
Wright successfully overturned his kingpin conviction and life sentence, but there were several other charges levelled against him. As word got around the prison, Wright began working as a paralegal on more than 20 fellow inmates' cases, fighting back against the unfairness of the criminal justice system from the inside. Over the next seven and a half years, he educated himself on New Jersey law and built his own legal defence. Maintaining his innocence, Wright decided to take matters into his own hands while incarcerated in a maximum security facility. In 1991, he was found guilty by a jury and received a life sentence with no eligibility for parole for 30 years.

In 1989, Wright was an entrepreneur and independent record producer whose life was upended when he was charged with leading one of New Jersey's largest narcotics distribution networks. Here's what you need to know about the unbelievable true story behind For Life. Wright's real-life inspirational journey starts in New Jersey in the late '80s and leads to a chance meeting with 50 Cent decades later, when the rap mogul approached the former-inmate-turned-lawyer to help him license an underground fight club in the Bronx. "He was so focused on his one goal, which was to get out of jail, that he didn't have time for grief, he didn't have time for joy, he didn't have time for anger even," Nicholas Pinnock, who plays a character inspired by Wright in For Life, told q's Tom Power. After his release, he went on to become an attorney in his own right. While serving time, the former inmate taught himself law so he could prove his own innocence and overturn his conviction.

Inspired by a story that made headlines nearly 30 years ago, For Life is loosely based on the life of Isaac Wright Jr., who was falsely accused of being a drug kingpin and sentenced to life in prison. For Life is a new legal and family drama from executive producer Curtis "50 Cent" Jackson, but unlike the average courtroom procedural, this series gives new meaning to the saying that truth is stranger than fiction.
