A woman who says she regularly worked as an onstage dancer for Snoop Dogg and his associate Bishop Don “Magic” Juan is now suing the men with claims they s3xually assaulted her nearly a decade ago.
The Jane Doe accuser filed her lawsuit in federal court in Los Angeles Wednesday, claiming her alleged assaults by the rapper and his friend happened shortly after she attended a Snoop Dogg concert at Club Heat Ultra Lounge in Anaheim, California on May 29, 2013.
According to the lawsuit, obtained by Rolling Stone, the woman alleges she was assaulted in back-to-back attacks after she accepted a ride home from Bishop Don “Magic” Juan — whose real name is Donald Campbell — and wound up at his residence against her wishes. She claims Campbell assaulted her at the residence when he “removed his penis from his pants” and “repeatedly shoved his penis into (her) mouth.”
The unidentified accuser claims Campbell later demanded she accompany him to a recording studio where Snoop Dogg was purportedly filming his TV series, Snoop Dogg’s Double G News Network. She alleges Campbell told her Snoop wanted her there and might make her “his weather girl.” She complied “in hopes of advancing her career,” the filing states.
The filing says the “mediation was unsuccessful” and that, “immediately after the mediation ended,” Snoop Dogg posted an image on Instagram that read “Gold digger” alongside emojis of a judge and a police officer. The complaint filed by lawyer Matt Finkelberg with the Derek Smith Law Group describes Snoop Dogg’s Instagram post as “obviously threatening” against the Jane Doe plaintiff.
Snoop Dogg, born Calvin Broadus, was previously sued by makeup artist Kylie Bell, who alleged the rapper and members of his entourage s3xually assaulted her in 2003. Shortly before filing her complaint, Bell was sued by Snoop for extortion. Bell later dropped her lawsuit, explaining in a statement that “the matter has been resolved amicably.”
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