-illion, Williams rarer than one in 831 octilian, the phone records, and Allen's full account. There was nowhere for the defense to go. On March 20th, 2023, the jury convicted all three on every count. First-degree murder and armed robbery. As the verdict was read, Boat Wright reportedly turned toward Ex-tentant's family and blew them a kiss. Not a flinch, not a flicker of remorse, just a man who had apparently already decided that none of this was going to reach him. Sentencing came April 6th, 2023. Judge Usan stepped into that courtroom and said what needed to be said. He started with Nuome. Mr. >> Newsome. You sir are a perfect example of why we have in this state a felony murder rule. I'm pretty sure having sat through the trial that you did not wake up that morning and say to yourself, I'm going to go kill somebody today. >> The judge granted that Newsome probably didn't wake up planning to be part of a murder, but he made clear why that changes absolutely nothing. And what happens is that when you take a firearm and you rob somebody, you're telling the world, I'm going to take something that doesn't belong to me by force. And even if your intent at that moment was not was only to rob and not to kill, who can say that the death of the victim is not a predictable and foreseeable outcome? >> Trayvon Nuome was sentenced to life in Florida State, prison on both counts, running concurrent with a 10-year minimum mandatory. Then the judge turned to Williams, the man who spotted the car, who confirmed the target, who orchestrated everything from the driver's seat without ever firing a shot or grabbing the bag, and who then went home, got on a bed, and filmed himself throwing the stolen money around. >> Williams, you are the perfect example of why we have a law of principles in this state. It was you who picked the target in this case. And then the judge brought up the video. That bed, those hundreds flying through the air, the grin on his face while a family was getting destroyed on the other side of town. >> And I can tell you this court is shocked by your behavior after the murder. A person who had any measure of human decency or remorse for killing someone would not likely to be seen dancing around and filming themselves with the stolen money. You should understand that while you were dancing on that bed throwing down those bills, you weren't throwing money down on the floor. You should think of that as you tossing down days, weeks, and months of your life. Just like that. >> Dedric Williams was sentenced to life in Florida State Prison on both counts, running concurrent with credit for time already served. Then came Boatight, the shooter, the man who blew that kiss at Extant's family after the verdict. Judge Usen didn't soften a single syllable. >> Mr. Boight, you turned a robbery into a murder. And on that day when you stood there and fired that weapon, you didn't just end one life, you effectively ended five lives, including your own. >> And then the judge went somewhere that very few judges go. He didn't just hand down the sentence. He described the room. He described the furniture. He described in precise and deliberate terms what the remainder of Michael Boatright's existence was going to look like every hour of every day for however many years God gives him. >> From here, you will go and be placed in a cell that has a stainless steel slab that's attached to the wall of your bed. And next to it is a stainless steel sink and a stainless steel toilet. That's the furniture. You'll spend every hour and every day and every week and every year of your life in that cell. And one day they'll come and open up that cell in the morning and you'll have passed on. And only on that day will you have served your sentence. Michael Boatright received two consecutive life sentences with no possibility of parole plus an additional consecutive 30 years on top of that. Then there was the fourth man, the one who cooperated, the one who turned states evidence and handed prosecutors the whole blueprint. Robert Allen was sentenced on May 17th, 2023. He stood before Judge Usen and spoke directly to Extentacian's family. He said sorry didn't begin to cover it. He said if he had to die in prison, so be it. He asked for forgiveness. And unlike his codefendants, Judge Usan believed him. Allan received seven years in Florida State Prison with credit for approximately five years already served in county jail, leaving him roughly 2 years to complete. That was followed by 20 years of supervised probation. Prosecutors and defense had jointly recommended probation only, citing the risk Allen took testifying against men with street ties and his cooperation in solving an unrelated cold case murder. Robert Allen was released from prison on October 26th, 2023. The man who helped set the whole thing in motion, who bought those masks, who confirmed the target, who split $5,000 of blood money, walked out of a Florida prison less than 6 years after Extention was killed. And while the internet mostly kept it moving after that news dropped, what happened next pulled everything back into the spotlight. Because while Allan was out on probation trying to rebuild whatever was left of his life, someone else was still in a cell with a phone and that someone found a video of a little boy. Decume the Instagram story and what really happened. Here's where we have to slow down and be precise because the headline on this video and on every YouTube thumbnail and social media post that's been circulating around this story implies something very specific. It implies that a man who was released from prison did something directly targeting X-Tentation's son. And while the real story is still deeply messed up, it is not exactly that. And you deserve to know the actual facts because the actual facts are disturbing enough without embellishment. Let's start with who actually did this. Michael Boatright, the shooter, the man serving two consecutive life sentences with no parole, is still in a Florida state prison. He has not been released. He will not be released. He is exactly where Judge Usen told him he would be, in that cell. with that stainless steel slab for the rest of his natural life. But at some point in 2024, he or someone with access to his Instagram account got hold of a phone inside that facility and they started posting. In 2024, a family video of Gigumi Enroy surfaced. A