More information is being revealed about Cardi B’s probe into Tasha K’s finances. New filings in the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the Southern District of Florida show the rapper’s legal team intensifying efforts to collect on the nearly $4 million defamation judgment. Attorneys for Cardi B, whose real name is Belcalis Marlenis Almánzar, have issued subpoenas to Yelen Entertainment LLC and Stash Media Works LLC, seeking expansive financial records tied to the blogger’s business operations.
The subpoenas demand production of contracts, tax returns, bank statements, QuickBooks files, credit card records, and documents connected to revenue streams from the UnWineWithTashaK platform, TK Deals, and related ventures.
Separately, Cardi’s attorneys have scheduled a Rule 2004 examination of Latasha Transrina Kebe. The order requires the debtor to appear under oath on March 16, 2026, at 10:00 a.m. in Miami and produce financial documents. Rule 2004 examinations allow creditors to probe a debtor’s financial affairs, assets, income streams, and transfers. The move signals continued efforts to trace revenue and enforce the defamation judgment.
Bankruptcy Rule 2004 is sometimes called the “fishing expedition rule” of bankruptcy law. It lets creditors look almost everywhere for money trails; accounts, shell companies, revenue streams, even digital platforms. In a case involving a media personality with multiple online revenue channels, that tool becomes extremely powerful.
The filings mark the latest chapter in Cardi’s push to scrutinize Tasha K’s repayment obligations following their prior settlement agreement.

