Big U Fumes After Nipsey’s Affiliate Leaks Last Footage Of His Son!

🚨 The Vultures Feast: Big U’s Son, Nipsy’s Ghost, and the Internet’s Callous ‘Karma’ 😈

 

The murder of Jabari “Baby Wee” Henley on Halloween night 2025 was not a tragedy; it was a sickening public spectacle that exposed the rank hypocrisy and toxic rot at the core of street culture, both online and off. While an imprisoned father—Big U Henley—grieved the loss of his son, a vicious mob, cloaked in the false righteousness of Nipsy Hussle’s legacy, celebrated the murder as “karma.” This vile display confirms that in the world of hip-hop and gang politics, truth is irrelevant, and the most compelling narrative, no matter how cruel, wins.

 

⚖️ Guilty By Blood: The Cold-Blooded Targeting of Jabari Henley

 

Jabari Henley, a 34-year-old warehouse supervisor with a 10-year-old daughter, was, by all accounts, striving for a life away from the chaos that defined his father’s existence. He was assassinated by a drive-by shooter at a smoke shop near 69th Street. He was shot four times, collapsing in a catastrophic, bloody final attempt to survive. His crime? Carrying the name of his father, Big U.

Big U, currently detained and facing devastating federal RICO charges (43 counts, including conspiracy to commit murder for hire and $1.2 million in COVID relief fraud), has become the undisputed villain of the street rap narrative. Despite the fact that:

Eric Holder Jr. was convicted and sentenced to 60 years to life for Nipsy’s murder.
The trial made it “crystal clear” the murder was over personal beef and snitching accusations.
Zero evidence or charges ever connected Big U to Nipsy’s death.

…the narrative of Big U as Nipsy’s betrayer and secret killer became “gospel truth.” The internet, fueled by years of explosive, yet unsubstantiated, claims from figures like Wack 100 and Charleston White, decided to use an innocent man as a blood sacrifice for a crime his father was never even charged with.

The logic is simple, and contemptible: if the legal system fails to deliver “justice” against the powerful, the streets will take an eye for an eye, regardless of who is blinded. Jabari was not a gang leader; he was collateral damage in a media-fueled, generational feud.

 

📲 The Digital Mob’s Celebration: ‘Nipy Karma’ Trending

 

The immediate, feral reaction on social media to Jabari’s death was not mourning, but a terrifying spectacle of celebratory vengeance. This wasn’t genuine grief; it was the digital mob demanding a pound of flesh.

Within 48 hours of the murder, the cruel hashtag “Nipy karma” accumulated over 4,000 uses.
Of 8,000 analyzed posts on November 1st and 2nd, a staggering 62% invoked Nipy’s name, treating Jabari’s murder as a deserved consequence for Big U’s alleged sins from 2019.
Tik Tok videos showing paramedics performing CPR on Jabari’s lifeless body—a graphic violation of his dignity—racked up 3.2 million views by the following noon.
Instagram accounts dedicated to Nipsy’s legacy shamelessly cross-posted content that barely concealed their celebration, framing the young father’s death as somehow “honoring” a man who spent his final years actively trying to broker peace.

The most profound hypocrisy comes from the very people claiming to uphold Nipsy’s legacy of “The Marathon.” His own brother, Black Sam, was forced to post a desperate, rational plea: “Pain multiplies pain. Honor Nip with peace, not this.” This voice of reason was drowned out by the tsunami of bloodthirsty, self-appointed avengers who prioritized digital notoriety and an easy narrative over the basic human decency Nipsy actually represented. They used a dead man’s memory to justify the murder of another man’s son.

 

🔒 The Father’s Powerless Hell

 

The final layer of tragedy lies with Big U, confined to the Metropolitan Detention Center, facing a life sentence while simultaneously fighting the unimaginable grief of outliving his child. Loose Cannon described Big U’s reaction upon hearing the news: “He didn’t say much at first… Then he whispered, ‘Not my boy. Not like this.’”

Imagine the sheer, crushing impotence. A man who once controlled a vast, violent street network is now powerless:

He cannot attend his son’s funeral.
He cannot pressure the streets for answers.
He cannot protect his remaining family from the escalating tension that has made the streets of Los Angeles a powder keg, as noted by observers tracking the “22% uptick” in anonymous tips to Crime Stoppers.

His incarceration and ongoing RICO fight rendered him unable to shield his child, confirming that even the “iron fist” of a certified OG is no match for the treacherous intersection of street violence and the venomous, unforgiving court of online opinion. Jabari Henley’s death is not street justice; it is a brutal indictment of a culture that values bloodlust and baseless conspiracy over the life of an innocent man.