Courtney Clenney Wants Jury to Hear Evidence Supporting Self-Defense Claim
OnlyFans creator Courtney Clenney has asked a Florida judge to allow jurors to review evidence she says demonstrates a history of physical abuse by her late boyfriend, Christian Obumseli, as she prepares to stand trial on a second-degree murder charge.
According to a newly filed court motion, Clenney’s legal team argues that text messages, medical records, eyewitness testimony, police body-camera footage, security reports, and expert witnesses should be presented during the trial to provide context for her claim that she acted in self-defense when Obumseli died in April 2022.
Defense Claims Relationship Was Marked by Repeated Violence
Court filings state that Clenney’s attorneys intend to show the couple’s relationship involved repeated incidents of alleged domestic violence. The defense says the proposed evidence includes communications exchanged after alleged physical confrontations, medical documentation of injuries, and testimony from individuals who reportedly witnessed parts of the relationship.
The legal team also plans to present testimony from domestic violence experts who they believe can explain why Clenney feared for her safety at the time of the fatal incident. Her attorneys argue the evidence is essential for jurors to determine whether she reasonably believed she faced imminent danger.
Prosecutors Continue to Challenge Self-Defense Argument
Christian Obumseli was fatally stabbed inside the Miami condominium he shared with Clenney on April 3, 2022. Police had responded to the couple’s residence one day earlier after Clenney reportedly requested that Obumseli leave the apartment, but officers determined he had a legal right to remain there.
Following the fatal incident, Clenney told investigators she threw a kitchen knife in self-defense. Prosecutors, however, dispute that version of events, citing the medical examiner’s findings that the fatal wound was inconsistent with her account.
Clenney was arrested several months later while at a rehabilitation facility in Hawaii and has pleaded not guilty to second-degree murder.
Judge Yet to Decide on Motion
The Florida judge overseeing the case has not yet ruled on whether the requested evidence will be admitted during the trial. The decision could play an important role in determining what jurors are allowed to consider when evaluating Clenney’s self-defense claim.
Meanwhile, attorneys representing Obumseli’s family continue to reject the defense’s allegations, maintaining that the available evidence does not support the claim of self-defense and asserting that Obumseli was the victim in the relationship.
























































