Boosie BadAzz Is Taking Somebody To Court Over a $600K Trump Pardon Gone Wrong
When the presidential plug doesn't come through, apparently you can still see somebody in small claims — or not so small.

July 13, 2026 · 2 min read
Let's be real: if you handed over six figures for a presidential pardon and walked away with nothing, you'd be filing paperwork too.
According to reporting from XXL Mag, Boosie BadAzz has filed a lawsuit connected to a failed attempt to secure a pardon from former President Donald Trump — one that reportedly cost him somewhere in the neighborhood of $600,000. Boosie, it seems, wants his money back. And honestly? Can you blame him?
The Play That Didn't Work
Pardons — especially at the presidential level — have always lived in a murky legal and political space. People hire fixers, lawyers, lobbyists, and connected insiders to try to get ears in the right rooms. It's a whole ecosystem. But when the outcome doesn't materialize and the bag is already gone, that's where things get messy fast.
Reports suggest Boosie's legal team is now pursuing whoever was on the other end of that arrangement. The details of exactly who received the money, what was promised, and what (if anything) was delivered are still emerging — so we're not going to play fill-in-the-blank on names or specifics that haven't been confirmed. What we can say is that $600,000 is not a number you just eat and move on from.
Boosie Has Always Been Vocal About His Legal Battles
This isn't Boosie's first rodeo with the justice system or with speaking his truth publicly. The Baton Rouge rapper has been open about his brushes with the law for years, and he's never been the type to stay quiet when he feels wronged. Going the legal route here — rather than just venting on Instagram Live — actually shows a level of strategic thinking that people might not expect.
Whether or not a civil suit gets him any money back is another story entirely. Courts move slow, and cases like this — involving political access, alleged promises, and large sums of cash — can get complicated quickly.
The Bigger Picture
This situation is also a window into something that rarely gets talked about openly: the underground economy of political access. Reports have long suggested that pardon-seeking became a booming (and often shady) industry in the final stretch of Trump's first term. Boosie's lawsuit, if it moves forward, could pull back the curtain on how some of those arrangements actually worked — or didn't.
For now, Boosie is doing what anyone would do when they feel played: he's putting it in front of a judge. Stay tuned, because this one's got layers.
Editor's note: Written in response to reporting by XXL Mag. Read the original at https://www.xxlmag.com/boosie-badazz-sues-trump-pardon/.
This piece is original commentary from THACLIPPERS. Written in response to coverage by XXL Mag. Read the original report



