“Watch out,” says former Queen-Pin of the Rap Game Lydia Harris. “I come for my money.”
Harris, the woman who helped to run Death Row Records, complains Snoop Dogg, Marion 'Suge' Knight and Music Giants Universal Music Group, Time Warner and Interscope Records about a judgment of $ 107 million, Dailymail.com can reveal DailyMail.com.
Harris, 61, married co-founder of the dead cell Michael 'Harry-O' Harris and helped the record label that was famous for Tupac Shakur, Dr. Dre and Snoop's music to produce, while her husband was a prison sentence for a decades of prison.
In 2005, in the same year that she and Harry O are divorced, she won a standard judgment of $ 107 million against the notorious death cell boss Suge Knight and the companies behind the record label, after she claimed that he ruined her out of her share in the lucrative company.
But she was never able to collect.
Now Harris tries a different tactic: sue the gigantic record labels and large hip -hop figures that she claims were on Suge's scam.

Lydia Harris renews her 20-year legal battle again Death Row Records and Marion 'Suge' Knight (right). Michael 'Harry-O' Harris (left) is also a co-founder and the ex-husband of Lydia

On Tuesday, Lydia brought her lawsuit against Snoop Dogg (center), SUGE (in the middle left) and Music Giants Universal Music Group, Time Warner and Interscope Records on a judgment of $ 107 million, DailyMail.com can reveal


Lydia helped running the death cell, while her husband came out a prison sentence of 17 years. She won the judgment against Suge and the companies behind the record label in 2005, after he claimed that he ruined her out of her share in the lucrative company
'For more than 20 years I have fought for what is justified of me. What started when a vision turned into betrayal, silence and exclusion, “Lydia told DailyMail.com in an exclusive interview.
“While others harvest the rewards, myself and my family did not leave anything behind it.”
Harris has an adult daughter, Lydasia, with Harry O.
“This is not about resentment; It's about justice. I have devoted years of my life and I refuse to have my contributions erased, “she added. 'I respect everyone involved, but respect does not mean silence.
“I'm ready for a resolution. I am ready to be paid what I owe. It is time for honesty, for truth and for justice. '
Its lawsuit, submitted to a federal court in Texas on Tuesday, accuses Snoop, Suge, Universal, Time Warner and Interscope data of 'Fraud at the Court, Civil Conspiracy, Obstruction of Justice and abuse of legal trial'.

Lydia Harris told DailyMail.com that Suge and his lawyers tried to wriggle out of the enormous judgment by claiming that Harry-O has signed a release that effectively forgiven the debt.

Lydia poses in Death Row Records with Warner Bros Record Executive Mo Ostin (bottom left), DJ Battle Cat (Bottom Center), Talent Manager Benny Medina (third in from the left) and rapper Dana Dane (third in from the right)

She accused the record labels, managers and rap stars of 'refusing to produce financial data', 'submit fraudulent and misleading legal archives' and 'dealing with poor marriage tactics'

Lydia poses with lawyer David connoisseur who has represented Snoop Dogg and Suge Knight
Harris also called 'Time Warner' among the defendants in her court case, an ancestor of the current Media Giant Warner Bros. Discovery.
Time Warner was renamed 'Warnermedia' and bought by AT&T in 2018, later became 'Warner Bros. Discovery 'After it was split off in 2022 from a merger with Discovery Inc.
Harris claims 'a deliberate and orchestrated conspiracy' by Interscope Records, Time Warner, Universal Music Group, Death Row Records and others to cheat her of the $ 107 million judicial judgment from 2005.
She accused the record labels, managers and rap stars of 'refusing to produce financial data', 'submit fraudulent and misleading legal archives' and 'involved in poor tread tactics'.
The legal submission adds that they have intentionally impeded judicial discovery, refused to comply with judicial orders and to deal with fraudulent legal maneuvers to avoid accountability. '
Harris, who now lives in Sugar Land, Texas, told DailyMail.com that Suge Knight and his lawyers tried to twist out of the enormous judgment by claiming that Harry-O signed a release that effectively forgive the debt.
Harry-O was sentenced in 1987 to 28 years in prison for kidnapping and attempted murder. While he was behind bars, he was co-founder of the death cell.
In total, he served 33 years before his sentence was converted by President Donald Trump on the last day of his first term in the White House.



The legal submission adds that the deliberately hindered the judicial discovery of the defendants, refused to comply with judicial orders and deal with fraudulent legal maneuvers to avoid accountability

Suge and his employees tactical bankruptcy to protect the Death Row assets and play a Shell game with the enormous profit of the record label, Lydia claims.
But she said she never signed a release and that she still owes the cash stack.
Knight and his employees tactical bankruptcy to protect the Death Row assets and play a Shell game with the enormous profit of the record label, she claims.
Lydia also claimed that its lawsuit will contain 'new documents' that supposedly Time Warner and universal bosses know aware of the alleged private tactics of Suge, and has participated in hiding the $ 107 million for her.
However, it seems that she has had trouble finding the right lawyer for her case, to submit the new lawsuit 'Pro SE', which represents itself without a lawyer.
Lawyers may have been deterred by her previous splashes with her own council, because they have accused former representatives Wasserman, Comden & Casselman of incorrectly representing her in the original court case.
The case in the death cell is one of the Langstrents on the books of the Hof van Los Angeles.
A lawyer who was previously involved in the case, Peter Ezzell, said that he has 17 boxes with documents about the case that 'generations went through' since Harris Knight approved in 2002.