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Soulja Boy ordered to pay $4 million after he’s found liable for sexual assault

Soulja Boy in a red jean jacket and pants pointing forward with one arm fully extended
Soulja Boy was found liable in civil court Thursday for sexual assault and battery and hit with a $4-million bill for compensatory damages.
(Jordan Strauss / Invision / Associated Press)

A jury in Santa Monica slapped rapper Soulja Boy with a $4-million judgment Thursday after finding him liable in civil court for the sexual assault and battery of a woman who lived at his home and said she was his assistant.

The 34-year-old rapper, whose real name is DeAndre Cortez Way, smiled calmly as the verdict was read, according to Courthouse News Service. The judgment was for compensatory damages only; determination of punitive damages is still to come.

Marlon Wayans makes a punchline out of Soulja Boy’s entire career after the ‘Pretty Boy Swag’ rapper targets the comic and his trans son with anti-LGBTQ+ slurs.

“We’re happy our client was vindicated and the jury believed her claims of physical and sexual assault,” plaintiff’s attorney Ron Zambrano, a partner at West Coast Employment Lawyers, said in a statement obtained by The Times. “We’re looking forward to moving on to the punitive damages phase of the case.”

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Way has denied all claims against him.

“We maintain that the evidence does not support the verdict,” his attorney, Rickey Ivie of Ivie McNeill Wyatt Purcell & Diggs, said in a statement to The Times. “It is unfortunate that aspersions and misperceptions of a culture were allowed to influence the trial. Mr. Way fully intends to pursue his post-trial remedies and to fight for a just result in this case.”

The case was brought by a Jane Doe accuser in January 2021, and the trial began in March in Santa Monica, according to court records.

The jury cleared the “Crank That” rapper on claims of false imprisonment and constructive discharge — an allegation that he created a work environment so hostile the employee had to quit — while finding him liable for civil claims, including sexual battery, assault and gender violence.

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Soulja Boy’s assault case will cost him a pretty penny — and a luxury car or three. A judge approved a woman’s request to seize the rapper’s property to satisfy her $472K reward.

Doe said she was hired as a personal assistant to the rapper in December 2018, according to the lawsuit filed in Los Angeles County Superior Court. The filing alleged that from Jan. 23, 2019, to Dec. 23, 2020, Way inflicted “serious physical and sexual injuries” on Doe and made her “fear for her life.”

Doe said in court documents reviewed by The Times that she was promised $500 a week but was never paid, despite doing Way’s bidding seven days a week, 20 hours a day. Shortly after her employment began, the filing said, a romantic relationship developed between the two and the abuse soon followed. The lawsuit accused Way of punching Doe and raping her on multiple occasions.

Testifying during the trial, Way — who was accused of sexual battery, false imprisonment, negligence and assault, plus a handful of labor code violations — denied raping or beating Doe, according to Courthouse News Service, and said she was never his employee but rather stayed at his house frequently and rolled marijuana blunts for him.

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His attorney said in his closing argument that she got “room and board” for her efforts, something he called “industry standard,” the outlet said.

‘Why does it have to be violent?’ Teddy Riley said when asked about Soulja Boy. ‘You’re a coward for hitting a woman.’

During three days of testimony, Doe said she “didn’t even feel human anymore. I felt like an animal,” Courthouse News reported. She said she stayed because he threatened to hurt her or her family and to publicly post a video that he had recorded of her performing oral sex.

Text messages showed that she was required to do tasks that are typically done by an assistant, including making travel arrangements and getting food. In one message sent after an alleged attack, Way wrote, “I should have killed you,” the lawsuit said.

The trial will continue with determination of punitive damages.

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