Yaa Yeboah is a popular media personality

Entertainment pundit Yaa Yeboah has stated that legal practitioner Lawyer William Kusi must apologise to Odo Broni for the derogatory labels he used during the ongoing legal dispute involving the late Daddy Lumba.

Speaking in a discussion on United Showbiz on November 29, 2025, Yaa Yeboah mentioned that Lawyer Kusi engaged in needless public relations tactics instead of focusing on his legal duties.

“When Lawyer Kusi started this, I told him the unnecessary PR was too much. In my opinion, I think Lawyer Kusi owes Odo Broni an unqualified apology,” she said.

She explained that even before the judge delivered any ruling, the lawyer resorted to name-calling.

“As of when the judge had not made any pronouncement, and no judgment was given, Lawyer Kusi was calling names. He was calling Odo Broni `sidechick `slayqueen’ and even made an assumption here. I was of the opinion that as a lawyer, he should focus on his job and deliver,” she shared.

According to Yaa Yeboah, the interviews, the labels and the comments were unnecessary and unprofessional.

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“But then, the name-calling, the unnecessary interviews, I feel he owes the woman an apology. The judge has recognised her as a wife, so now, what was all the name-calling for? It was extremely unnecessary,” she noted.

She added that the court clarified that marriage is defined by the parties involved and not by the scale of the celebration or where it takes place.

“The judge made a statement that marriage is not defined by celebration or place; it’s defined by the parties involved. Those who didn’t know whether a marriage ceremony actually happened between Odo Broni and Daddy Lumba must understand it could have been private,” she disclosed.

Yaa Yeboah emphasised that many people allowed their emotions and personal experiences to cloud their judgment throughout the case.

“I’ve realised that we added our emotions and sentiments to it. Some people also used their personal experiences, things they’ve gone through or witnessed to express themselves, but we forgot that when you drag someone to court, it’s not a matter of emotions and sentiments but rather the paper,” she added.

FG/EB

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