A former Snoop Dogg backup dancer sues him for alleged sexual assault, sex trafficking

 A former Snoop Dogg backup dancer sues him for alleged sexual assault, sex trafficking. 



Snoop Dogg is still being prosecuted by a defunct dance partner who suit claims she was the beneficiary of human trafficking and sexual abuse by the rap star and now one of his wants to associate. 


According to the class action, residential meditational used to be tried and failed Tuesday and Wednesday morning. The local prosecutor, Matt E. O. Finkelberg of the Derek Smith Law Group, filed lawsuits in circuit court in L. A. Instantaneously after starts to talk ceased.



Snoop Dogg's solicitor and pr team didn't reply Thursday to an ask for statement. Finkelberg furthermore didn't answer. 


"Gold digger season is here be careful Nefews keep ya guards up," the recording artist uploaded Wednesday on Instagram. "And. Keep ya circle small." The 2022 Super Bowl Halftime Show dancer included symbols of a police sergeant, a wad of cash and a supreme court justice, together with a deeply suspicious upper lip. 


The reported cases in enquiry purportedly transpired in 2013 to a “ women, noted as Jane Doe, who worked for and accomplished with Snoop — forename Calvin Broadus — and many other rap songs. Jake "Magic" Juan, born Donald Campbell, but several of Snoop's industries are assigned to the case.


According to the court case, in May 2013, Doe and a roommate participated a Snoop Dogg prove at Club Heat Ultra Lounge in Anaheim. They registered the VIP hotel at the club and ran into Campbell, who ostensibly subsequent encouraged them home safely to the rapper's film. The pal turns around night, and Campbell reportedly promised to take Doe "home or I can take you back to my place with me." Doe stated “ she inquired go to her household. 


Doe had slept in the ride, the suit alleges, and woken up pretty soon before arriving at Campbell's parent's house, not her have. She used to be tired and goes to sleep at his position, to then be roused around 4 a. M., the complaint claims, by Campbell pressuring his nipple in her mouth and into her mouth. 


Campbell subsequent implored Doe to "put this dress on" and come with him to the videoing of "Snoop Dogg's Double G News Network." He told police her he wanted to see if the recording artist would create her the newsreader, and Doe asserts in the defamation suit that she abided in aspirations of pursuing her vocation.


At the studio, Doe went to the bathroom with a stomach ache, only to have Broadus open the bathroom door while she was on the toilet, then enter and shut the door behind him, the suit says. He allegedly removed his penis from his pants and said, "Put it in your mouth." Afraid for her safety and her life, she complied, the suit says.


Afterward, Doe was spotted by Campbell wandering in the studio. He called her over to take a picture with the rapper, then took her out of the studio, the lawsuit says.


Doe claims in the lawsuit that she wasn't hired afterward because she didn't "willingly and enthusiastically" give Broadus oral sex. She also alleges she has suffered from various ailments since the events, including anxiety, post-traumatic stress, depression, nightmares, sleep disorders, headaches, emotional distress and more.


The lawsuit seeks damages in an amount to be decided at a jury trial.


Wednesday was a big day for the rapper, business-wise: He announced the purchase of Death Row Records, the gangsta rap powerhouse label that released his 1993 album, "Doggystyle."


"It feels good to have ownership of the label I was part of at the beginning of my career and as one of the founding members," he said in a statement. "This is an extremely meaningful moment for me.”


" It feels good to have ownership of the label I was part of at the beginning of my career and as one of the founding members, "he said in the same remark." This is an extremely meaningful moment for me. "




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