Chris Brown Sues Warner Bros. for $500M Over ‘A Historical past of Violence’ Documentary
Chris Brown has sued Warner Bros. Discovery, claiming the media home defamed him by exposing the R&B singer’s prolonged historical past of sexually abusing girls in a 2024 documentary.
Warner Bros. Discovery and Ample Leisure, the manufacturing firm behind Chris Brown: A Historical past of Violence, is accused within the criticism, which was filed in Los Angeles Superior Court docket on Tuesday, January 21, of “selling and publishing false data of their pursuit of likes, clicks, downloads, and {dollars} and to the detriment” of the R&B singer, “understanding that it was stuffed with lies and deception and violating fundamental journalistic ideas.”
“They did so after being supplied proof that their data was false, and their storytelling ‘Jane Doe’ had not solely been discredited again and again however was the truth is a perpetrator of intimate companions violence and aggressor herself,” reads the lawsuit, which was filed by attorneys Arnold Shokouchi and Levi McCathern. “Mr. Brown has by no means been discovered responsible of any intercourse associated crime…however this documentary states in each obtainable vogue that he’s a serial rapist and sexual abuser.”
The Jane Doe who made sexual assault accusations towards Brown within the documentary can be named as a defendant within the criticism, which alleges the girl “fully disregarded the information in an try for fame and fortune — all at the price of Chris Brown and the repute he has labored diligently in redeeming over the past decade.”
The “sensationalized, unfounded, and defamatory allegations” within the documentary “have been discredited, dismissed by the courts, or outright fabricated,” Brown’s attorneys write. The lawsuit additional alleges that the Jane Doe filed a “frivolous civil lawsuit” towards Brown in January 2022 by which she accused him of sexual assault and battery — however that her claims “had been decided to be completely fabricated, resulting in the withdrawal of her attorneys and dismissal of the case” that very same August “after a Miami Seaside Police detective uncovered textual content messages…that uncovered her dishonesty.”
The lawsuit’s central cost is that the documentary’s manufacturing corporations proceeded with its launch regardless of understanding it “contained false claims and violated journalist skilled requirements”; Brown’s attorneys now assert that this “triggered important hurt to Mr. Brown’s repute, profession, and enterprise alternatives.”
Brown is asking for $500 million in damages, “a portion of which will likely be donated to survivors of sexual abuse.”