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Afroman Triumphs in Wild ‘Lemond Pound Cake’ Trial Filed by Cops

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CitrixNews Staff
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Afroman Triumphs in Wild ‘Lemond Pound Cake’ Trial Filed by Cops

By Charisma Madarang

Charisma Madarang

Contact Charisma Madarang on X Contact Charisma Madarang by Email View all posts by Charisma Madarang March 19, 2026 LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA - SEPTEMBER 20: Afroman attends the 2019 Daytime Beauty Awards at The Taglyan Complex on September 20, 2019 in Los Angeles, California. (Photo by Paul Archuleta/FilmMagic ) Afroman on Sept. 20, 2019 in Los Angeles, CA. Paul Archuleta/FilmMagic

In the summer of 2022, members of the Sheriff’s Department in Adams County, Ohio, raided Afroman‘s home with a warrant on suspicion of drug trafficking and kidnapping. After busting down his door and ransacking his home, armed officers found neither drugs or any sign of a kidnapping. No charges were filed.

Following the debacle, Afroman effectively turned lemons into lemonade and turned footage of the botched raid into a series of music videos that have since gone viral online — in particular one titled “Lemon Pound Cake,” that shows one of the officers, gun in hand, pausing in the rapper’s kitchen to eye a tasty treat on the counter.

That videos, as well as social media posts the artist made with the raid footage, became the subject of a lawsuit filed the following year by seven cops who claimed Afroman (real name Joseph Foreman) used footage of their faces without their consent (a misdemeanor violation in Ohio) and sued him on civil grounds for invasion of privacy.

On Wednesday, following a three-day trial in which Afroman defended his art in court, the jury sided with the rapper on all counts and disagreed with the cops’ claims that he owed them a combined $3.9 million in damages. Shortly after the trial ended, the rapper posted a video to his social media of the judge reading the verdict in court.

The trial in Adams County this week raised questions about the limits of First Amendment protections and the freedom of artistic criticism. In 2023, the ACLU of Ohio wrote an amicus brief in support of the rapper. “This case is a classic entry into the SLAPP suit genre: a meritless effort to use a lawsuit to silence criticism,” the ACLU wrote in the brief. “Plaintiffs are a group of law enforcement officers who executed what appears to have been a highly destructive and ultimately fruitless search of a popular musician’s home. Now they find themselves at the receiving end of his mockery and outrage, expressed through a series of music videos about the search, as well as spinoff merchandise and social media commentary.”

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In their lawsuit, the seven officers claimed they had been “subjected to threats, including death threats” and had also “suffered emotional distress, embarrassment, ridicule, loss of reputation and humiliation.” During the trial, the officer that Afroman had dubbed “Police Officer Poundcake” on social media, said he had been sent a numerous pound cakes at work. Another officer cried repeatedly as a video made by the artist mocking her played for more than 10 minutes.

“Mr. Foreman perpetuated lies intentionally, repeatedly over three and a half years on the internet about these seven brave deputy sheriffs who’ve lived in this county for years, risk their lives for this county for years, done their job,” Robert Klingler, the deputies’ attorney, said during his closing testimony, per the Washington Post. “Mr. Foreman did it intentionally. Mr. Foreman knew that what he posted on the internet were lies.”

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