The Game Challenges Alleged Pedophile Live With Unexpected Results

LONG BEACH
(Photo by Scott Dudelson/Getty Images)

The Game confronts an accused pedophile who sought to meet a 15-year-old boy.

During a stream with Russian internet personality Vitaly, The Game and their teams ambushed a meet-up between a 22-year-old man and a 15-year-old boy. In a dramatic turn, The Game threw a cake in the alleged predator’s face. “You got a sickness, bro. You need to kill yourself. What’s going on in your mind?,” he said.

However, fans were surprised when the “Dreams” rapper later sat down for a heart-to-heart with the alleged predator.

“You gotta change your ways. It’s not cool, man. As sick as the whole operation is, some part of me still got a heart,” he said. “I feel bad for you, homie. And I shouldn’t feel bad for you. You better than this, bro. I got kids, homie.”

The nameless predator revealed he was sexually abused by an older man and now works at a theme park with close access to children.

“I feel bad that somebody took advantage of you like that and coached you to where you become the predator. The fact that somebody did it to you, that hurts me, man,” The Game replied.

In a strange turn of events, the man agreed to collaborate with Vitaly and The Game on additional sting operations to catch other sex predators.

In related news, while The Game has been working with Vitaly to catch sex predators, he is facing serious accusations of his own.

Years after winning a default judgment of over $7 million against The Game for alleged sexual assault on VH1’s “She Got Game,” Priscilla Rainey is now seeking to seize his Calabasas home. Court documents show Rainey and her attorney, Janelle M. Dease, are asking a judge to order the sale of the property to partially satisfy the debt, which stands at $6,898,721.99.

Dease has requested a hearing to force The Game to explain why the home should not be sold, noting that property records show no current exemptions and that the home is titled under The Game’s real name, Cash M. Jones. The property, valued at $3,191,375, with a fair market value over $3,600,000, is claimed to be an alter ego of The Game.

Despite collecting $3.6 million from the sale, this would cover only about half of the debt. Rainey has been pursuing this claim since she first filed in August 2015, seeking $10 million, and won a $7 million judgment in 2016.

The Game has consistently refused to pay, and an appeals court rejected his request for a new trial. Rainey won a second lawsuit in 2023 and served The Game with papers to seize his home in June, accusing him of transferring the deed to Wack 100 to obstruct the seizure.