Max B going to prison didn't quell his beef with his former Byrd Gang brother Jim Jones.
"He could die where he stands, but I ain’t got time to talk about a person in jail,” Jones said of B, who's serving time for murder conspiracy and robbery charges. “You violate me a certain type of way, that’s for life. I can't never talk bad about somebody in jail. Let’s see how long it takes for him to come out. If he comes out and I’m still into it, I’mma bust his ass.”
That was three years ago, and by all accounts things have gotten better between the two since.
Max spoke on what went wrong in a new jailhouse interview for an upcoming documentary.
"I think two egos were just coming together. Two big personalities. I wasn't there for that. I was just happy to be involved, you know what I'm sayin'?" Max explained. "I'm never trying to come take nobody sh*t. I'm in my own world, b. I'm an existentialist. I like to do my own sh*t. I come from a whole other spot.
It was just egos clashing, a lack of respect, you know what I'm sayin'? A lack of everything. That sh*t don't mix well," Max added. "Next thing you know you are beefin'," he added." It should've went a different way. I think today we would've handled the situation different. We was young. We was all crazy. Now we here, we older, we got kids. We got to set the right example. It's all love."
Ever six months or so French Montana sparks another rumor that Max is about to be free. However, even after his sentence reduction of 75 years to 20, he's still looking at 2025 for his earliest parole.