Meek Mill opened up about the “ wildest ” party he’d attended at a Sean “Diddy” Combs party, and let’s say it wasn’t the appetizers. “The weirdest shit I ever seen was ‘coke vibes’ at a puff party,” Meek wrote. “That’s going around at all the parties … I’m from Norf Philly. I made millions when I was 23! I don’t even want to be hooked on weed that bad! Not being judgmental, but I feel differently!”
With Diddy currently under a federal investigation for allegedly sex trafficking, Meek’s name was thrown into the bedlam of gossip and assumptions, and he’s not having it, not one bit. And while he’s not entirely surprised by the hard-pushing reputation of Diddy’s events, Meek is letting it be known that he won’t be dragged through the thickets of deeper legal drama here.
In his post, Meek also called attention to what he believes is targeted character assassination, like the blogs running with speculation that he is the “Philadelphia rapper who dated Nicki Minaj” in Rodney “Lil Rod” Jones’ explosive lawsuit against Diddy.
“I wanna raise up litte rod and how his lawsuit just went away?” Meek added. “He never actually spoke my name but these blogs all ran with that entire agenda against me. My culture cannot agree but it was an assault on my brand.. I wanna know what the bottom of it is!”
Although Meek said the lawsuit had been dropped, the case is still technically active. In March, a federal judge threw out several of the most significant allegations, including the RICO (racketeering) charges. However, he still allowed the core claims, alleging sex trafficking and sex abuse, to proceed. That’s to say that the gravest charges are still hanging in the air, even if a bit of the legal weight has been shaved off.
But Meek isn’t letting the whispers guide the ship. Previously, he had offered $100,000 to support a private investigation into how his name got dragged into the mess. For a man no stranger to legal skirmishes and public perception, it feels like this one is personal.
And Meek’s tone is, through it all, more worn out than stormy, that of someone who’s seen too much, been misunderstood too many times, and wants to protect what he’s been able to build. A millionaire in his early 20s with millions in the bank and a name he’s had to scrub hard to clean up, he’s finally saying: Don’t lump him in with the chaos he never wanted anything to do with.
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