The mother of Tupac
Shakur has filed a lawsuit seeking $1.1million in unpaid royalties from
an album released after the rapper's death.
Afeni
Shakur, 66, filed the lawsuit against Entertainment One claiming breach
of contract for failure to pay royalties on the album Beginnings: The
Lost Tapes released in June 2007.
Entertainment
One in July bought the rights to Tupac's music that was previously
owned by Death Row Records, according to the lawsuit.
Lawsuit filed: Afeni Shakur, shown in 2011 in
Atlanta, has filed a lawsuit seeking royalties from an album released
posthumously following the 1996 death of her son rapper Tupac Shakur,
shown in 1994
Afeni is
co-administrator of her son's estate and also demanded in her lawsuit
that Entertainment One turn over master recordings of all of her son's
unreleased music, according to a report on Wednesday in TMZ.
Telephone calls to Entertainment One were not returned.
The Lost Tapes contained some of the first hip hop songs that Tupac recorded in 1988.
Posthumous album: Tupac, shown on Sept. 4, 1996
in New York City, was shot and killed in Las Vegas after attending a
Mike Tyson boxing match
The album featured 10 songs with Tupac's early crew and prompted Tupac's joining of the Digital Underground tour as a roadie.
Tupac
was shot multiple times in a drive-by shooting on September 7, 1996
while driving in Las Vegas after watching a Mike Tyson boxing match.
The rapper was rushed to a hospital and died six days later.
Lost tapes: Tupac's mother has sued over royalties for the album Tupac Shakur Beginnings: The Lost Tapes
Afeni and Tupac's father Billy
Garland were active members in the late 1960s and early 1970s of the
Black Panther Party in New York City.
Tupac
was born a month after Afeni was acquitted of more than 150 charges of
conspiring against the US government and New York landmarks in the
Panther 21 court case.
Tupac
had one of the highest selling hip hop albums of all time with his 2006
double-disc All Eyez on Me and remains a hip hop icon with album sales
reaching more than 75 million to date.
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