Ja Rule’s recent attempt to brand 50 Cent as a snitch has backfired in a major way — and the takedown didn’t even come from 50 himself. Enter Bradford Cohen, a high-profile attorney in the Hip Hop world who’s worked with Lil Wayne, Drake, and Kodak Black, and who just called cap on Ja’s so-called “proof.”
Earlier this week, Ja Rule shared what he claimed was official paperwork proving that 50 cooperated with police and filed an order of protection against Murder Inc. But according to Cohen, not only does the document fall flat, it actually disproves Ja’s claim.
Breaking it down on Instagram, Cohen explained:
“Police reports don’t name informants by name. In the document Ja posted, it lists ‘a. Informant, b. Curtis, c. Marvin’ — they are separate entities. The commas make that obvious. This paperwork does not say 50 is the informant. Period.”
He added a subtle jab at the Fire Festival rapper’s logic:
“Dumb people would ignore the commas between the names. Don’t be a dummy.”
Cohen made it clear he doesn’t take sides personally — he respects both artists — but said the paperwork simply isn’t the smoking gun Ja claimed it to be.
This all comes after Ja Rule reignited their decades-long beef, fueled by 50’s recent mocking of Irv Gotti and a fresh round of social media shots. When Ja threatened to “go nuclear” on 50 in an interview, 50 laughed it off:
“This fool has been ready to go what he calls nuclear for 22 years. LOL.”
That lit the fuse for a brutal online rant from Ja, where he clowned 50’s music, TV shows, and even called him “boo boo the fool.”
But with this “snitch” claim now thoroughly debunked by a credible legal source, it looks like Ja may have just fired a very public blank.