The verdict, which will see the last two defendants set free immediately, marks the end of criminal trial that has captivated the music industry for nearly than two years.
Drake thinks the game is rigged — and he’s filing some seemingly unconvincing legal actions to prove it. Remind you of anyone in politics?
The ruling, which also cited Diddy's "propensity for violence," means that the embattled rap mogul must await his May sex trafficking trial from a Brooklyn jail.
The rocker agreed to pay his former girlfriend $327,000 in legal fees after dropping the case, in which he accused her of conspiring to "falsely portray" him as a "rapist and abuser."
In this week's Legal Beat, the Drake-Kendrick beef escalates into litigation, Miley rips a copyright case over "Flowers," UMG calls Fred Durst's lawsuit "fiction," and much more.
Over the last two days, Drake has alleged that UMG artificially inflated the streams of Kendrick Lamar's "Not Like Us." Here, Billboard analyzes his claims.
The new filing, which claims UMG “funneled payments” to iHeartRadio as part of a “pay-to-play scheme," sheds new light on the blockbuster dispute.
Gibson accuses the company of infringing its trademark for the "iconic Les Paul body shape."
“The suggestion that UMG would do anything to undermine any of its artists is offensive and untrue," said the company in a statement.
In a legal petition, the star's company accuses UMG of serious wrongdoing -- a stunning twist months after his high-profile feud with Kendrick.