Carl Crawford Denied Emergency Motion To Stop Megan Thee Stallion Album Release
During her feud against 1501 Certified Entertainment CEO Carl Crawford, signee Megan Thee Stallion announced she was still dropping her upcoming album, ‘Suga,’ against his wishes.
Subsequently, Crawford filed an emergency motion to dissolve the temporary restraining order, which permitted Meg to release the project despite his backing.
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Additionally, late Wednesday (Mar 4), District Court Judge Beau A. Miller denied Crawford’s request, which stated that “the album at issue may be dropped for distribution beginning March 6, 2020.”
Also mentioned in the motion, was Rap-A-Lot Records head J. Prince, who’s publicly supported Crawford during the extenuating dispute.
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The Rap-A-Lot label head is also being accused by Meg and her legal team for allegedly threatening them on social media.
Furthermore, Judge Miller stated, “Mr. Prince shall refrain from threatening or posting threatening or retaliatory social media posts or threats against [Megan], her agents, or her representatives.”
While Crawford began speaking to press, and Meg readies album promo, Jude Miller stated that both sides “are prohibited from communicating with the media concerning the underlying issues in this case without court approval.”