American rapper and actor, 50 Cent has hinted at celebrating Nigerian former internet personality, Ramon Abbas who is widely known as Hushpuppi with a movie series.
The legendary rapper reveals his interest in making the movie via an Instagram post on Wednesday evening (November 9).
In the post, 50 Cent posted a couple of pictures of Hushpuppi (who is presently in US prison for fraud) and revealed that he would be releasing ‘The Hushpuppy series’.
He wrote.
For my scammers I gotta do this one, Hushpuppy series coming soon ! GLG
GreenLightGang i don’t miss #bransoncognac #lecheminduroi #gunitfilmandtv
Hushpuppi for some reason was a convicted felon sentenced in the United States to 11 years for conspiracy to launder money obtained from business email compromise frauds and other scams,[2] including schemes that defrauded a US law firm of about $40 million, illegally transferred $14.7 million from a foreign financial institution, and targeted to steal $124 million from an English Premier League club.
Until his arrest by the Dubai Police in June 2020 and subsequent extradition to the United States, Abbas posted pictures and videos of his lavish spending on exotic cars, watches, designer clothes, bags from expensive brands like Gucci, Fendi, and Louis Vuitton and of himself boarding helicopters, with celebrities, footballers, and Nigerian politicians or while on charter jets. He claimed to be a real estate developer.
He also holds a passport from St Kitts and Nevis, which was fraudulently obtained through a sham marriage to a St. Kitts and Nevis citizen
On the night his apartment at the Palazzo Versace was raided in an operation code-named Fox Hunt 2, Abbas was arrested alongside eleven others in six simultaneous raids. Detectives seized more than 150 million dirhams (about $40 million) in cash, 13 luxury cars worth Dh 25 million ($7M), 21 laptops, 47 smartphones, 15 memory storage devices, five external hard drives and 800,000 emails of potential victims alongside suitcases full of cash. The arrest was part of an FBI investigation that indicted him as being a “key player” in a transnational cybercrime network that provided “safe havens for stolen money around the world.