Cardi B Fires Back After Offset Says Her Baby With Stefon Diggs Is LEGALLY His

by Grace Somes
Cardi B, Stefon Diggs and Offset || Image source: @iamcardib/Instagram @offsetryn/Instagram

Cardi B’s celebration after the arrival of her fourth child took a sharp left turn after Offset jumped into the conversation with a word about the parternity that Cardi says crossed every line.

The Bronx rapper shared her big news with fans in a long, emotional caption on social media, thanking everyone for their support and teasing how excited she is for this next chapter. But minutes later, Offset popped up on Instagram with a Story that immediately lit the internet on fire: “My kid lol.”

That one sentence sent social media into a spiral.

At first, people thought he might’ve been trolling. But Cardi B didn’t find it funny at all. Within hours, she fired off a series of posts defending herself, expressing fear, and calling out what she described as ongoing harassment from her ex. She later deleted the posts, but screenshots spread instantly.

In one now-deleted message, she wrote, “Y’all be thinking it’s so funny and it’s not… It’s been over a year, and I’m still being harassed and threatened to the point that I feel like my life is in danger.”

She continued in another post, warning that people will do anything for attention: “It could get real nasty with just one upload… LEAVE ME TF ALONE.”

And she didn’t stop there.
The “Bodega Baddie” rapper later hopped on Twitter Spaces to speak directly to her fans. She told listeners she has “every single receipt” and says the private harassment only goes public when she doesn’t respond.

“I can’t take it anymore,” she admitted, comparing the situation to true crime stories she’s seen play out online.

Meanwhile, Offset’s post seemed to reference a Georgia law that assumes a woman’s husband is automatically considered the legal father of her child. Cardi filed for divorce back in July 2024, but the paperwork still isn’t finalized, which has fueled nonstop speculation.

But from Cardi’s perspective, the situation has nothing to do with legal loopholes or online jokes. She says it’s about feeling unsafe, unheard, and tired of dealing with private issues in public.

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