Jimmy Henchman denies 50 Cent’s claims that he was stabbed in jail, saying he has never had an altercation in his 15 years at FCI P######.
50 Cent took to Instagram to mock Jimmy Henchman’s prison conditions, claiming the incarcerated music executive was stabbed while serving a life sentence at FCI P######.
The post read “Three months ago the world put Jimmy on a gurney in Hazleton lol now the old rat is lying in Missouri. He knows what happened. It’s hard to see the tuff around it.”
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But Henchman, whose real name was James Rosemond, fought back fiercely, with a response that got to the heart of why he was imprisoned in the first place.
“That’s 100 percent not true. I’ve been depressed for 15 years. I’ve never even had an argument in this place. A lot of people in my position wouldn’t be able to survive in this situation, given my notoriety. I’ve never even had an argument, not even a fight,” Rosemond said in response to the stabbing accusation.
The former Czar Entertainment founder insists he has remained calm in prison despite his high status and numerous enemies in the music industry over decades.
“Sometimes there’s a weird look or something, more so because people feel like I’ve missed an opportunity, like I threw it away. But no one’s ever pointed a knife at me. I’ve never pointed a knife at anyone. There’s never been a situation like that,” Rosemond explained, speaking of the prison dynamic that 50 attempts to capitalize on with his Instagram posts.
According to Rosemond, he is not in protective custody, is not in hiding, and is not a victim of violence within the walls of FCI P###### in Louisiana, where he is currently serving his sentence.
The feud between 50 and Henchman dates back to 2005, when 50 pulled The Game from G-Unit, whose manager was none other than Rosemond.
What started as a business dispute escalated into something more violent.
In March 2007, G-Unit member Tony Yayo attacked Rosemond’s 14-year-old son outside the G-Unit management office.
That attack set off a chain reaction that would define both men’s lives for the next ten years.
Two years later, in 2009, Lowell Fletcher, also known as Lodi Mack, a G-Unit member, participated in the attack on his son and was shot five times in the back and arm on September 27, 2009, in the Bronx.
The FBI said Rosemond was paid $30,000 in cocaine to pay for the attack.
In 2018, he was sentenced to life plus 30 years in prison for murder-for-hire, according to federal prosecutors.
What really annoyed Rosemond was that 50 and his crew continued to laugh at him.
“People also have to remember that the reason I’m here is because a n#### attacked my 14-year-old son. That’s why I got a life sentence in prison. All because of these n#####. And to allow these guys to still make fun of me in my situation after what they did and the consequences, that’s crazy to me. People even after what they did to my 14-year-old son, it’s so ridiculous, it’s just crazy.

