Suit also accuses City of Chicago police and emergency
responders of failing to provide critical lifesaving aid following
the shooting
Filing includes multiple counts that accuse
the defendants of signing known gang members and monetizing and
profiting from violent behavior
CHICAGO, Oct. 9, 2024
/PRNewswire/ -- The Dinizulu Law Group filed a civil lawsuit
today in Cook County Circuit Court that seeks to hold rapper
Lil Durk (Durk Derrick Banks) and his record label Only
the Family Entertainment (OTF) and several other recording
companies accountable in the fatal shooting of Chicago rapper Carlton
Weekly, known as FBG Duck, outside a Gold Coast retail store on August 4, 2020.
The suit was filed on behalf of Weekly's estate and two
bystanders, Davon Brinson and Cashae
Williams, who were wounded but survived the attack. The lawsuit
presents multiple counts, including wrongful death, civil
conspiracy, negligence, and failure to render aid. The plaintiffs
further seek damages for the broader harm caused by the conduct of
the record label defendants, Alamo Records, Sony Music
Entertainment Inc., Universal Music Group Recordings Inc.
(Interscope Records) and Empire Distribution Inc., who financed the
OTF criminal enterprise. The suit describes how the record labels
knowingly signed, promoted, and profited from artists with known
gang affiliations. The complaint claims that these companies
capitalized on the violent rivalry between OTF and FBG Duck,
promoting "diss tracks" that taunted and threatened FBG Duck in a
yearlong campaign, and continued to profit after his murder.
The suit alleges that Lil
Durk, as the principal of OTF, along with other OTF members,
including the late rapper King Von,
orchestrated a campaign of intimidation against FBG Duck. In the
suit, OTF is described not just as a music label but also as a hub
for a known criminal enterprise, promoting a culture of violence
through music and social media.
The complaint details how Lil
Durk, King Von, and their
associates engaged in a conspiracy to murder FBG Duck, placing a
$100,000 bounty on his life. It
further outlines how OTF and its leadership used their platform to
intimidate and eliminate rivals, resulting in FBG Duck's eventual
killing. This strategy was part of a broader effort to control
Chicago's drill rap music scene.
Drill rap is described as a subgenre of hip-hop music that
originated in Chicago in the early
2010s. The songs often contain lyrics promoting real-life gang
activity.
The lawsuit also accuses the City of
Chicago of willful misconduct, claiming that police and
emergency services failed to promptly aid FBG Duck, who lay alive
for 17-plus minutes on the sidewalk in front of Dolce & Gabbana
without medical treatment or being transported to a medical
facility. The suit additionally targets Dolce & Gabbana and its
security firms, Picore Beristain Initiative Inc. and Top Tier
Safety Inc., for negligence. While FBG Duck was standing in line
outside their store, the lawsuit describes how the defendants
failed to take adequate safety measures despite knowing the area's
rising violence and fled the scene.
In January, a federal jury in Chicago convicted six members and associates
of a Chicago street gang in the
shooting and killing of Carlton
Weekly. Federal prosecutors tied the shooting to a
yearlong gang war stoked by social media and rap "diss tracks."
A summary of the complaint can be accessed at
dinizululawgroup.com.
Members of the press or anyone with information pertaining to
this case is asked to contact Dinizulu Law Group at
FBGDuckcase@Dinizululawgroup.com.
View original
content:https://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/new-lawsuit-seeks-to-hold-chicago-rapper-lil-durk-his-record-label-and-several-recording-companies-accountable-in-the-killing-of-rapper-fbg-duck-in-2020-302271690.html
SOURCE Dinizulu Law Group, Ltd.