Eminem was at the center of Trump’s defense failure, with a judge rejecting the rap concert analogy and ruling that the actions on January 6 showed clear, targeted incitement.
Eminem inadvertently became the centerpiece of a federal court failure involving Donald Trump after his legal team tried to use a supposed rap concert to defend against charges of Capitol riots.
U.S. District Judge Amit Mehta was unimpressed, and his response absolutely deftly demolished the comparison.
Trump’s lawyers argue that if his “Stop the Steal” speech on Jan. 6 counts as incitement, then rappers who perform offensive lyrics that incite violence should face the same liability.
This hypothetical protagonist is an Eminem-like artist who writes provocative songs about violence, weapons, and mayhem. The rapper knows his music can sometimes push fans to commit violent acts, but he performs it anyway, telling viewers to “fight like hell” and “fight the powers that be.”
Fans then rushed into nearby venues, attacking security and causing chaos. Donald Trump’s team says if this wasn’t incitement, then neither was his speech.
Judge Mehta’s ruling basically said this: Nice try, but you’re missing everything that’s really important here.
According to The Daily Beast, the judge explained that Trump’s case was fundamentally different because he spent weeks telling his supporters that the election was stolen through fraud, knew they were planning violence on a specific day, knew they were armed, and directed them to be in specific locations at specific times to prevent specific actions.
The hypothetical rapper didn’t do that.
“Only when these facts are taken into account will the rap concert begin to look like it did on January 6,” Mehta wrote in his decision. The judge did more than reject Trump’s argument. He shows exactly how this comparison breaks down under actual legal scrutiny.
What’s particularly interesting about this ruling is that Mehta is known to be a hip-hop lover who listens to Jay-Z, Kanye West, Drake and, of course, Eminem.
So Trump’s legal team is essentially trying to use hip-hop culture to defend charges of sedition before a judge who actually understands the culture.
The ruling allows civil cases brought by Democratic lawmakers and Capitol Police to move forward, meaning Trump cannot claim presidential immunity for his actions that day.
According to Mehta’s decision, he acted outside the scope of the official duties of the President.
Eminem, for his part, has been a critic of Trump for years, using his platform to attack the president’s policies and rhetoric.
The rapper became legendary for his direct attack on Trump during the 2017 BET Hip Hop Awards Freestyle Awards, a stance he has maintained through multiple election cycles.
So the irony of Trump’s legal team inadvertently making Eminem the centerpiece of a failed court defense is obvious.

