14, 2017, Peep’s managers told the rapper he should make “himself sick from taking a bunch of Xanax” so he could trigger “an insurance claim and not lose money” on a show he wanted to cancel. Judge Beaudet upheld those comments in her ruling Wednesday but struck down a latter section of the statement in which Cold Hart, whose legal name is Jerick Quilisadio, claimed that on Nov. He claimed that “throughout” that duration, Belinda Mercer, the tour’s manager hired by FAE, “provided and supplied Xanax, cocaine, marijuana, Percocet, and ketamine” to “those traveling on the tour bus.” In his disputed declaration, Cold Hart, a member of the emo-rap collective Gothboiclique, told the court he was traveling alongside Peep for the rapper’s “Come Over When You’re Sober” tour from Nov. ![]() In her lengthy ruling, Judge Beaudet said that while she agreed with FAE that portions of a highly damaging statement from Peep’s fellow musician Cold Hart were inadmissible hearsay, the court’s decision to strike sections of Cold Hart’s declaration Wednesday wasn’t enough to gut the wrongful death lawsuit first filed by Womack in 2019. ![]() Beaudet shot down label First Access Entertainment’s request to dismiss the claims on the grounds that mom Liza Kathryn Womack, the executor of her son’s estate, failed to show any “causal connection” between FAE’s alleged negligence and Peep’s tragic demise from a deadly cocktail of fentanyl and Xanax. Lil Peep’s mom scored a legal victory Wednesday when a judge upheld her negligence and wrongful death claims against her son’s record label and the tour manager who was traveling with the emo rapper when he overdosed and died on a bus in Arizona four years ago.Īt a court hearing in Los Angeles, Judge Teresa A.
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