Tag: Legal

  • Afroman wins legal battle over songs mocking US police

    Afroman wins legal battle over songs mocking US police

    US rapper Afroman has defeated seven sheriff’s deputies in a court case after they sued him for releasing songs and videos that mocked them and a raid they carried out on his home.

    The officers broke down the musician’s door in 2022 as part of a drug and kidnapping investigation, but the raid didn’t lead to any charges.

    Afroman, best known for his 2000 hit ‘Because I Got High’, responded by using home security footage in viral videos that ridiculed the deputies.

    His video for the song ‘Lemon Pound Cake’ was inspired by a deputy apparently eyeing a cake in his kitchen, while another video attributed personal and sexual transgressions to the officers.

    They sued him for defamation, but a jury has sided with the colourful rapper after a three-day trial.

    “We did it America! Yeah! We did it! Freedom of speech!” Afroman yelled outside the Ohio court, surrounded by supporters, in a clip posted on social media after the verdict.

    Real name Joseph Foreman, the musician gave evidence wearing a red, white and blue US flag-themed suit.

    “The whole raid was a mistake,” he told the court. “All of this is their fault.

    “If they hadn’t wrongly raided my house, there would be no lawsuit. I would not know their names. They wouldn’t be on my home surveillance system, and there would be no songs, nothing.”

    Attempt to silence criticism

    The deputies requested $3.9m (KSh. 502M) damages for “humiliation, ridicule, mental distress, embarrassment and loss of reputation”.

    Afroman released songs, including one that featured graphic and unfounded suggestions about Deputy Lisa Phillips’ sexuality.

    Sgt Randy Walters said his child had been humiliated at school over Afroman’s posts and had come home afterwards in tears.

    The deputies’ lawyer, Robert Klingler, told the court the rapper had “perpetuated lies intentionally” about his clients.

    “Even if somebody does something to you that hurts you, that you think is wrong – like a search warrant execution that you think is unfair – that doesn’t justify telling intentional lies designed to hurt people,” he said.

    Afroman released an entire album in 2023 about the incident, calling it ‘Lemon Pound Cake’, while its title song also took aim at the officer who, the lyrics said, “got the munchies because he got high”.

    That song has had 3.6 million views on YouTube, while another parody track titled ‘Will You Help Me Repair My Door’ has had more than nine million.

    The rapper told jurors he had a constitutional right to make artistic and critical content about government officials.

    His lawyer, David Osborne, argued that public officials could not use the courts to “silence” criticism simply because it hurt their feelings.

    “I’m sorry they feel the way they do, but there’s a certain amount that you have to take as a public official; it’s part of the duties of the job,” Osborne said.

    “What chilling effect does that have on the world we live in? You don’t like what a public official does, and you make a joke, and you’re dragged into court?”

  • Tyla sued over “Water” royalties

    Tyla sued over “Water” royalties

    Award-winning South African musician Tyla is facing a legal suit over her Grammy-winning hit song “Water.”

    The suit filed by Olmo Zucca and Jackson LoMastro against Tyla, British producer Sammy SoSo (Samuel Awuku) and Sony Music Entertainment alleges that they were not credited as top-line producers, harming their reputation and careers, preventing them from acquiring new and bigger composing opportunities.

    Zucca and LoMastro say that during a March 2023 recording session in Los Angeles, they worked with SoSo and fellow producer Rayo (Rayan El-Hussein Goufar) to make numerous audio recordings that were used on the final version of “Water” according to Billboard magazine.

    Zucca and LoMastro are credited as co-writers on “Water,” but not as producers. The pair allege that SoSo deliberately cut them out by contracting directly with Tyla “to take sole credit for production of the song,” and that he then lowballed Zucca and LoMastro with publishing royalties of only 10% each while giving himself 15%.

    “Although plaintiffs tried for months to resolve the matter with Awuku, Awuku refused to cooperate and, instead, engaged in a pattern of deception designed to conceal his nefarious actions,” reads the legal complaint.

    According to the lawsuit, SoSo fooled Zucca and LoMastro into signing a misleading contract that memorialised these unfair royalty rates.

    The complaint also cites a May 2024 meeting that Zucca had with Epic Records president Ezekiel Lewis, during which Lewis supposedly said SoSo had not informed the label about any co-producers on “Water.”

    The two are now seeking producer credits through the suit and to increase their percentage to 12.5%.

    “Because defendants have refused to recognise plaintiffs’ status as topline producers of the song, and have failed to pay plaintiffs all of the royalties they are owed from the song, plaintiffs have each suffered injury in fact,” says the complaint.

    The suit also says the song is likely to continue making profit over time.

    “Based on industry history, it is more than reasonable to expect the song to generate upwards of $50 million over an extended period of time,” says the lawsuit.

    The July 2023 track spent 29 weeks on the Billboard Hot 100, peaking at No. 7, and ultimately won a Grammy Award for best African music performance.