New Orleans rapper Dee-1 is flipping a tense roadside encounter into a bold critique of racial profiling and hip-hop stereotypes.
The faith-driven MC, born David Augustine Jr., revealed in a viral Instagram video that he was pulled over by the North Carolina Highway Patrol on September 24 while traveling for his ongoing Hipocritical Hop Tour. What should have been a routine stop quickly escalated into a drug search that left the rapper both stunned and determined to speak out.
Officers Accuse Dee-1 of Being a “Dope Dealer”
In the video, Dee-1 explained that state troopers searched his rental vehicle after a narcotics K-9 allegedly alerted to the car. Officers told him rental cars are frequently used to move drugs across state lines.
But what shocked Dee-1 most was the direct question one trooper asked: “Are you a dope dealer?”
Holding up merchandise from his back seat, the rapper pushed back on the stereotype. “That’s my children’s book. Yes sir, that’s my hoodies I was telling you about,” he said in disbelief. “But he asked me if I’m a dope dealer, bro. Like, literally.”
Instead of contraband, officers found only his tour gear, books, and clothing.
“They Just Knew They Found Some Dope”
Though frustrated, Dee-1 remained calm throughout the ordeal. “They just knew they found some dope. Nope. Just a man of God on tour,” he told his followers after the stop.
He later reiterated in his caption that he has never used or sold drugs, thanking God for the experience and confirming the footage will appear in an upcoming documentary.
Rap, Race, and Stereotypes
The moment has since struck a chord online, not only because of the awkward search, but also because it highlights the double burden Black men and rappers often face: the assumption of criminality.
Dee-1 has long worked to position himself as a different kind of hip-hop artist, known for socially conscious lyrics, faith-driven messaging, and his refusal to glorify drugs or violence. For him, the incident became a teachable moment.
Rather than escalate, he turned the stop into a cultural critique — using his platform to show how systemic biases and lingering hip-hop stereotypes play out in real time.
Looking Ahead
As his Hipocritical Hop Tour rolls on, Dee-1 isn’t letting the incident slow him down. Instead, he’s leaning into it as both personal testimony and social commentary, challenging assumptions about what rap represents.
“They just knew they found some dope,” he said. “Wait till y’all see the documentary.”
For Dee-1, the search wasn’t just a hassle — it became proof of why his mission matters: to show that hip-hop can be about accountability, truth-telling, and faith.
