Lifestyle

50 Cent settles assault lawsuit before release of Diddy documentary he produced

0

Days before the release of a Sean “Diddy” Combs documentary, 50 Cent has reached a settlement with a plaintiff who filed an assault lawsuit against him.

According to PEOPLE, the rapper and filmmaker, born Curtis Jackson III, was served with a civil complaint from the plaintiff Guadalupe de los Santos earlier this year.

FacetoFace reports that the complaint stated that the alleged assault happened in Los Angeles in September 2024.

De los Santos alleged that he was waiting at a traffic light when an SUV that Jackson was riding in approached him from the back.

De los Santos claimed that the “front passenger door” of Jackson’s SUV then “suddenly and forcefully opened, without warning or provocation and struck [him] on his left side, knocking him and his scooter to the street.”

Read more: America hip-hop mogul, Diddy, to spend four years in prison for sex trafficking

The plaintiff further claimed that “an occupant of the SUV, at Defendant’s Jackson’s direction, opened the door to intentionally strike him.”

De los Santos had asked the court to award him damages for assault, battery, intentional affliction of emotional distress, and negligence.

He also asked for the amount to be decided at a trial.

The lawsuit was previously filed in the Los Angeles County Superior Court, but it was transferred to the United States District Court for the Central District of Florida in September.

A motion to dismiss the complaint was initially filed by Jackson and his attorneys, with a hearing scheduled for December 22. But the case was ultimately settled between the plaintiff and the defendant this month.

A November 25 motion that was filed stated that de los Santos and Jackson “reached an agreement in principle to resolve all claims” and were “in the process of drafting and executing the formal settlement agreement,” PEOPLE reported.

WARNING! All rights reserved. This material, and other digital content on this website, may not be reproduced, published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed in whole or in part without prior express permission from ZAMBIA MONITOR.

Small scale miners raise the alarm over burdensome artisanal mining regulations

Previous article

Manufacturers push for stronger quality enforcement, greater support for local firms

Next article

You may also like

Comments

Leave a reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

15 − fourteen =

More in Lifestyle