Tag Archives: lawsuit

Ray J: Sued for Missing Marc Littlejohn Apparel

Ray J continues to feel the affects of Whitney Houston’s death . This time in the wallet, however, as opposed to the heart. Indeed, the man who made Kim Kardashian famous has been sued by stylist Marc Littlejohn because he allegedly hired Ray J to wear his clothing for a Grammy-related event on February 10. The problem? Those items were supposedly left in the hotel room where Houston died and, according to the lawsuit, have been missing since the day this singer passed away. Littlejohn is therefore suing Ray J for the cost of the clothing ($2,880) and demanding either the cash amount or the duds themselves. He’s had no luck so far in either case when reaching out to the artist or his mother. [Photo: WENN.com]

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Ray J: Sued for Missing Marc Littlejohn Apparel

Ray J: Sued for Missing Marc Littlejohn Apparel

Ray J continues to feel the affects of Whitney Houston’s death . This time in the wallet, however, as opposed to the heart. Indeed, the man who made Kim Kardashian famous has been sued by stylist Marc Littlejohn because he allegedly hired Ray J to wear his clothing for a Grammy-related event on February 10. The problem? Those items were supposedly left in the hotel room where Houston died and, according to the lawsuit, have been missing since the day this singer passed away. Littlejohn is therefore suing Ray J for the cost of the clothing ($2,880) and demanding either the cash amount or the duds themselves. He’s had no luck so far in either case when reaching out to the artist or his mother. [Photo: WENN.com]

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Ray J: Sued for Missing Marc Littlejohn Apparel

Anything BUT African! Applachia’s Melungeon People Upset To Learn Their Real Roots Aren’t Portuguese, Turkish Or Gypsy

