He writes: ‘When they [the police] asked him who he thought had
shot him, it would make sense that 50 would have said, ‘Ja Rule, Irv Gotti and
Murder Inc.’ 50 later insisted he never cooperated with officers, even when they
tried to make a case against Ja Rule’s colleagues Irv ‘Gotti’ Lorenzo and Irv’s
brother Chris, who were acquitted of laundering drug money through their label,
Murder Inc, in 2005. Ja Rule, 38, claims the case couldn’t have been made
without the rapper speaking to the police. According to the New York Daily News
newspaper’s Confidenti@l column, he wrote: ‘He secretly led them through his
recordings for the answers they were looking for.’ Ja Rule also claimed the
pair – who buried the hatchet in 2011 – previously got into a fight in 2000 at
a peace summit in Atlanta, Georgia and 50 ‘was a crazed man on a mission to
destroy me.’ He wrote: ‘50 tried to swing on me, but I dipped, then I hit him
with the baby Louisville Slugger [a baseball bat]. ‘Bam! I dropped the bat. I
pulled the shirt over his head. I started catching him left, right, uppercut.’
50′s crew reportedly ran away and Ja Rule also claims he led the charge in the
Hit Factory recording studio attack in Midtown later the same year when 50 was
stabbed. Ja Rule, real name Jeffrey Atkins, admits he armed himself with a
crutch taken from an injured crew member and marched into the recording studio
to take it out on 50. He said: ‘I hit him with the crutch. We proceeded to whip
his ass. I was putting in my work. 50 was crunched in the corner. I slammed the
big Tannoy speaker down on him.’...
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