The allegation had gone viral in the days leading up to Sunday, May 3, 2026, with the woman claiming that Angel Asiamah pursued a romantic relationship with her while Agradaa was serving time in Nsawam Prison, and that she had given birth to his child whom he later abandoned. The video ignited fierce public debate, with many questioning the timing — given that Agradaa had only been released from prison earlier this year after her sentence was reduced on appeal. Agradaa did not take the allegations lying down. In a fiery TikTok video, she fired back, pointing out a glaring inconsistency in the woman's story — that she had only spent about eight months behind bars, yet the child in question is reportedly nearly three years old. She threatened swift legal action, vowing to pursue custody of the child to make an example of those who use social media to spread damaging falsehoods. The legal threat appeared to do the trick. The woman, accompanied by her brother, released a fresh video walking back everything. Her brother explained that the accusation was never rooted in truth — neighbours in their community had simply been remarking that the child bore a resemblance to Agradaa, and a blogger who attended a funeral in their area seized on it to create content. The woman, he said, was not fully aware of what was being recorded or the scale of the trouble it would cause. The woman herself dropped to her knees and issued an emotional and unqualified apology, saying she had no idea the video would spiral to the level it did and that she deeply regretted the embarrassment caused to both Angel Asiamah and Mama Pat. The saga has reignited conversations about the dangers of content farming and the ease with which unverified claims can spread across social media — with real and serious consequences for the people targeted.