This is some pretty interesting stuff as far as genealogy goes, but the reaction of these Appalachian folk goes to show — some folks will do anything not to be “Black”. Race mixing goes WAY back, so how were these people SURPRISED to find out they were of African heritage? For those of you unfamiliar with the mountainous region between Tennessee and Virginia, the area has historically been home to a group of dark-skinned Appalachian residents once known derisively as the Melungeons. While the origins of these people has been contested on several occasions, it was primarily speculated they were descended from Portuguese explorers, Turkish slaves or Gypsies. But guess what. DNA don’t lie and a new study shows these people come from African men and White women. Yep. Something that was considered criminal back in the day actually happened often enough that a whole community was formed that included a bloodline that was pretty much explained by folklore. Here are the details: Now a new DNA study in the Journal of Genetic Genealogy attempts to separate truth from oral tradition and wishful thinking. The study found the truth to be somewhat less exotic: Genetic evidence shows that the families historically called Melungeons are the offspring of sub-Saharan African men and white women of northern or central European origin. And that report, which was published in April in the peer-reviewed journal, doesn’t sit comfortably with some people who claim Melungeon ancestry. “There were a whole lot of people upset by this study,” lead researcher Roberta Estes said. “They just knew they were Portuguese, or Native American.” Beginning in the early 1800s, or possibly before, the term Melungeon (meh-LUN’-jun) was applied as a slur to a group of about 40 families along the Tennessee-Virginia border. But it has since become a catch-all phrase for a number of groups of mysterious mixed-race ancestry. In recent decades, interest in the origin of the Melungeons has risen dramatically with advances both in DNA research and in the advent of Internet resources that allow individuals to trace their ancestry without digging through dusty archives. G. Reginald Daniel, a sociologist at the University of California-Santa Barbara who’s spent more than 30 years examining multiracial people in the U.S. and wasn’t part of this research, said the study is more evidence that race-mixing in the U.S. isn’t a new phenomenon. “All of us are multiracial,” he said. “It is recapturing a more authentic U.S. history.” Estes and her fellow researchers theorize that the various Melungeon lines may have sprung from the unions of black and white indentured servants living in Virginia in the mid-1600s, before slavery. They conclude that as laws were put in place to penalize the mixing of races, the various family groups could only intermarry with each other, even migrating together from Virginia through the Carolinas before settling primarily in the mountains of East Tennessee. Claims of Portuguese ancestry likely were a ruse they used in order to remain free and retain other privileges that came with being considered white, according to the study’s authors. The study quotes from an 1874 court case in Tennessee in which a Melungeon woman’s inheritance was challenged. If Martha Simmerman were found to have African blood, she would lose the inheritance. Her attorney, Lewis Shepherd, argued successfully that the Simmerman’s family was descended from ancient Phoenicians who eventually migrated to Portugal and then to North America. Writing about his argument in a memoir published years later, Shepherd stated, “Our Southern high-bred people will never tolerate on equal terms any person who is even remotely tainted with negro blood, but they do not make the same objection to other brown or dark-skinned people, like the Spanish, the Cubans, the Italians, etc.” In another lawsuit in 1855, Jacob Perkins, who is described as “an East Tennessean of a Melungeon family,” sued a man who had accused him of having “negro blood.” In a note to his attorney, Perkins wrote why he felt the accusation was damaging. Writing in the era of slavery ahead of the Civil War, Perkins noted the racial discrimination of the age: “1st the words imply that we are liable to be indicted (equals) liable to be whipped (equals) liable to be fined … “ Later generations came to believe some of the tales their ancestors wove out of necessity. Jack Goins, who has researched Melungeon history for about 40 years and was the driving force behind the DNA study, said his distant relatives were listed as Portuguese on an 1880 census. Yet he was taken aback when he first had his DNA tested around 2000. Swabs taken from his cheeks collected the genetic material from saliva or skin cells and the sample was sent to a laboratory for identification. “It surprised me so much when mine came up African that I had it done again,” he said. “I had to have a second opinion. But it came back the same way. I had three done. They were all the same.” In order to conduct the larger DNA study, Goins and his fellow researchers – who are genealogists but not academics – had to define who was a Melungeon. In recent years, it has become a catchall term for people of mixed-race ancestry and has been applied to about 200 communities in the eastern U.S. – from New York to Louisiana. Among them were the Montauks, the Mantinecocks, Van Guilders, the Clappers, the Shinnecocks and others in New York. Pennsylvania had the Pools; North Carolina the Lumbees, Waccamaws and Haliwas and South Carolina the Redbones, Buckheads, Yellowhammers, Creels and others. In Louisiana, which somewhat resembled a Latin American nation with its racial mixing, there were Creoles of the Cane River region and the Redbones of western Louisiana, among others. The latest DNA study limited participants to those whose families were called Melungeon in the historical records of the 1800s and early 1900s in and around Tennessee’s Hawkins and Hancock Counties, on the Virginia border some 200 miles northeast of Nashville. The study does not rule out the possibility of other races or ethnicities forming part of the Melungeon heritage, but none were detected among the 69 male lines and 8 female lines that were tested. Also, the study did not look for later racial mixing that might have occurred, for instance with Native Americans. Goins estimates there must be several thousand descendants of the historical Melungeons alive today, but the study only examined unbroken male and female lines. The origin of the word Melungeon is unknown, but there is no doubt it was considered a slur by white residents in Appalachia who suspected the families of being mixed race. “It’s sometimes embarrassing to see the lengths your ancestors went to hide their African heritage, but look at the consequences” said Wayne Winkler, past president of the Melungeon Heritage Association. “They suffered anyway because of the suspicion.” The DNA study is ongoing as researchers continue to locate additional Melungeon descendants. Fascinating stuff right? Or is it even that deep? Source

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Anything BUT African! Applachia’s Melungeon People Upset To Learn Their Real Roots Aren’t Portuguese, Turkish Or Gypsy

What The Hell?? NFL Player Sued For Destroying $2 Million Dollar Rental…The Home Had A “Putrid Stench Of Animal Waste”

NFL Player Sued For Destroying $2 Million Dollar Rental We know celebrities, professional athletes, and the like have a tendency to wild out and trash isht sometimes, but this is gross! Seattle Seahawk Kellen Winslow Junior is accused of destroying a Rancho Santa Fe home he and his wife rented last year, according to a lawsuit. The lawsuit, filed recently by the homeowners Ahmad and Nona Zarei, alleged Winslow Jr. of ruining $381,000 of furniture, rugs, and designer drapes. “This is a standard shakedown of a professional athlete,” said Winslow Jr.’s attorney Brian Watkins. The former Tampa Bay Buccaneer rented the home, located at the 17,100 block of Camino Acampo in Rancho Santa Fe, from January 2011 to June 2011 for $9,000 a month. The home is estimated to be worth about $2 million. The homeowners accused Winslow Jr. of leaving the home smelling like dog urine and feces. It alleged the home had a “putrid stench of animal waste.” “I don’t believe there was any damage. They said house smelled of urine. I did two walk-throughs and could not smell anything,” said Watkins. “That’s their motivation. They think they’ll get that from a professional athlete and it’s not going to happen.” Fox 5 contacted homeowner’s realtor, who also conducted the final walk-through. She said there was minor damage, nowhere near the estimated amount claimed in the lawsuit. Fox 5 contacted the homeowner and his attorney. Neither one returned the calls for comment. SMH if it’s true this guy and his wife are some nasty muhfuggas!!! Source

