Marion “Suge” Knight won’t be getting a look at the bank records of Andre Young, known as Dr. Dre–at
least, not any time soon–ruled Los Angeles County Superior Court judge
Brian S. Currey in Compton on Tuesday. “The court quashes the subpoena
as it is a nullity and wholly useless,” Currey wrote in tentative ruling
posted outside the courtroom door. Currey cited what he said should
have been an obvious procedural defect in Knight’s demand for Young’s
bank records: It did not specifically list the documents sought, so
technically requested nothing. “This motion is much ado about
nothing,”wrote Judge Currey–all of which leaves the door open for an
ongoing, but perhaps much-delayed, probe into Knight’s claim that Young
was conspiring to have him killed in connection with a fight over money
owed for some high-profile corporate deals.
The ruling slightly cooled the fires under hot legal dispute that got
hotter in mid-October. That’s when Knight, who is being sued for his
role in the death of Terry Carter near the set of a promotional shoot
for Universal’s Straight Outta Compton
film in 2015, filed a spectacular counter-claim. It asserted that
Young—a producer of the film—had been trying to have him killed in
connection with Knight’s demand for hundreds of millions of dollars he
was supposedly owed from Young’s film income and $3 billion sale of the
Beats company to Apple. When he struck Carter with his truck in the
parking lot of Tam’s Burgers No. 21, claimed Knight, he was trying to
escape an ambush by armed men working with Dre.
Young’s lawyer, Howard King, strongly challenged Knight’s assertions
when the counter-claim was filed. In court on Tuesday a lawyer for the
Young team pointed out that he had been dismissed as a party in the
original wrongful death complaint; that lawyer also said that the
cross-complaint had not yet been served on Young. No lawyer for Knight
appeared during the hearing on Tuesday. Judge Currey, for his part,
pointed toward a list of strong suggestions he had included in his
tentative ruling: He urged, among other things, that the lawyers try to
resolve their discovery disputes informally, and that they determine
whether Knight intended to waive his Fifth Amendment rights against
self-incrimination by proceeding with the lawsuit even as he awaits trial on a related murder case.
By focusing on procedural defects in the records request, Judge
Currey avoided any indication of how seriously he takes the underlying
death plot claim, which is likely to get a further airing when Knight is
tried, probably early next year, on charges of murdering Carter and
attempting to murder Cle “Bone” Sloan, who was also injured in the Tam’s
incident. That trial was repeatedly delayed as Knight switched counsel
and dealt with health problems in jail.
The civil suit against Knight, filed by Carter’s family in 2015, was
eventually transferred to the Compton courthouse. That is just a few
blocks from Tam’s, where Knight’s encounter with Sloan, Carter and
others took place on Jan. 29, 2015, following an argument that began at
the nearby base camp for a video that was used in connection with the Straight Outta Compton
trailer. The film, directed by F. Gary Gray and released by Universal
on Aug. 14 of that year, went on to become a hit with more than $200
million in global ticket sales.
Wednesday, December 14, 2016
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