A leaked voice note. A Drake mention. A baby mama who decided she was done staying quiet. And a rapper who responded to all of it by plugging a new song.
Welcome to the messiest celebrity situation of the week — and it has layers.
Sauce Walka is in the middle of a full-blown public explosion after his ex, Kiley Losson, released audio clips that allegedly feature him threatening to have Drake’s car shot at. The internet immediately ran with the Drake angle. Sauce Walka immediately tried to redirect. And somewhere in the middle of all of it, a child and a mother’s safety got lost in the noise — which is, according to Kiley, exactly the problem.
The audio that kicked everything off is not subtle.
In one clip, a voice allegedly belonging to Sauce Walka can be heard delivering a threat that left very little room for interpretation.
“I will get Drake’s car shot at. He better realize who the f** I am.”*
In a second clip, the message continued in the same direction.
“Tell Drake to keep my name out his mouth before I go on the internet and embarrass him.”
Kiley, who shares a child with Sauce Walka, released the recordings after what she described as a breaking point. She took to The Shade Room to explain her decision — and made it clear she wasn’t doing it for attention.
“The recording was not released for attention, clout, or internet drama. I released it because I reached a point where I felt my voice deserved to be heard.”
She also addressed the Drake angle directly — confirming what many had already speculated.
“Drake and I were involved in 2024. This is not a secret, and it is not something I have ever felt the need to hide. But the truth is, this story is being turned into something it isn’t. This is not about Drake.”
And then — this is where things get really interesting — Sauce Walka posted his own response video. And his explanation took a sharp left turn.

For anyone new to the story: Sauce Walka is a Houston rapper who has built a reputation over years in the independent rap game for being unapologetically confrontational — both in his music and in real life. He and Kiley Losson share a child together, and their relationship has clearly not ended quietly.
Kiley, for her part, has been largely private — until now. Her decision to leak the audio and speak to The Shade Room represents a significant shift, and the detail she emphasized repeatedly is the one that tends to get buried beneath the Drake headlines: there is a child involved, and she believes that child’s environment matters.
Drake, meanwhile, has not publicly commented — which, given that someone allegedly threatened to have his car shot at, is a notable silence of its own.
Fans immediately noticed that Sauce Walka’s response video did not address the Drake threat directly — and the internet was not holding back about it.
Rather than explaining the audio, he reframed the entire situation. His argument: this was never about jealousy over Drake. The real issue, he claims, was Adam22 from the No Jumper podcast allegedly talking about his son on air. According to Sauce Walka, that crossed a line that had nothing to do with romantic rivalry.
“The threat was never about the p**y.”*
He then proceeded to plug a new song.
The comment sections erupted. Some fans found the redirect unconvincing given the specificity of the audio. Others thought the Adam22 explanation added context worth considering. A significant portion of the internet was simply stunned that a new music plug made it into the response video.
Within hours, both the original audio and Sauce Walka’s response were circulating widely — ensuring that whatever he was hoping to control had already escaped him entirely.
Some fans believe Kiley’s decision to go public was a calculated move to establish a paper trail ahead of potential legal proceedings. Others took her statement at face value — a mother who felt cornered and chose to stop absorbing the pressure quietly.
It’s unclear what, if any, legal action has been taken or is being considered by either party. What is clear is that Kiley was direct about the stakes she sees in this situation.
“Refusing to stay silent does not make me a villain — it makes me a mother choosing to stand up for herself and her child.”
Sources close to the situation have not indicated whether Drake’s team intends to respond to the audio or whether Sauce Walka faces any legal exposure from the statements made in the clips. Sauce Walka, for his part, is calling the whole thing “just a lil baby mama drama” — a characterization that Kiley has made clear she does not accept.
There is a version of this story that is pure entertainment — two people going back and forth online, a famous third party’s name dropped for maximum impact, and a rapper trying to spin a chaotic news cycle into a streaming moment. That version is easy and fun to follow.
But Kiley’s statement keeps pulling the story somewhere more serious. She is a mother describing a pattern of intimidation. She is saying, on the record, that she felt her safety and her child’s wellbeing were at stake. Whether or not Drake is involved, whether or not Adam22 said something that crossed a line — those details do not change what she is describing about her own experience.
That part of the story deserves to be heard on its own terms.
Here is the detail that nobody seems to be talking about enough: Sauce Walka ended a response to serious allegations about threatening a global superstar’s safety by promoting new music. In the same breath. Without apparent irony.
Drake has allegedly been threatened on a voice note, Adam22 has been blamed for starting it, a child is caught in the middle, and somewhere at the bottom of all of it — there is a song available on all streaming platforms.
Only in 2026.
Sauce Walka called this “baby mama drama” and dropped a single. Kiley called it intimidation and went to The Shade Room. Drake has said nothing. And Adam22 is probably somewhere planning a podcast episode about all of it. Somebody is going to have to address this more seriously than a promo plug — the only question is who blinks first.

