lil_wayne__web.jpgNEW YORK (AP)— Lil Wayne was freed from jail Nov. 4 after serving eight months in a gun case, emerging with a hot new album, well-wishes from a former president and a deepened appreciation for his fans.

“Welcome home, Weezy!” the rap star’s Facebook page proclaimed, using one of his nicknames, after his morning release from the Rikers Island jail complex. He was freed at a location jail officials and his lawyer wouldn’t disclose.

“I was never scared, worried nor bothered by the situation” behind bars, Lil Wayne said Nov. 4 through Weezythanxyou.com, a website he set up to give fans a glimpse of his life in jail.

Lil Wayne, who had the best-selling album of 2008 and won a best rap album Grammy with Tha Carter III, kept his career in high gear while locked up for having a loaded gun on his tour bus in 2007.

His latest album, I Am Not a Human Being, released while he was in solitary confinement in September, hit No. 1 on the Billboard 200 chart last month. He also was featured on a string of hits by other artists, including Drake and Eminem, that came out while he was jailed -and he recorded a verse for the Drake/Jay-Z collaboration: Light Up over on the phone for a Rikers Remix that made the rounds online.

President Barack Obama recently told Rolling Stone he has some Lil Wayne music on his iPod. And former President Bill Clinton praised the rapper’s abilities during a phone interview with a Pittsburgh radio station on Nov. 4, adding that “what I hope will happen is that he has a good life now.”

Lil Wayne, born Dwayne Carter Jr., pleaded guilty in October 2009 to attempted weapon possession, admitting he’d had a loaded, semiautomatic .40-caliber gun on his bus after a Manhattan concert.

He started a yearlong sentence in March but got time off for good behavior, despite a disciplinary knock that sent him to solitary for the last month of his term. A charger and headphones for a digital music player were found in his cell in May, jail officials said. The items are considered contraband.

The rapper later acknowledged the misstep on his Weezythanxyou site, where his associates typed up and posted periodic letters he wrote on topics ranging from his daily Rikers routine to new songs he’d heard and liked on the radio.

He also provided specific, individual responses to some of the fan mail that flooded his cell and became, he said, a source of cheer behind bars.

“I laughed with some of you, reasoned with some of you, and even cried with some of you,” he wrote in a letter posted Nov. 2. “I never imagined how much impact my words and life can have.”

But he assured fans the impact hasn’t completely changed an artist known for ingenious work that sometimes borders on weird: “I will be the same Martian I was when I left, just better.”

A few die-hard fans huddled in the pre-dawn rain Nov. 4 outside the Rikers complex, hoping to get a glimpse of him.

A rapper since his childhood, New Orleans-born Lil Wayne released his first solo album, Tha Block Is Hot, in 1999. His hits include Got Money, Lollipop and A Milli.

Lil Wayne, who turned 28 in jail, envisions recording new music and releasing a long-rumored Tha Carter IV next year and he may also make a book out of a journal he kept in jail, according to his managers and associates.

But his priorities after being released from jail  were spending time with his family — he has four children –and the Cash Money Records label mates to whom he often refers as family, too.

“Family first … then back to business,” Cash Money co-founder Bryan “Birdman” Williams said in an interview last week.