The suit between Afroman and various Sheriff's Deputies of Adams County, Ohio, is over.
In addition to the 3 songs that made use of security video taken when the Adams County Sheriff's department raided his house back in 2022, he made other videos. The deputies were claiming that he had defamed them.
The original warrant, obtained on the say so of a "confidential informant," said that the sheriff's department would find narcotics, and kidnap victims held in a dungeon. They found none of that. Just the home of a successful entertainer who used his money to move away from the Hellscape that is Los Angeles, and buy some property in the country, to raise his family. This pissed off someone in Adams County. We don't know that it was someone in the sheriff's department, but the sheriff, and whatever judge signed the warrant, were sure quick to believe the worst about this guy.
This is Legal Mindset's video Afroman's Wild Case Against Ohio Cops (Fast Facts)
I have been thinking about the 3 original videos (link below) after all of this got started. The reason that the Adams County Sheriff's Department was so bent out of shape is ridicule. Ridicule is a fabulous weapon, and they were not expecting to look like idiots in front of the whole world. Of course, the more they draw this out, the more people see those videos. Apparently cops in Adams County have never heard of The Streisand Effect.
Here is a link to the post I created back in 2023 when this exploded after the videos were released. If you click thru you will find the video "Will You Help Me Repair My Door," and links to the videos "Lemon Pound Cake," and "Why Are You Disconnecting My Video Camera?"
The deputy featured in the video "Lemon Pound Cake" had to sit in court and watch the video be played. It is hilarious.
NEW: Afroman's music video "Lemon Pound Cake" played in court as "Officer Poundcake" was forced to sit and watch.
— Collin Rugg (@CollinRugg) March 18, 2026
Adams County Sheriff's deputies are suing Afroman after he released a music video following a botched raid on his home.
At one point during the trial, the video was… pic.twitter.com/NMh2QT3lMN
And the good news for the First Amendment...
Verdict is in: Afroman FULL victory, with no claims going to any of the Adams County Sheriff plaintiffs, total courtroom W for @ogafroman
— Legal Mindset (@TheLegalMindset) March 18, 2026
Solid news for First Amendment protections of free speech, parody, artistic creation and fans of Lemon Pound Cake. pic.twitter.com/6FP4hUzazB
W Pound cake W AfroMan pic.twitter.com/WHanggHqeF
— issa//Shame (@IssaxShame) March 18, 2026
Legal Mindset has a postmortem video on the results of the trial: Afroman HUMILIATES Cops in Epic Court Win (Fast Facts)
ReplyDeleteSo the badgemonkeys got all butthurt and sued a clever entertainer for butthurt damages...and didn't win. But guess what...neither did Mr. Clever Entertainer. He still had
ReplyDeleteto pay a lawyer and endure a court case. Because for those who don't know...The Process Is The Punishment. It's designed and intended to be that so people are reluctant to seek justice. As for the butthurt badgemonkeys....wonder who laid their legal fees...I doubt they did.
This wasn't a criminal case. This was a private action (civil) brought, not by the county, but by the group of deputies. I don't know if Foreman would have gotten his legal fees reimbursed in Ohio, but I know his songs got enough play - "Lemon Pound Cake" was trending on X - to offset some of the costs. And he did get his $400 back.
DeleteI was a young (and very naive) civilian employee for a large metropolitan police force. I was stunned one day to find out they had a dedicated crew who's only job was to repair homes damaged by cops and swat teams who breached the wrong house. In my opinion things like this happen far more often than they should.
ReplyDeleteOfficer pound cake got the attention he deserved, maybe in the future he will remember this and be a little more humble, but I doubt it.
-MrHappy-
Yeah, cops have trouble with maps. That wasn't the case here. The breached the house listed on the warrant. The problem is that not one statement from the "confidential informant" working with the Adams County Sheriff's Department was correct. It was all fabricated - in my opinion - because someone didn't like the idea of a black rapper from LA having a nicer house than they do.
Delete