Yes, It’s A Break From All The Relentless Naomi Coverage
New York Post readers find “rap wars” stories strangely satisfying:
Posted: March 26th, 2007 | Filed under: New York PostThe city’s rap wars are on the brink of exploding after a thug performer allegedly beat up a 14-year-old kid for wearing a rival’s shirt — and the boy turned out to be the foe’s son, officials said yesterday.
G-Unit artist Tony Yayo was released on a $5,000 cash bond after being arraigned on charges of assault and endangering the welfare of a child, both misdemeanors. Prosecutors said he roughed up the teenager on a Manhattan street for wearing a sweatshirt promoting a rival company.
Yayo, an associate of rap star 50 Cent, vented his rage on the son of Czar Entertainment chief Jimmy “Henchman” Rosemond, who represents rival rapper The Game, cops said.
. . .
The criminal complaint against Yayo, 29, who is nearly twice the teen’s size, said he hit the kid so hard with the back of his ring-studded hand that the boy’s head bounced off a wall.
The youngster told cops that two men with Yayo brandished guns during the assault, after 50 Cent allegedly sicced his crew on the kid.
A source close to Rosemond, 42, said the father, a former gang member, was fuming.
“If he wanted Yayo dead, he’d be dead already,” the source said.
Cops are not convinced the boy was attacked simply for wearing a Czar Entertainment sweatshirt. The source said cops believe Yayo might have known exactly whom he was hitting.
Rosemond’s son is a rap-star wannabe, and has made industry connections through his father.
. . .
[Family lawyer Jeffrey] Lichtman said the teen was on his way to an after-school internship at his father’s West 25th Street office last Tuesday when 50 Cent, whose Violator Records office is across the street, spotted the boy and signaled to some members of his entourage.
Yayo, whose real name is Marvin Bernard, allegedly pushed the youth up against the wall and hit him.
“F – – – Czar Entertainment!” Yayo reportedly yelled.
Lichtman said he had as much contempt for 50 Cent as the man who carried out the attack.
“He was the one that gave the hand signal that started the whole thing,” Lichtman said. “He wasn’t there during the hitting, but [he] . . . started it.”