You ever seen someone throw rocks and hide their hands? That’s exactly what 50 Cent’s accusing J Prince of doing. 50 ain’t holding back this time—he’s calling out the so-called King of Houston and airing out the dirty laundry.

So here’s what went down. J Prince allegedly tried to press 50 to “check in” after he moved his whole operation down to Houston. Yup, 50 left New York behind and started setting up shop in H-Town—better taxes, bigger business opportunities, and a booming hip-hop scene. Makes sense, right? But apparently, that rubbed J Prince the wrong way. Word on the street is, J Prince wasn’t feeling 50’s arrival and tried to press him—sent his crew to make sure 50 “paid respects.” Translation? Extortion attempt.

But 50? Nah. He wasn’t going for none of that. He made it *real* clear that he don’t play those games. He even clowned J Prince on Instagram and dared him to pull up if he really wanted smoke. Sources say 50’s got receipts—real documents, audio, the whole nine—that could take down J Prince’s entire street empire. And believe this, 50’s not scared. He’s trolling, he’s exposing, and he’s *not* checking in.

But let’s not get it twisted—J Prince still got pull in Houston. His Mob Ties crew runs deep. But 50 ain’t fazed. Matter of fact, he came to Houston and started making major moves: launching businesses, investing in the city, and giving back in a big way. He even got awarded the *key to the city* by Mayor Sylvester Turner in 2022—Houston literally gave him his own holiday. November 24th is officially *50 Cent Day*.

While 50 was being celebrated, J Prince was reportedly fuming behind the scenes. See, 50 wasn’t just living in Houston—he was *thriving* in it. He tried opening a $20 million film studio there. He launched G-Unity Foundation programs for local high school students. He handed out free turkeys with the Houston Rockets and donated over $850,000 in toys for kids in 2023. In 2024, he helped raise $6 million for the Houston Children’s Charity.

Meanwhile, J Prince? He’s being called out for running what people are now saying is nothing more than an extortion ring. That whole “check in” thing? It’s less about protection and more about payment. Artists who come into Houston are expected to touch base with J Prince, not out of respect—but to cough up cash. Or else, things start mysteriously going wrong.

Take NBA YoungBoy for example. He refused to check in, and not long after, his spot got hit. Chains gone. Cash gone. Car keys gone. The robbers even hit him up for a $30,000 ransom. But YoungBoy clapped back hard, calling them fools and refusing to pay. And outta nowhere—guess who pops up? J Prince, posting a video claiming he had all of YoungBoy’s stolen goods and telling him to “reach out.”

 

50 Cent Explodes On J Prince For Leaking FAKE Docs About 50 Snitching

YB wasn’t buying it. He went *off*, saying real ones don’t handle business like that. He said if J Prince really had good intentions, he would’ve called directly—not gone online fishing for clout and leverage. YB made it clear: he wasn’t checking in, paying up, or playing these games.

And YB ain’t the only one speaking out. Cam’ron and Mase even dragged J Prince on their “It Is What It Is” podcast, clowning him for trying to still run the streets at 60 like it’s 1995. They said what many are thinking: real OGs don’t send others to do their dirty work—and you can’t call yourself a big homie if you’re acting like a little one.

Oh, and don’t even get us started on those infamous Houston *loaded dice games*. Rumors have been swirling that J Prince and his sons use them as traps for artists who come to town. Some say it’s all part of the extortion playbook. And tragically, people are even speculating about Takeoff’s death at one of those games. Official reports say it was a stray bullet, but whispers from the streets claim J Prince allegedly sent his people to “teach a lesson” after Takeoff and Quavo didn’t check in properly. That lesson turned deadly.

And whenever J Prince gets pressed about it? He gets shifty. Real shifty.

So now, we’ve got 50 Cent—business mogul, cultural icon, and now Houston heavyweight—locking horns with J Prince, the self-proclaimed gatekeeper of the H. One’s being praised by mayors, partnering with the city, helping the youth. The other? Accused of terrorizing artists and running a decades-old extortion ring dressed up as “respect.”

This battle’s far from over—but one thing’s for sure. 50 ain’t checking in, and he ain’t backing down.