Ja Rule Reveals 50 Cent’s History While Challenging His Intentions in Diddy Documentary

The rapper revisits 50 Cent’s prior legal issues and queries his intentions as executive producer of the Diddy documentary.

50 Cent, who recently gained attention as an executive producer on the documentary The Reckoning, which explores Sean “Diddy” Combs’ legal disputes and abuse claims, was the target of a series of tweets from Ja Rule.

Ja Rule expressed his displeasure with Herman’s new job, despite the fact that the document has generated a lot of conversation. Rather, he accused 50 Cent of disregarding his own past in order to present himself as a moral voice through documentaries.

Ja Rule called 50 Cent a “dry snitch” in his tweets, asserting that his participation in well-known exposés is more about self-promotion than it is about assisting victims. He contended that he would donate revenues to groups that assist survivors if 50 were genuinely driven by justice.

Then he went one step further and brought up 50 Cent’s documented domestic abuse case from 2013, in which model Daphne Joy accused him of kicking her and damaging thousands of dollars’ worth of property during a fight in Los Angeles. 50 Cent was sentenced to probation, community service, domestic violence therapy, fines, reparations, and an order to avoid Joy, even though he finally entered a no contest plea to a vandalism charge as part of a plea agreement.

Ja also cited Joy’s public remarks from 2024, in which she charged 50 with further abuse over the years. Ja Rule utilized the assertions to draw attention to what he sees as hypocrisy in 50’s new role as a producer of tales focused on responsibility, even though no additional charges resulted from those accusations.

Ja made it clear that he is neither endorsing Diddy nor denying the charges against him. Rather, he claimed to be drawing attention to Herman’s character and asking why 50 Cent is presenting himself as the narrator of other people’s wrongdoings while his own history is still being debated and contested.

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