Official Press Release ODUMODUBLVCK'S PHYSICAL ASSAULT ON CHOCOLATE CITY STAFF MEMBER AT RHYTHM UNPLUGGED CONCERT

What began as a rap beef between our artist Blaqbonez and Odumodublvck (Tochukwu
Gbubemi Ojogwu) has devolved into a sustained campaign of harassment, stalking, and
physical violence that now endangers our entire team.

In the early hours of December 22, 2025, at the backstage area of the Rhythm Unplugged
Concert, Tochukwu physically assaulted our staff member, Feyi Ajayi, while he was there
with another of our artists.

According to multiple eyewitnesses, Tochukwu approached Mr. Ajayi, made threatening
statements about Chocolate City and its leadership, and then headbutted him without
provocation. When our artist’s bodyguard intervened, he and his associates poured drinks on
Mr. Ajayi while shouting expletives about Chocolate City and its executives.

Mr. Ajayi is currently hospitalized and receiving treatment for injuries sustained in the assault.
While he is responding well to treatment, the severity of the attack required immediate
medical attention.

This was not an isolated incident. It represents the latest escalation in a year-long pattern of
criminal behavior:

December 2024: Tochukwu assaulted Blaqbonez at Landmark Beach, forcibly stealing his
eyeglasses. The eyeglasses have never been returned, and he has since been photographed
wearing them.

March 2025: He tracked Blaqbonez to a hotel in Uyo, cornered him in an elevator with at
least five male associates, attempted to punch him, and threatened that he “had guns.” That
same day, he and his associates harassed Ms. Morin Oluwatobi, who manages Blaqbonez, by
physically blocking her from performing her duties and verbally assaulting her.

March, 2025: He instructed his associates to attack Major AJ, a Chocolate City artist, while
he was at a public eatery. When confronted about the attack, Tochukwu stated it was because
Major AJ is closely associated with Blaqbonez.

September, 2025: Despite security presence, he accosted Blaqbonez at a fashion show in
England, attempting to strike him before being intercepted. He then spat at
Blaqbonez’smanager, Morin.

October, 2025: He engaged in sustained cyberbullying, threats, and intimidation online
against Osagie Onobun, a Chocolate City executive, because of his association with
Blaqbonez.

Throughout 2024-2025, Tochukwu sent over 100 threatening messages to Blaqbonez via
social media and personal phone numbers, escalating to calls and direct messages to
Chocolate City executives. These threats have extended to their family members and anyone
associated with them.

He has publicly attacked other artists and spread false narratives in attempts to defame
Blaqbonez’s character and damage Chocolate City’s reputation. He has called show promoters
to disrupt Blaqbonez’s performances and threatened industry colleagues who support
Blaqbonez, urging them to ostracize him or become targets themselves.

His targets now include Ms. Oluwatobi, Mr. Ajayi, Mr. Onobun, multiple Chocolate City
artists, other industry professionals, and our executives. These assaults and threats are
well-documented, and this escalating pattern of violence and intimidation cannot continue.

What was an artist dispute has become a blood feud where Tochukwu stalks our people across state lines and international borders, physically assaults them, and threatens deadly violence.

Rap beefs are part of hip-hop culture. Physical violence, stalking, spitting on women,
threats with weapons, and maligning well-meaning people are not. The global hip-hop
community has buried too many artists because disputes spiraled into violence. We will not
wait for such a tragedy.

To event organizers: You have a duty of care to professionals working in your venues. We
call on you to establish security protocols that protect everyone from violence.

To the music industry: Artist disputes are inevitable, but criminal behavior is not. We must
draw that line collectively or bear collective responsibility for the inevitable tragedy.

Our team’s safety is our highest priority, and rest assured, we will use all available legal
means to ensure it. As a law-abiding organization, Chocolate City has escalated this matter to
the relevant authorities.

We take no pleasure in this public statement, but when an artist’s behavior becomes a
sustained campaign of violence—particularly targeting women—we have a duty to protect
our people through every legal means available.

Signed
Chocolate City Music Management

Share

Post comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *