Another Guilty Plea in Jam Master Jay Murder Case Nearly 24 Years Later

Nearly 24 years after the killing of Jam Master Jay, a new development has emerged in the long-running case. Jay Bryant, a 52-year-old Queens resident, pleaded guilty to helping facilitate the 2002 murder by granting access to the recording studio where Mizell was working. In a courtroom statement, Bryant admitted his role, saying he “helped them kill Jason Mizell.” Prosecutors allege his actions allowed the gunmen to enter and carry out the fatal ambush.
Mizell was inside a second-floor lounge of the studio when two men were buzzed in and opened fire. Previously, Karl Jordan Jr. and Ronald Washington were convicted in connection to the killing, though Jordan’s conviction was overturned in December 2025 while Washington’s remains intact. Authorities say the murder was linked to a dispute over a drug deal, though testimony during trial suggested Mizell was not deeply involved in drug trafficking.
As a founding member of Run-DMC alongside Joseph "Run" Simmons and Darryl "DMC" McDaniels, Mizell helped shape hip-hop’s global influence with hits like Walk This Way. The group was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 2009. Bryant now faces a potential sentence of 15 to 20 years in prison, as officials continue to pursue closure in one of hip-hop’s most significant unsolved cases.










