Englishdude
OG
Guilty or not disney execs done worse, so have most of Hollywood directors etc.
??? What y’all talking aboutNot even going to lieI thought homie was gay BUT he won. My nigga won big (pun included)
The chick Persephani is in a relationship with that dude Patrick Cloud??? What y’all talking about
Dam not trying to be a hater but reallyThe chick Persephani is in a relationship with that dude Patrick Cloud
Add the Persephanii thread in the Candy Shop to that list.
He makes some funny videosThe chick Persephani is in a relationship with that dude Patrick Cloud
Ngl, I'm shocked....The chick Persephani is in a relationship with that dude Patrick Cloud
Same shit I said after I saw that jacket
It’s on brandSame shit I said after I saw that jacket
Was that Meagan with him and his attorney?
The break-up text
Shortly after 3 a.m., club surveillance footage shows Jabbari standing near the hostess stand. Chaudhry said this was the moment she saw Majors' break-up text on her phone.
The lawyer alleged that Jabbari soon left the club and grabbed a taxi with Majors' card. Surveillance footage shows her arriving at Majors' address at 3:23 a.m.
As she rode up to Majors' triplex penthouse on the 17th, 18th, and 19th floor of a luxury, lower Manhattan apartment building, the elevator surveillance camera recorded a clear image of her right hand, to which there continues to be no apparent injury, Chaudhry said in the April 8 letter.
Jabbari's phone went silent at 7:45 a.m. She had called Majors 32 times since they parted ways at midnight, and had sent him a series of "angry, jealous text messages" accusing him of infidelity and begging him to call her, Chaudhry alleged in the letter.
Hours later, Majors, still in his Upper East Side hotel room, began scrolling through Jabbari's barrage of calls and texts. What he saw chilled him to the bone, Chaudhry told Insider, and he came rushing home.
Majors' attorney said his arrest could make Black men afraid to call 911
NYPD body-camera footage captured Majors telling the cops who had arrived at his penthouse that he had not struck or injured Jabbari, and that she, instead, had gouged his own chin and arm with her fingernails as they fought on the street the night before, ripping his $1,000 coat, Chaudhry said.
"They did not investigate, pursue or care," even after he showed them the damage to his face, arm and coat, Chaudhry wrote in the letter to the judge.
Why did officers instead believe Jabbari, who at first could not even remember what had happened?
Racism, Chaudhry alleges.
Chaudhry said the footage showed the officers "walking around and looking out the windows, at the view" from the 17th, 18th, and 19th floors while "making impressed faces and mumbling to each other."
"Because the cameras are worn on the officers' chests, the video shows where they go, what they are looking at, and how long they look at it," she said.
"There is also some commentary by all the officers about how this is a three-level penthouse, clearly showing amazement at the unique size of the place."
Chaudhry, Majors' attorney. Alexi J. Rosenfeld/Getty Images
"Majors saved her life by calling 911, and they have falsely charged him with a crime," Chaudhry told Insider.
Chaudhry wrote in court documents that officials had "refuse to prosecute" Jabbari on suspicion of assaulting Majors or in connection to the Rolex watches and diamond jewelry Jabbari is accused of taking from the apartment.
"Meanwhile they refuse to prosecute her" for allegedly assaulting him, or for Rolex watches and diamond jewelry, she alleged in court documents that Jabbari took from the apartment.
"It is heartbreaking that in 2023, a Black man should still be afraid to dial 911, even to save a life," the lawyer said.
"The sad truth of this story is that if you are Black man and there is a white woman who needs medical help, you should think twice about calling 911 because chances are, you will be blamed and arrested."
"And everyone—despite proof of the Black man's innocence—will assume he did it," she said. "And no one — despite proof of the white woman's crimes — will prosecute her."