The EX has been living in Shady's home for months. Shady is trying to evict her. He wants nothing to do with her. She's basically a squatter. Her "friends" are alleging that Shady hired a guy to break into his house and re take the specific jewelry that he had given her.
Let the law play out. Shady is no angel, but it's not like his ex is someone who should be given the benefit of the doubt either.
Except he hasn't validly attempted to evict her
It appears under Georgia law you must serve 60 day notice to evict a "tenant at will" and he never has properly given her eviction notice. He apparently went to home and handed her 16 yr old son an eviction notice and wanted her and them out of home immediately. Reportedly sending his friends and some family to remove her items from house in early June which lead to filing of police report as he had no legal right to do so and is why they are set for a coming court date
He legally should have had someone properly serve her or attached eviction notice to home with proof he left notice on door and waited until law mandated time had passed. Providing an eviction notice to a teen and attempting to remove items from home (She saw items being removed from home on stream from security system and called police)
By law that notice is not legal since he gave it to teen son and he can not demand she leave before that 60 days
The law appears to be on her side and legally he has still not effectively given her a valid eviction notice by Georgia law at this point
I will let the law play out but the details already look poor with regard to how he has handled eviction process which is not legal and do potentially lay out a motive
Especially if anyone linked to previous incident of attempting to remove her belongings from home is linked to what transpired two nights ago
At this point I am not casting judgement McCoy for assault claim but it does appear the eviction handling has been bungled from start by him and the police/court records of early June incident support her in that eviction effort was not legal