Cardi B Wins Again As Judge Punishes Lawyer For Shocking Question
By Chukwudi Onyewuchi on January 30, 2026 at 10:30 AM EST

Cardi B’s courtroom victory didn’t end with a jury verdict.
Months after defeating assault claims, the rapper found herself at the center of another dramatic ruling, this time aimed squarely at the opposing lawyer.
A judge has now ruled that a forbidden question crossed the line, triggering punishment, public rebuke, and fresh attention on how the trial was handled.
Cardi B Secures Another Courtroom Win

The legal battle surrounding Cardi B took another decisive turn when a Los Angeles County judge imposed sanctions on the lawyer who represented the former security guard, accusing her of assault.
After jurors needed just one hour to side with the Grammy-winning artist, the fallout continued with a ruling that reinforced how firmly the court believed its boundaries had been ignored.
According to Rolling Stone, Judge Ian C. Fusselman issued a six-page decision detailing why plaintiff’s attorney Ron A. Rosen Janfaza would be fined $1,500.
The sanction stemmed from a question posed while Cardi B was on the witness stand last August, despite clear instructions forbidding such inquiries.
The judge’s message was unmistakable: courtroom rules are not optional.
The Question The Judge Explicitly Banned

Weeks before trial, Judge Fusselman had drawn strict limits on what could be discussed in front of jurors.
Any reference to alleged prior conduct, including exotic dancing or claims of a “former association with a gang or gang members during her youth,” was barred.
In a July 2025 pretrial ruling, he explained that such material “would be unduly prejudicial and likely to confuse the jury and result in an undue waste of time.”
Yet moments after Cardi B took the stand, Janfaza asked, “Do you have any affiliation at this time with a gang?”
Defense lawyers immediately objected, and the court warned him “about the clear violation of the court’s ruling.”
That single question became the centerpiece of the sanctions decision and reshaped the narrative after the verdict.
Why Cardi B’s Legal Team Pushed Back

Following the jury’s decisive rejection of the assault claims, Cardi B’s attorneys sought accountability.
They asked the court to hold Janfaza in contempt, arguing that the gang question and references to evidence not introduced at trial undermined the integrity of the proceedings.
Janfaza offered multiple explanations. He cited exhaustion, claimed his office manager drafted the questions, and argued that adding the words “at this time” allowed him to sidestep the restriction on discussing prior acts.
Judge Fusselman rejected every defense. “The court is not persuaded by any of these arguments,” he wrote, emphasizing that the tactic was deliberate.
Judge Declares It Was No Accident

In perhaps the most striking language of the order, Judge Fusselman dismantled the notion that the violation was unintentional.
“It is clear that Mr. Janfaza was aware of the [prior] ruling and that the question was specifically drafted in an attempt to avoid directly violating the letter, but not the clear intent, of the court’s ruling,” he stated.
The judge continued with a blunt assessment, stating, “It was no accident. It was not the result of inexperience or stress. It was not the fault of Mr. Janfaza’s office manager. It was a knowing and intentional violation of the court’s ruling.”
Janfaza was ordered to self-report the sanction to the California State Bar within 30 days and to pay the fine by Feb. 27 or face collections.
Cardi B’s Testimony And The Verdict That Followed

The sanction ruling arrived months after jurors concluded that Emani Ellis failed to prove Cardi B assaulted her during a 2018 confrontation outside a Beverly Hills obstetrician’s office.
At the time, Cardi B was secretly pregnant with her first child with Migos rapper Offset, and believed Ellis was filming her.
On the stand, the "Bodak Yellow" rapper firmly denied any physical contact, describing the encounter as verbal.
“She didn’t hit me. I didn’t hit her. There was no touch,” she testified.
Two witnesses backed her account. Obstetrician Dr. David Finke and receptionist Tierra Malcolm said Ellis appeared to be the aggressor and had a phone in her hand.
Malcolm also recalled declining Ellis’s later request for help with an employment claim, explaining, “I didn’t think if I told my truth [that] it would help her.”
After the September victory, Cardi B leaned into the moment, releasing special “Courtroom Edition” CD covers for her album "Am I the Drama?" featuring her viral trial looks.
With the latest ruling, the courtroom saga has only reinforced what the jury already decided: Cardi B walked away not just cleared, but vindicated.