Saturday, June 6, 2026 - Nigerian rapper Tochukwu "Odumodublvck" Ojogwu has accused record label Chocolate City Music of allegedly collaborating with the Nigerian Police to arrest him.
Odumodublvck levelled the allegations in a series of posts
on his X page on Friday, June 5, claiming the record label had made several
attempts to do so.
The rapper stated: "9th attempt gone wrong. My motion
is peppering them. Chocolate City has been trying to arrest me for the longest
time. They tried before my American tour, and now they are trying again with
the European tour. Why? Because I exposed the sexual abuser under their roof,
their lies and their bots. Everyone keeps watching while they try all their
gimmicks, but why? We're in Europe, baby. Their own is a play."
Furthermore, he alleged that the record label used the
police to file a frivolous petition against him, which lacked a phone number.
He warned that he would publish every single frivolous petition the police had
sent to him if they were not careful.
"You sent a petition without a phone number on it. Do
you want to kidnap me? Do you want to pull me to the side and shoot me? Sending
a petition without contact details. Is your job to oppress innocent citizens?
Mind you, the same station you are calling me to is the same one where you let
that sexual abuser go, under the guise of 'he has begged and paid a settlement
to the victim.'
"Sending petitions before my tour so police can detain
me, because your artist cannot tour. My motion is making them sick. Everybody
says Motion. My motion is too much that fake police are finding me. Why always
me?" Odumodublvck noted.
However, the record label denied the allegations during an
interview with Premium Times on Friday, June 5. Speaking with the newspaper,
Desmond Ezebuiro, PR Lead at Bean Creative IMC, a subsidiary of Chocolate City
Group, stated that the company had no power to arrest any individual.
"Please note that our company does not possess the
authority to arrest any individual, as such powers rest with law enforcement
agencies and not private entities," Mr Ezebuiro said.
"As regards the various claims and allegations
currently being circulated, the matter is before the courts and, out of respect
for the legal process, we are unable to comment further on the specifics at
this time. We remain committed to due process and will allow the appropriate
legal channels to address the issues raised."
In December 2025, the record label accused Odumodublvck of
allegedly attacking one of its staff members, Feyi Ajayi, backstage at the
Rhythm Unplugged concert. The label claimed the rapper's conduct had grown into
what it characterised as a "sustained pattern of harassment, stalking, and
physical violence," maintaining that the attack posed a grave threat to
the well-being of its entire team and pledging to take legal action.

0 Comments