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Lydia Harris reignited her legal war over Death Row Records by demanding Snoop Dogg stop using the brand until her $107 million judgment is paid in full.
In 2005, a California judge ruled in favor of Harris against Death Row Records and then owner Marion "Suge" Knight, awarding her $107 million, including $60 million in punitive damages. The judgment ...
Lydia Harris claimed that once Snoop Dogg, who is named in the lawsuit, bought the company in 2022, she became much more interested in the matter. (Michael Harris currently serves as COO to Death ...
Lydia, now 61 years old, married Death Row co-founder Michael “Harry-O” Harris after they met in 1985 at a nightclub in Houston. According to her, she helped run the record label while he ...
Eventually, Lydia Harris was forced to file suit against Knight, revealing the actual origin story of Death Row Records’ and the hitherto unknown players involved. More from VIBE.com ...
Snoop Dogg and Death Row Records are pushing back hard in a Texas courtroom, asking a judge to throw out Lydia Harris’ $107 million lawsuit over the label’s ownership, calling her claims ...
Lydia Harris said the parties named in the suit have yet to pay her a $107 million judgment awarded to her in 2005 after she sued Knight and Death Row Records in 2002. She claims that she put up ...
Lydia Harris has launched a legal campaign against Snoop Dogg and others, seeking $107 million over her claimed stake in Death Row Records.
Lydia Harris, ex-wife of label co-founder Michael "Harry-O" Harris, accused Death Row Records, Time Warner, Universal Music Group and Interscope Records of conspiring to evade paying her a $107 ...
The two are said to have conspired to cheat Lydia Harris, wife of convicted drug kingpin and former Death Row financier, "Harry-O, out of $107 million.