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What The Hell?? NFL Player Sued For Destroying $2 Million Dollar Rental…The Home Had A “Putrid Stench Of Animal Waste”

Breastfeeding Group on Time Cover: Way to Be!

The Time Magazine breastfeeding cover and story on attachment parenting are A-O-K with at least one major organization, despite the ruckus it caused. Bettina Forbes, co-founder of Best for Babes – an advocacy group dedicated to educating moms about breastfeeding – defended the controversial image. Forbes says three is NOT too old to be breastfeeding, and that while she’d have preferred a celebrity like Jennifer Garner on the cover, it’s still great. “We understand that Americans are uncomfortable with [the Time cover],” she told TMZ. “However, in other cultures where babies wean themselves normally, usually somewhere around age three or four, it is perfectly acceptable.” “Think of it this way – some cultures have been drinking green tea for millennia, yet only recently has it become popular in the United States once the health benefits were more understood and it was popularized by marketing.” “Breastfeeding is the same thing,” she argues, since “it is accepted and valued in many cultures, but not yet fully in the U.S.” “We’re happy with anything that is an appealing image, provokes conversation, and ultimately desensitizes people to breastfeeding.” You tell us, THG readers: Attachment parenting …

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Breastfeeding Group on Time Cover: Way to Be!

Ola Ray, Michael Jackson Video Star, Settles Lawsuit Over "Thriller" Profits

Ola Ray, the girl who played Michael Jackson’s date in the famed “Thriller” music video (below), has settled her lawsuit over payment for her role. Three years after filing suit, and 29 years after starring in it. Ray sued MJ and his production company in May 2009, the month before Jackson died, claiming she was owed royalties from the 1983 smash. Michael Jackson – Thriller The video was perhaps Jackson’s biggest career highlight. The former Playboy Playmate sued Jackson for breach of contract, insisting that she was still owed a massive share of “Thriller” profits . Terms were not disclosed, but the out-of-court settlement implies Ray was paid in some way, rather than the court tossing her complaint. “Thriller” video director John Landis has filed a similar lawsuit against MJ Estate, with both sides still trying to negotiate a settlement.

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Ola Ray, Michael Jackson Video Star, Settles Lawsuit Over "Thriller" Profits

Get Your Story Straight: John “Lemme Stroke Ya” Travolta’s “John Doe” Accuser #1 Admits He Got The Date Wrong, But Insists The Facts Remain!

Does this mean that Johnny T is innocent?? John Travolta’s Sexual Abuse Accuser Admits To Having The Wrong Date Of Assault The Plantiff who filed a bombshell lawsuit against mega-star John Travolta still maintains the Grease star made unwanted sexual advances towards him, but now says he got the date of the incident wrong, RadarOnline.com is exclusively reporting. Travolta’s lawyer has insisted from the beginning that it was impossible for the actor to have committed the alleged assault on that date because he was in New York City and called the claims “fiction.” According to sources close to the case, John Doe #1’s account of the incident remain the same, but the date on which he said the alleged assault took place was not January 16, 2012, but actually on an earlier date. “It was a miscalculation,” one source said about the wrong date being claimed in the lawsuit. A second source said that the date change will not drastically affect the lawsuit filed against the star. “The lawsuit will likely be amended, but this doesn’t change the facts of the lawsuit,” a source connected to the case told RadarOnline.com exclusively. Despite having the wrong date, John Doe #1 is rock-hard in his stance that Travolta did him dirty. “John Doe #1 gave very specific information, and staff from the Beverly Hills Hotel will absolutely be included as witnesses in the case.The source pointed out that Travolta’s lawyer Marty Singer has been a pit bull against the claims, with Singer telling RadarOnline.com that they had flight and hotel details that would prove that Travolta was not in Los Angeles on January 16, 2012.“Let’s not forget John Doe accuser #2. It’s very interesting that Travolta’s team hasn’t gone after him,” the source pointed out. With two lawsuits now filed against Travolta, the source said that even though the original date was wrong, they aren’t going to withdraw the suit, which accuses the actor of assault, sexual battery, and sexual harassment. “This case will absolutely proceed through depositions and to a trial. The lawsuit can’t and won’t be thrown out because the date was wrong by the first John Doe, which will ultimately be up to a jury to decide. Both accusers are ready to go public, and aren’t afraid of John Travolta, and they will see this through to the end,” the source said. Not sure how a jury is going to interpret the “miscalculation” of the date, but these guys sound pretty intent on dragging John out of the closet kicking and screaming! via RadarOnline

