wow. COMPLETELY full of gas. this was not like this before. I did check the oil before and there was no gas in it. well, at least I got a engine flush...HAHA...? Thank you for the help guys.
That is seriously messed up bigtime.
The good thing is that you didn't hydraulic lock the crankcase...or at least I hope you didn't.
My suggestion:
Pull the drain plug and drain the oil.
Pull the oil filter off and dump the gas out of it also.
Then it's time to follow all the plumbing and I mean all of it and find out why and how the gas tank is attached to the crankcase. Don't stop until you find the cause and can clearly identify it. Then continue the plumbing verification process until you are completely finished to insure everything else is connected properly.
Once you find the problem and fix it, then start cleaning up the engine.
Drain the airbox even if it looks dry. There's usually a capped hose under the bike that goes to a reservior and continues up into the airbox.
Get ALL the gasoline out of the engine. That means out of the lower crankshaft areas, the transmission and clutch areas. Note that on some engines, there are secondary plugs on the engine that can drain oil out of areas such as the crankshaft galleries.
Gasoline is almost certainly in the rocker galleries above the pistons and that has to be cleaned out also.
Personally I would pull the clutch cover, starter, any other covers or parts that access the core engine and any other drains on the engine case then leave it fully open for a day or two with a fan blowing on it. Nothing wrong with blowing it out with a shop vac or compressed air either.
Once it is all cleaned out, install a new oil filter, load the engine with new oil then spin the starter a few times then start it. Verify you are not getting fuel into the crankcase and watch it closely for a while. After maybe 10 minutes, I would drain the oil and refill with new oil again. (the first oil change is just to flush the majority of the remaining fuel residue out of the engine) Once you have no fuel contamination in the oil, ride 100 miles while watching it closely then do another oil/filter change.
If it was me, I would be debating on whether to go visit whoever replumbed the engine with my 1-5/16" combination wrench for a little discussion out behind the barn with no witnesses or the drain pan full of oil/gasoline to dump over their head. Maybe both.