Blogger Latasha Kebe, aka Tasha Ok, is reportedly asking a federal court docket to cease rapper Cardi B from garnishing her financial institution accounts till after her attraction is heard. The recording artist, whose actual title is Belcalis Almánzar, moved to garnish Tasha Ok’s financial institution accounts at J.P. Morgan Chase to gather on the $3.3 million the blogger owes her.
Almánzar received a $4 million judgment after she sued Kebe for defamation in 2019. Kebe claimed that the “WAP” rapper had labored as a prostitute and had a venereal illness. Kebe misplaced and was ordered to pay the rapper a complete of $4 million. The YouTuber filed an attraction which is presently pending.
Nevertheless, Almánzar just lately filed papers with a Georgia court docket to garnish Kebe’s financial institution accounts, and now the blogger is requesting {that a} federal court docket intervene to cease the rapper till her attraction is heard. Kebe additionally shared {a photograph} on Instagram of herself laughing as she stood in entrance of the Financial institution of Africa in Bamako, Mali on Sept. 23.
Kebe captioned the submit, “G.O.A.L.S ?? I wanna be like her once I develop up daddy…?. Winos we simply dropped the BlueFace mother interview on TashaKLive.com! Watch earlier than #PhuckeryFriday begins! See y’all tonight on TashaKLive.com for some #PhuckeryFriday. Present begins at 7pm est on TashaKLive.com #unwinwithtashak.”
One fan famous, “That is what snitching on your self appears like.” After Kebe posted a number of footage of herself overseas visiting Kenya, Morocco and Mali earlier this month, followers questioned if Kebe had moved to someplace in Africa to keep away from paying the cash she nonetheless owes Almánzar. The blogger claimed that she was on trip but in addition talked about her “new life in Africa” on Instagram. She additionally posted footage of herself and the rapper with the caption, “Welp, #YouTube video up in 5 minutes. Since your fav retains BEGGING for these little cash, ask her how she needs the 4 million? In Guinea Francs or Ugandan Shillings?”