A judge tossed two of the claims against Afroman, finding that “the issue appears to be the humiliation and outrage that the officers feel at having their likenesses displayed and mocked.”


The rapper Afroman will have to continue to defend himself against a defamation lawsuit filed by Ohio sheriff’s deputies who raided his house after a judge allowed some of the deputies’ claims to proceed.

In a ruling last week, an Ohio county judge dismissed two of the deputies’ claims against Afroman, best known for his 2000 hit “Because I Got High,” finding that the rapper’s commentary was protected artistic speech. However, the judge allowed three other claims to proceed, finding that it was not outside the realm of possibility that the deputies could prove they were entitled to relief.

The Adams County Sheriff’s Office (ACSO) executed a search warrant on Afroman’s house last August on suspicion of drug possession, drug trafficking, and kidnapping. As Reason reported in June, the deputies were searching for evidence of outlandish claims from a confidential informant that the house contained a basement dungeon.

Deputies found neither large amounts of marijuana nor a depraved dungeon. Afroman was never charged with a crime. He responded by releasing two music videos viciously mocking the deputies—“Lemon Pound Cake” and “Will You Help Me Repair My Door.” He also sold merchandise with images of the deputies and used the footage to promote his products and tours.

The mockery offended the deputies so much that seven of them filed a lawsuit against Afroman in March. The deputies argued Afroman used their personas for commercial purposes without permission, causing them to suffer “embarrassment, ridicule, emotional distress, humiliation, and loss of reputation.”

In an October 13 ruling on Afroman’s motion to dismiss the lawsuit, Adams County Judge Jerry McBride tossed out the deputies’ claims of invasion of privacy by misappropriation and unauthorized commercial use, finding that, “while their quality and appropriateness may be questioned, [Afroman’s] artistic and musical renderings have substantial and creative content which outweighs any adverse effect on the plaintiffs in terms of their right of publicity.”

“In this case, the value that seems to be at issue here is not the monetary value of the officers’ likenesses, which appears to be nominal,” McBride wrote. “Instead, the issue appears to be the humiliation and outrage that the officers feel at having their likenesses displayed and mocked by the defendant. Undoubtedly, they also feel aggrieved by their investigative actions being questioned publicly.”

However, McBride allowed three of the officers’ other claims—false light, unreasonable publicity of private lives, and defamation—to survive, finding that many of Afroman’s comments on the deputies appeared to be statements of fact rather than opinion. For example, Afroman posted on social media that deputies wanted to kill him, that one of them stole money from him, and that another deputy was a lesbian.

“My clients are pleased with the Court’s ruling denying the defendants’ motion to dismiss their claims,” Robert Klingler, an attorney for the deputies, says. “Telling lies about people in public discourse is never justified, especially when those lies are vile, intentional, and meant only to unfairly damage people’s reputations. Mr. Foreman has until now acted as if he can say anything he wants, not matter how untrue and despicable, without any repercussions. We look forward to demonstrating that neither Mr. Foreman, nor anyone else, has the right to intentionally lie about others for the purpose of causing them injury.”

The Ohio chapter of the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) filed an amicus brief in support of Afroman’s motion to dismiss the suit, arguing it was a blatant example of what’s known as a strategic lawsuit against public participation (SLAPP).

“We were pleased to see that the trial court properly dismissed several of the police plaintiffs’ claims,” says David Carey, deputy legal director of the ACLU of Ohio. “Even at this early stage, it is obviously meritless for the officers to claim that Afroman ‘misappropriated’ commercial value merely by commenting on the events of a destructive search of his home—even if that commentary took the form of harsh mockery, and even if it was placed on products that he offered for sale.”

Such retaliation for publicly criticizing the police is sadly common. Reason recently reported on a lawsuit filed by an Iowa man who was arrested twice for criticizing his local police department during the public comment period of a city council meeting.

  • TWeaK@lemm.eeOP
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    1 year ago

    The unreasonable publicity claim the jury will be asked whether the police had an expectation of privacy. Obviously they could not, since they were inside someone else’s house and therefore could not have any idea whether there was hidden video or audio recording systems.

    Oh they knew the cameras were there, they even tried to turn them off. Then a little one of them reached inside of his vest while counting Afroman’s cash, which mysteriously was a few hundred short of the gig payment it represented.

    Regardless, if you’re in someone else’s home, you don’t have an expectation of privacy against them. And as an officer on duty, you don’t have an expectation of privacy against the public, either.

    Also, the context matters. Afroman isn’t the New York Times. He didn’t present this information as true news, allegations meant to be taken literally and seriously. While they are serious allegations, Afroman is a comedic rapper. A reasonable observer would know that some of what Afroman raps about will be exaggerated or have fictional details added in order to make a more compelling song or even just to make a bar rhyme.

    Not all of the claims are against his songs, some of the claims are about posts on Instagram or other social media. These are a little more shaky.

    Personally, I don’t think the cops are really that thin skinned. I think they’re simply abusing the legal system to try and cause financial harm to Afroman. Unfortunately, that all too often works.

    Don’t forget, this all started because Afroman slept with one of the cops’ ex-wife.

    • ralen_jor@sh.itjust.works
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      1 year ago

      Where did you get the part about Afroman sleeping with one of the police’s ex-wife? I hadn’t heard that part of the story before.

      • TWeaK@lemm.eeOP
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        1 year ago

        It wasn’t anything confirmed, and looking into it he’s married (although some articles mention his wife, while others talk about her as his ex-wife?) so maybe he didn’t sleep with her. However I definitely saw a few things suggesting he’d interacted with a cop’s ex-wife somehow, and that was supposedly what stirred things. It was probably from reddit or YouTube comments, though, so who knows if it’s actually true.

        In any case, the report from their CI (the official reason) was full of holes, and it’s ludicrous that a judge granted a warrant over that. No wonder that another judge in the same area has allowed all of this to proceed to trial.

        Edit: I found this comment that mentions him fucking a Sheriff’s wife. It might be mentioned in his album.