short clip of the boy walking around the house pointing to photos of his late father on the wall with a caption along the lines of that's my dad with a smiling emoji. It was the kind of warm, innocent moment that X-Tentations fan base responds to deeply and it went wide. Boat Wright's account reposted it to his Instagram stories. Over the clip, multiple crying, laughing emojis were added along with commentary reportedly to the effect of, "They need to free a real one. He wasn't moved by it. He wasn't rattled by it." He used a 5-year-old's tribute to his murdered father as material for content, as a joke. And then it got worse. A follow-up story appeared showing a screenshot of the post's views list, specifically highlighting that Genesis Sanchez, Gumi's mother, had watched it. The caption read, "She watching again with laughing emojis. He wanted her to see it. That was the whole point. It wasn't boredom. It wasn't accidental. He posted the child, watched the views, screenshotted the moment the boy's mother was confirmed in the audience, and laughed about that publicly, too, from a prison cell on a contraband phone while serving life without parole for killing that child's father. In the same run of stories, Boatright also reposted old footage of the crew with the cash, the same video from the day of the murder, the same bed, the same hundreds flying through the air. I want you to try to stop me. >> Blood money reposted from behind bars next to a clip of the victim's son with laughing emojis on both. The posts were amplified when DJ Academics reshared them to his own platform, sparking a massive wave of backlash across the internet. People were furious. Extention's fan base, which has always been ferociously protective, went into full meltdown mode. The clip of Gumi spread again, this time attached to the context of a killer mocking it from a cell, which made the whole thing land twice as hard as it already did. >> My dad is Batman. He tried to keep the choker, so he died. I'm going to save my dad for the choker because I because I'm Spider-Man right now. >> That boy, that explanation, that completely innocent, heartbreaking way of holding something no child should have to hold and somebody laughed at it. In October of 2024, Boatright posted again from what appeared to be the same account. I'm not sorry for nothing I did. Not sorry. Years after the trial, years after sitting in that courtroom and hearing Judge Yusen describe his deathbed in precise detail, still laughing, still posting, still performing for whoever was watching. Now, back to the question the headline raises because the internet has been conflating two separate events. the mocking, the geeky repost, the cash video, the she watching screenshot that all came from Boatright, a man who is still in prison and has never been released. The other half of the story is Robert Allen, and that's where the after his release framing comes from. Allen was released from prison on October 26th, 2023. As of late March, 2026, court documents confirm he has completed his effective prison term and remains on 20 years of supervised probation. And here is what the record actually shows. There are no credible reports, no confirmed social media posts, no documented contact, no verified harassment of Robert Allen targeting Gigumi, Genesis Sanchez, or anyone in Extentian's family since his release. The man who expressed genuine remorse in open court, who helped solve an unrelated cold case, and who served his sentence by all available evidence, has not resurfaced in this story since walking out of that prison. The internet took boatrights prison troll sessions and Allen's release and stitched them together into a single headline. And that headline traveled at a speed that the corrections never will. That's just how this works. But here is what remains true regardless of which man did what. A killer used a contraband phone to find a video of his victim's 5-year-old son. He posted it publicly. He laughed at it. He screenshotted the moment the boy's mother saw it. And then he went back to his stainless steel bed in his stainless steel cell and kept living. the only way he's ever going to keep living inside those four walls for the rest of his life. And Geek keeps growing. As of January 2026, he just turned 7 years old. He started first grade in 2025. He is being raised by a mother who promised from day one that he would know his father and has kept that promise every single day. >> I'm definitely going to make sure like I'm not going to ever lie to him. That's for sure. He's going to know about his dad. He's going to hear about his dad 24/7. He's going to know all of it one day. The music, the interviews, the legal drama, the trial transcripts, the surveillance footage, the sentencing, and the moment when a man in a prison cell found his video and thought it was something to laugh at. But he's also going to know what his father said in that first interview after getting out of jail. the one where a 19-year-old kid who had been through more than most adults sat down and talked about wanting to fill up refrigerators for people who were hungry about finding a way out through music and wanting to pass that path on to other kids who felt alone. >> So I knew that feeling and I wanted to comfort anybody cuz I found a way out through the music. >> That was Extentation at 19 already thinking about other people already building something that 8 years after his death is still alive in the numbers. His YouTube channel sits at over 42 million subscribers. Sad has crossed two billion streams on Spotify. His catalog doesn't shrink, it just keeps growing. The men who took him got exactly what Judge Usan told them they were going to get. The shooter will die on that stainless steel slab. The driver will follow. The second gunman will follow. And the one who cooperated carries what he did with him on 20 years of supervised probation wherever he goes. And Gekkum, the little boy who thinks his dad was Batman, who styles his hair the same way Jay did, who is going to be old enough one day soon to sit down and read every word of this story, keeps going. The legacy outlived the hate, and no laughing emoji posted from a prison cell is ever going to change that. If you enjoyed watching this video, then go ahead and click on any of the cards on your screen for
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