50 Cent Makes Fun of Floyd Mayweather Jr.’s $100 Million Defamation Case

Fif never passes up the chance to make fun of his ex-friend who is now his enemy.

50 Cent has returned to social media, doing what he does best: making fun of people.

This time, his taunts are directed at Floyd Mayweather Jr., a longstanding rival who recently sued Business Insider, its parent firm Insider Inc., and reporter Daniel Geiger for $100 million.

The action, which was filed in the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York, alleges that the publication published a story that was “knowingly false and defamatory,” causing harm to Mayweather’s real estate business.

Geiger “frequently disregarded documentary evidence of Mayweather’s ownership and commercial success, turned down numerous requests to examine confirmed transaction records, and instead relied on anonymous sources and innuendo,” the lawsuit claims.

Mayweather further asserts that the piece, which he feels was motivated by “racial and political bias,” caused him to “lose lease opportunities at his buildings” and miss out on “emergency rent-freeze concessions.”

However, 50 Cent didn’t hide his doubts. The rapper-turned-TV mogul posted on Instagram, saying, “Well, that case is going nowhere because you didn’t do the deal champ.” To force him to fund his own legal team, he must have mentioned the writer separately. Champ is crazy.

But according to Mayweather, this legal spat is about more than simply appearances. According to his lawyer Bobby Samini, “this lawsuit isn’t just about setting the record straight.” “When the press veers beyond journalism into deliberate character assassination, it’s about holding them accountable.”

“I’ve never sued a media outlet, and I’m 48 years old,” Mayweather clarified. However, the media has attacked me, disparaged me, and disparaged my family throughout my life. You can judge me based on the person you know.

“We will vigorously defend against this meritless attempt to discredit our reporting and smear our reporter,” the insider retorted.

The trolling, in typical 50s flair, was quick—and vicious.

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