As the dust refuses to settle around the controversial passing of Nigerian artist Ilerioluwa Aloba, popularly known as Mohbad, online activist VeryDarkMan (VDM) has reignited public curiosity with his series of informal investigations. From sitting with Primeboy and Sam Larry to unraveling confessions from the singer’s driver and now a dramatic revelation by a woman named Dominica Chinwe, VDM is either edging closer to the truth—or complicating it even further.
“They Beat Him Like a Criminal” — Dominica Chinwe’s Explosive NDLEA Allegation
In her gripping sit-down with VeryDarkMan, Dominica Chinwe, who identified herself as a close associate of Mohbad, made chilling claims about the singer’s encounter with NDLEA operatives. According to her, it all began when Mohbad received news of fellow Marlian act Zinoleesky being arrested.
Mohbad, his partner Wunmi, Dominica, and her then-boyfriend allegedly rushed to the Marlian house, where the NDLEA had already surrounded the property. What followed, if true, could shake the foundation of the singer’s demise.
“Mohbad told us to follow the NDLEA bus to the gate. They shot at us and hit his car three times. He got out, furious, and began exchanging blows. They beat him brutally with rifle butts and shoved him, bleeding, into their van.”
Dominica claimed that although Mohbad was freed later that day—allegedly due to a performance booked in Dubai—his trauma was already etched in his psyche.
“He Was Never the Same Again” — Mental Breakdown, Aro Admission, and Ghosts from the Past
The incident, she insisted, shattered Mohbad mentally. He was hospitalized and later admitted to Aro Neuropsychiatric Hospital. She painted a harrowing picture of the singer spiraling into paranoia, constantly complaining about headaches and fear.
Dominica claimed Mohbad’s mental health was so fragile that his family brought in a private nurse to monitor him at home.
“He wasn’t mentally stable when he recorded that ‘If I die, it’s Naira Marley’ video. The Mohbad we all knew had faded long before his death.”
Wunmi or the World? — Shocking Accusations Against Mohbad’s Wife
Dominica didn’t stop at government brutality. She went after Wunmi, Mohbad’s widow, accusing her of playing double agent between the singer’s family and his former label boss, Naira Marley.
She alleged that Wunmi:
- Used laughing gas regularly around Mohbad.
- Called Naira Marley to report that Mohbad’s family wanted him dead.
- Blamed Dominica’s ex-boyfriend to sabotage his chances of being flown abroad for psychiatric treatment.
- Claimed Bella Shmurda gave Mohbad hard substances.
In a final blow, Dominica alleged that the viral clip of Mohbad warning Wunmi about her family “never knowing peace if he died” was recorded in 2022, not close to his September 2023 passing.
So, was the singer’s tragic decline gradual and ignored? Or manipulated by those closest to him?
Primeboy, Sam Larry, the Driver—Useful Leads or Red Herrings?
While VDM has tried to corner the puzzle piece by piece—interviewing Primeboy, Sam Larry, and Fidelis the driver—critics argue he’s dancing around the real questions.
Primeboy claimed Mohbad “injured himself.” The driver blamed Wunmi for instigating fights and acting irrationally. Sam Larry, on the other hand, insists he was out of the country and merely had a financial dispute.
These testimonies could either clear key suspects—or cloud public judgment just enough to let the real culprit vanish in the noise.
VDM: Crusader or Clout Chaser?
Here lies the biggest question of all: Is VeryDarkMan solving Mohbad’s case or sensationalizing it?
- His efforts have reignited national attention.
- He’s raised stakes with bold accusations and promised to unmask Wunmi.
- But he’s also operating outside legal protocols, with no forensic power—just street credibility and public outrage.
With every upload, is VDM exposing Mohbad’s killer—or burying justice beneath a mountain of “he said, she said”?
Final Thought: Will Justice Come from Instagram Reels or Courtroom Evidence?
Dominica Chinwe’s bombshell revelations add one more piece to this messy jigsaw puzzle. But they also raise serious concerns: How much of what we now believe about Mohbad’s final moments is rooted in fact—and how much is driven by grief, trauma, or worse, agenda?
Until the Nigerian police act decisively—or until someone speaks who really knows—Mohbad’s killer remains a ghost among us.