The streets of Nigerian hip-hop just got a courtroom twist.
Tochukwu Gbubemi Ojogwu, the fiery rapper known as Odumodublvck, has been ordered to appear before an Abuja magistrate on November 6, 2025, at exactly 9:00 AM. The charge? Criminal intimidation.
The summons, stamped November 3, 2025, by Magistrate Farida Ibrahim of the FCT Chief Magistrate Court, accuses the “Declan Rice” hitmaker of threatening Olayinka Osagie Onobun, Head of A&R at Chocolate City Music.

Court documents seen by multiple sources show the case filed under CR/1505/2025. It cites Sections 396 and 397 of the Penal Code, laws that punish threats meant to cause fear or force someone into unwanted action.
Onobun, who manages Blaqbonez, reportedly felt his safety was at risk after a series of heated posts on X. The messages, described as “cumulative acts,” allegedly targeted his person and reputation.
The drama didn’t start in court. It began online.

Weeks ago, Odumodublvck clashed publicly with Morin Oluwatobi, Blaqbonez’s manager. What seemed like typical rap beef quickly escalated. The rapper called out veteran MI Abaga for staying silent, labeling him a “hypocrite sitting on the fence.”
Then came the posts that crossed the line.
According to the legal petition filed by Onobun’s lawyer, Pelumi Olajengbesi, Odumodublvck’s words weren’t just shade, they were threats. Enough to make a grown man fear for his safety.
In a now-deleted or buried post, Odumodublvck hinted that the past few weeks had been “heavy.” He claimed he and his circle were painted in a bad light over a deeply personal issue that got twisted online.
But the law doesn’t care about feelings. It cares about words.
The summons is clear: show up or face arrest. No lawyers, no proxies, just Odumodublvck in the dock, facing a magistrate who’s seen it all.
Chocolate City, home to legends like MI and Ice Prince, has stayed silent. Blaqbonez hasn’t commented. Onobun’s camp only says justice must take its course.
On X, reactions are pouring in. Some call it karma for a loud mouth. Others say it’s an industry hit job. One user wrote, “When rap beef meets real beef, someone ends up in court.”
The hearing is just two days away.
Will Odumodublvck show up? Will he fight the charges or settle quietly? And how deep does this rift really go?
One thing is certain: Nigerian hip-hop just entered a new chapter, one written not in bars, but in legal briefs.
Stay tuned. The next verse drops on November 6.

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