Key Points
- Sinach and her husband deny all social media claims. They sent formal pre-action notices dated 21 November.
- The letters demand removal of posts and a seven day apology. The notices warn of civil and criminal defamation action.
- The couple ask fans for prayers and quiet support during this time. They say they remain focused on music and ministry work.
Sinach (Osinachi Kalu Okoro Egbu) and her husband have moved for legal redress over online posts. Thurrocks Associates, acting for the couple, issued pre-action notices to three people on 21 November 2025.

The legal team says the posts spread false rumours that harmed the couple’s reputation and work. The letters demand immediate removal of the posts and a prominent public apology for seven days. Sinach admits marriage rumours appeared on the singer’s feed days earlier and drew wide comment.
The notices name the platforms where the posts appeared as Facebook and Instagram. They accuse the recipients of publishing malicious falsehoods and causing emotional distress. The letters warn that civil and criminal defamation proceedings will follow if demands are not met.
The couple strongly deny the claims and call the posts baseless and slanderous. Their lawyers say the posts damaged ministry ties and business relationships worldwide. The legal note asks for a formal apology to be visible on the same platforms.
What the letters ask for
The notices ask for removal of each offending post from public view immediately. They also demand a prominent apology to run on Facebook and Instagram for seven days.
The lawyers warn that the next steps will include civil claims and criminal filings.
The legal move follows a wave of online messages that questioned the couple’s marriage.
Sinach and her team say these messages were unverified and relied on rumours. The couple ask that fans avoid sharing unconfirmed reports and respect privacy.
Reaction and next steps
A source close to the couple says they prefer to deal with the matter quietly. The source adds that legal steps were taken after repeated harmful posts. The couple remain focused on planned concerts and charity work across several countries.
ValidUpdates will follow this story as it develops and will report on any court filings. Other recent entertainment disputes show a trend of legal teams acting to curb false posts. Portable accuses Cubana ChiefPriest is an example of heated online claims that sparked public debate.
Lawyers told readers that pre-action notices are a formal step that warns recipients. If the recipients comply the matter may not reach court, the letters suggest. If they refuse, the couple’s lawyers say they will begin full legal proceedings.
Sinach and Pastor Joseph Egbu thank fans for their prayers and written support. They say their work in music and humanitarian causes will continue without change. The couple ask followers to rely on official statements and verified news sources