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Get Your Story Straight: John “Lemme Stroke Ya” Travolta’s “John Doe” Accuser #1 Admits He Got The Date Wrong, But Insists The Facts Remain!

John Travolta Lawsuit: Masseur Accuses Actor of Sexual Assault, Harassment

John Travolta has been sued by a masseur (male masseuse) who claims that the actor tried to have sex with him during a recent massage. According to the shocking lawsuit, Travolta saw the masseur’s ad online, and scheduled an appointment for $200 an hour. Then it all went haywire. The accuser did not know who booked the appointment, but followed instructions and met up with a black Lexus SUV, which Travolta was driving. Travolta and the masseur, who says he saw Trojan condoms in the center console, drove to the Beverly Hills Hotel and went to Travolta’s bungalow. The suit claims Travolta stripped naked , appearing semi-erect. The masseur says he told Travolta to lay down on the table and the first hour went without incident. Unfortunately, there was a second hour booked. Then, according to legal documents, the 48-year-old actor began rubbing the masseur’s leg, touched his scrotum and the shaft of his penis. The masseur claims he told the movie star that he does not have sex with his clients, but Travolta was completely undeterred … allegedly. Offering to do a “reverse massage,” he added, “Come on dude, I’ll jerk you off!!!” The suit alleges that Travolta then masturbated and told the masseur he got to where he was “due to sexual favors he had performed when he was in his Welcome Back Kotter days,” and that this is the nature of the beast. “Hollywood is controlled by homosexual Jewish men who expect favors in return for sexual activity,” Travolta said, according to the lawsuit. The masseur, who is only listed as John Doe, claims Travolta called him a loser, but then doubled the hourly rate and sent him on his way. The suit seeks $2 million plus punitive damages. [Photo: WENN.com]

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John Travolta Lawsuit: Masseur Accuses Actor of Sexual Assault, Harassment

Lil Wayne, Producer Finally Settle $20 Million “Lollipop” Lawsuit

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After hit producer Bangladesh put Lil Wayne on blast last year, it’s no secret that producers and Lil Wayne haven’t always had the best relationship. However,…

Lil Wayne, Producer Finally Settle $20 Million “Lollipop” Lawsuit

Pay Up: Ray-J Ordered To Pay $30K After Blowing Off A Radio Appearance In South Carolina

Where is the money team now??? Via TMZ : Ray J is taking a 5-figure beating in court — because a judge has ordered the singer to pay more than $26,000 … after allegedly blowing off a radio appearance in South Carolina back in 2010. The SC station — called Cox Radio — originally sued Ray J, claiming it paid him $20,000 to MC at a local event for a couple hours … then attend a meet-and-greet with fans for another 30 minutes. But according to the lawsuit, Ray blew the entire thing off — and absconded with the money. A South Carolina judge ruled in favor of Cox radio because Ray never showed up, awarding it $25,100 — but Ray didn’t pay, so Cox took the judgment to Ray’s primary state of residence … California. The judgment has since swelled to $26,848.33. So far, no word back from Ray. More On Bossip! Dirty Dog Diaries: MORE Women Come Forward Telling Royce That Her New Boo-Thang Dezmon Briscoe Been Tryna Chop Them Down Too! Single And Ready To Mingle: The 10 Best Cities To Meet New People And Get Freaky! Cheaper To Chop Her: Men (And Women) That Got Caught Trying To Pay For That Poon Ain’t That A B–?! Dirty Dogs That Faced Bad Karma For Their Dirty Dog Ways

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Pay Up: Ray-J Ordered To Pay $30K After Blowing Off A Radio Appearance In South Carolina