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Twitter Influencer Justice Okodugha Receives Legal Notice After False Accusation

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Summary: Content creator Stephanie Momoh has issued a cease and desist notice to Justice Anthony Okodugha, operator of the X account @Societyhatesjay, on March 9, 2026. This was after Justice falsely accused her of having sex with two men. 

Justice Anthony Okodugha, who operates the X account @Societyhatesjay, has received a cease and desist letter after falsely accusing content creator Stephanie Momoh, in a now-deleted tweet, of having sex with two men. Her lawyers issued the notice on March 9, 2026, citing defamation, cyberbullying, harassment, and intentional infliction of reputational harm under Nigeria’s Cybercrimes Act 2015.

Justice’s false accusation was made in response to a post Stephanie published on X on Friday, March 7, 2026. “Curse Yahoo boys online, link with them offline,” she wrote, calling out the hypocrisy of people who publicly condemn internet fraudsters while privately associating with them.

Reacting to her tweet, Justice quoted her post, attached a photo and a video of Stephanie with two different men, and wrote: “You’re actively being piped by 2 yahoo boys. Shut up, man.” 

In response to Justice’s false accusation, Stephanie, on March 10, 2026, published an X post releasing her lawyer’s letter dated March 9. 

“I normally ignore online noise, but when false and damaging statements are made about my character, it has to be addressed properly,” she stated. “The matter is now being handled through the appropriate legal channels. I will not be engaging in further public exchanges on this issue.”

The cease and desist letter demanded that Justice immediately delete all posts, comments, and content relating to the false accusations across all social media platforms, issue a written public apology on the same platforms where the statements were made, and confirm compliance within 48 hours. 

Failure to comply, the letter warned, would result in legal proceedings including claims for general and aggravated damages, compensation for emotional and reputational harm, and possible criminal complaints under cybercrime laws.

Following the cease-and-desist letter, Justice responded on March 10, 2026, with a dismissive post on his X account. writing, “This babe don sue me. no wam. who fit create apology message for me? 15k for you if e sharp,” he stated, publicly offering to pay someone to write an apology on his behalf rather than issuing one himself.

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