Gloria Velez Claims She Beat Up Remy Ma Twice In VladTV Interivew

Gloria Velez on the set of Joe Budden’s “Pump It Up” video shoot in Miami, Florida on March 8, 2003. (Photo by Julia Beverly/Getty Images)

Former video vixen Gloria Velez has reignited an old hip-hop feud, revisiting her explosive clashes with Remy Ma in a new VladTV interview released October 11. Speaking with DJ Vlad, Velez recounted multiple altercations with the Bronx rapper during the early 2000s, including one fight she claims turned violent after a personal threat.

“We did. Multiple times,” Velez laughed when asked about her history with Remy.

She traced their tension back to the “Murda Mamis” era — a circle of women in hip-hop that included DJs, models, and performers like La La Anthony. According to Velez, the group’s unity quickly fractured when Remy’s “aggressive nature” took over.

“She was a bully,” Velez said. “She tried to do that with me, and that’s not gonna pop off.”

One early confrontation, Velez alleged, took place at a holiday party where Joe Budden was performing. “Remy flashed her little pistol from across the room,” she said. “One of my boys grabbed the gun and told her, ‘If you’re gonna pull it out, you better use it.’”

Gloria Velez v. Remy Ma

Velez said the hostility escalated after her then-boyfriend was incarcerated. “People thought I was an easy target,” she said, accusing Remy of threatening her on the radio with support from singer Aaron Hall. Their animosity reportedly continued in Las Vegas, where security had to separate the two during a heated exchange inside a mall.

The feud allegedly peaked at a Jadakiss party Velez hosted in New York. She claimed Remy arrived with “a bunch of girls in jeans and tank tops”, intending to jump her. “It got personal when she mentioned my son’s school,” Velez recalled. “That’s when I saw red… You’re threatening my child now — that’s when I threw the punch.”

The brawl, according to Velez, turned chaotic. “I ripped off her jewelry and stomped her with my boots,” she said.

After security broke it up, Velez claimed Remy called Fat Joe saying she’d been jumped — prompting a second fight inside the venue. “When she came back, I fought her again,” Velez said, alleging that Hot 97’s Sunny Anderson later admitted the scuffle had been planned as a setup.

Looking back, Velez called Remy’s later prison stint for a 2007 shooting “karma.” “She was just angry,” she said. “Still talking about shooting people as a grown woman — that’s not gangster.”

Now an author, Velez said she hopes Remy has changed. “Pulling out a gun isn’t gangster,” she added. “Growth is.”


Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

X