The Game has been forced to part with his California property to pay off a $7 million judgment.
Based on court papers reviewed by Complex, a judge approved the sale of his Calabasas estate to help cover the $7,130,100.00 judgment that Priscilla Rainey won against him in November 2018.
“If the proposed sale of the dwelling is likely to produce a bid high enough to satisfy the homestead exemption and any outstanding liens or encumbrances senior to the judgment creditor’s lien while still leaving “some amount available to satisfy even a ‘part’ of the judgment creditor’s lien, then the court must grant the application for sale,” the legal documents state. This means if selling the home would leave any cash left over for the person owed money, the court has to allow the sale.
Rainey took The Game to court back in 2015, claiming he sexually assaulted her during filming of the VH1 show She Got Game. Rather than contesting it in court, The Game chose not to attend enough court sessions, which led to the judge ruling in Rainey’s favor.
Last October, The Game was summoned to court to explain why his mansion shouldn’t be sold to clear the debt. That July, US District Judge Mark C. Scarsi served the rapper and his manager Wack 100 with a notice of levy, writ of execution, claiming he transferred his deed to his manager to prevent Rainey from getting it.
The mansion is currently listed for $4 million, meaning he’d still owe her $3 million if it sells at that price. The Game has made it clear previously that he doesn’t intend to pay her anything, regardless of the ruling.
In 2020, The Game slammed Rainey in a post while updating everyone on his pandemic activities. “People out here dying from the rona n blogs out here creating false narratives for this Waffle House roach who doing anything her thirsty a## can to try n take money from me,” he wrote. “I’m enjoying retirement !! Y’all been saying she got 7 million for 7 years & yet here I am, laid up tipsy off my 5th quarantine watching Tiger King lol.”
While he was downplaying the situation, Rainey was pursuing her legal options. That same year, she was granted ownership of the rapper’s Prolific Records label and also received royalties for his album Born to Rap.
Despite whether he starts paying up, Rainey hasn’t stopped there. Last year, she subpoenaed his kids’ school district to obtain documents including proof of residence and attendance records.