Monique Mayers spent nearly 12 years in senior operational roles across Curtis "50 Cent" Jackson's business enterprises. She was terminated in 2019. According to the federal complaint filed April 30, 2026 in the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Georgia, what began as a strained working relationship escalated into what her attorneys describe as a yearslong campaign of retaliation, harassment, and witness intimidation.
The complaint frames two specific moments where Mayers's refusals allegedly made her a target. First, during Jackson's 2015 bankruptcy reporting period, Jackson allegedly "demanded that Ms. Mayers place property in her name to conceal Jackson's connection to the transaction." She refused. Second, Mayers alleges Jackson pressured her to "file a false police report accusing Bajar Walters, Jackson's driver and bodyguard, of stealing Jackson's vehicle and approximately $600,000 in cash." She refused. The complaint alleges Mayers also resisted a forced retraction of a Forbes feature story about her own work.
The harassment campaign — by the numbers: Mayers alleges more than 83 incidents of harassment through phone calls and text messages sent from at least 25 unique phone numbers. Specific messages include a threat reading "you will suffer fif" and a voicemail saying "Bang bang, I shot you down." The complaint identifies August 3, 2024 as a peak day with 15 calls received.
The grand jury subpoena Mayers received in 2021 places her squarely in the witness-intimidation theory of the case: she alleges the harassment intensified after she became a potential witness in a separate proceeding. The complaint asks the federal court for compensatory and punitive damages plus an injunction barring further intimidation.
- 01Intentional Infliction of Emotional Distress — alleged sustained pattern of threats, harassment, and intimidation tactics.
- 02Invasion of Privacy — unwanted contact, alleged surveillance behaviors, and intrusion claims tied to the harassment count.
- 03Retaliation — the complaint frames the post-2019 campaign as retaliation for Mayers's refusals to participate in alleged property concealment, false police reporting, and the Forbes retraction pressure.
- 04Witness Intimidation — alleging the harassment escalated after Mayers received a 2021 grand jury subpoena.
- 05Harassment — 83+ incidents documented, 25+ unique phone numbers, including the "you will suffer fif" text and "Bang bang, I shot you down" voicemail.
This is a federal civil suit — not a criminal matter — but several allegations (witness intimidation, false-police-report pressure, property concealment during a bankruptcy) brush up against conduct federal prosecutors take seriously. Jackson's 2015 bankruptcy is already public record; Mayers's allegations would, if proven, retroactively reframe what was disclosed at the time. The volume claim alone — 83+ messages from 25+ numbers — is unusually concrete for a harassment complaint and gives the court a clear evidentiary roadmap if subpoenas issue for the carrier records.