Mobb Deep’s Prodigy Settles Lawsuit by Agreeing to Tweet About It

Mobb Deep's Prodigy Settles Lawsuit by Agreeing to Tweet About It

Photo by Johnny Nunez / Getty Images

In November, Prodigy of Mobb Deep filed a lawsuit against Universal Music Publishing Group. According to Billboard, the complaint alleged that the company had been collecting fees for Prodigy’s solo work as a featured artist and in collaborative projects for almost 20 years without his approval. The suit demanded at least $57,000 for copyright infringement and other alleged violations. Now, Prodigy has ended the dispute in an unusually public way.

Prodigy, whose legal name is Albert Johnson, filed a settlement agreement yesterday, court records show. TMZ reports that UMPG agreed to pay him more than $150,000 on the condition that Prodigy tweet the following sentences: “My dispute with UMPG was all a misunderstanding. Thankful that we resolved it quickly and happy to be continuing my long-standing relationship with UMPG.”

Earlier today, Prodigy tweeted (then deleted) those exact words:

My dispute with UMPG was all a misunderstanding.

— PRODIGY MOBBDEEP (@PRODIGYMOBBDEEP) March 1, 2016

Thankful that we resolved it quickly and happy to be continuing my long-standing relationship with UMPG.

— PRODIGY MOBBDEEP (@PRODIGYMOBBDEEP) March 1, 2016

He then tweeted:

#bbhmm

— PRODIGY MOBBDEEP (@PRODIGYMOBBDEEP) March 1, 2016

Spokespeople for Prodigy and UPMG declined to comment on the matter to Pitchfork.

Prodigy’s lawyer confirmed the settlement to Pitchfork but declined to comment on the dollar amount.

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