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Nicki Minaj Celebrates Victory: YouTuber’s Cocaine Claims Retracted in Settlement Lawsuit

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Nicki Minaj performs during the opening night of her Pink Friday 2 World Tour at the Oakland Arena on March 1, 2024. (Kevin Mazur/WireImage for Live Nation)

Nicki Minaj has reportedly achieved a significant legal victory against a commentator on YouTube’s platform. 

According to TMZ, Nicki Minaj’s court case with YouTuber Nosey Heaux, whose real name is Marley Green, ended in her favor. The settlement requires Green to publicly admit that her previous claims about Nicki Minaj using cocaine were false. In addition to these retractions, Green has agreed to refrain from publicly discussing Nicki Minaj’s husband, Kenneth Petty, and their son, Papa Bear. Furthermore, Green has also reportedly agreed not to repost any comments about Nicki Minaj engaging in illegal or unethical activities, with a penalty of $50,000 for each violation. 

Green posted her original comments, for which she has now admitted she had no evidence, in a video on September 12, 2022.

“[Nicki] is shoving all this cocaine, shoving in all this cocaine up her nose,” Nosey started. “Allegedly. Thank you. Allegedly. But we all know it’s true. Fuck, listen. I can’t even say ‘allegedly’ with that ’cause I, we all know it’s true. I’m not saying allegedly on that. Nicki Minaj is a cokehead.”

In response, according to HipHopDX, Nicki Minaj tweeted a portion of a TMZ article about her lawsuit against Jesseca Green. Her attorney, Judd Burstein spoke out stating, “When this case is over, she will no longer be permitted to use the name ‘Nosey Heaux’ because we will take her trademark from her when she does not have enough money to pay the judgment. Anyone else who spreads lies about Nicki will suffer a similar fate. My marching orders are to aggressively sue anyone with a media or social media following who damages her with intentional lies. Eventually, the lesson will be learned.”

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While Nosey Heaux is no longer able to perpetuate the narrative, the impact of the previous allegations has already been subtly referenced in songs by other artists. For instance, in songs like Latto’s ‘Put It On Da Floor’ and ‘It’s Givin,’ the narrative has been used to indirectly target Nicki Minaj.