The major label says Salt-N-Pepa can’t exercise so-called “termination rights” because the rappers didn’t execute their own record deal.
The singer says guitarist Dave Navarro and his other bandmates attacked him onstage after years of "bullying" him by playing their instruments too loudly.
Dave Navarro, Eric Avery and Stephen Perkins claim the band suffered "a swift and painful death" following the incident and lost millions of dollars.
In this week’s Legal Beat newsletter, a fight over Biggie’s catalog sale, potential witnesses in Drake’s “Not Like Us” lawsuit, the end of copyright claims against Karol G and much more.
The three hitmakers are asking a judge to dismiss intellectual property theft claims brought by gospel singer Victory Boyd.
A web series creator is alleging that the rapper's upcoming comedy film copies her title.
Lauren Pisciotta says in an amended complaint that the controversial rapper lured her in by falsely promising to help advance her music career.
A judge says the plaintiff’s expert witness is unqualified, pointing to deposition testimony that he found infringement based merely on his “instinct” granted “by God.”
The lawsuit says Biggie’s widow "wrongfully withheld” Voletta Wallace’s cut of the Primary Wave deal, which was reportedly valued at $100 million.
The ruling significantly narrows the claims of April Lampros, who was the seventh alleged victim to sue the rapper last year.