The star rapper, who was on stage with Travis Scott during some of the deadly concert, says he shouldn't be named in the massive litigation.
After the superstar rapper filed a takedown request with YouTube, the fan allegedly argued he had a legal right to post the footage, sparking a lawsuit.
The music giant has filed a scathing first response to the lawsuit, which claims that the label's diversity practices were illegal.
The band says the case, filed by a musician who played in the band for just a few months in 1999, is clearly barred by the statute of limitations.
A federal judge weighs in for the first time on a sweeping copyright lawsuit filed against Twitter/X by music publishers.
With each side suing the other, a federal judge says Cabo Wabo's Hollywood outpost can't use Hagar's branding until the dispute is resolved.
In this week's Legal Beat, Earth Wind & Fire wins a lawsuit over its name, Kanye gets sued by Donna Summer's estate, YoungBoy faces drug claims and much more.
The band's former law firm isn't pulling any punches, accusing its ex-clients of "cynically" filing false accusations.
The rapper, awaiting trial on federal gun charges, allegedly told his supervisor that he has “no intentions to discontinue using the substance.”
The judge in the case said the court "cannot rely on generalized, uncorroborated claims that disclosure would harm plaintiff to justify her anonymity."






