Rapper Hammer was hit with a lawsuit earlier this month due to allegations that he placed his residence in a trust fund to avoid collection of a debt.
A lawsuit filed by Newstyle Media, based in Anaheim Hills, California, claims that hammer used his Stanley Burrell Irrevocable Children's Trust fund to hide ownership of his Tracy, California home.
According to local records Hammer has lived in the house since 1997, but between 1997 and 2002, the title was in another mans name.
The issues started when Hammer allegedly agreed to pay Newstyle Media over $250,000 to produce and distribute a CD.
Newstyle claimed it shipped almost 600,000 CD's in November of 2001, when Hammer dropped another album, Active Duty, on his own label.
Newstyle claims Hammer transferred the house into his trust's name, so it couldn't be listed as an asset during the debt collection process.
Hammer said that accusations were ridiculous and that he didn't remember doing business with the company.
Source: allhiphop.com
A lawsuit filed by Newstyle Media, based in Anaheim Hills, California, claims that hammer used his Stanley Burrell Irrevocable Children's Trust fund to hide ownership of his Tracy, California home.
According to local records Hammer has lived in the house since 1997, but between 1997 and 2002, the title was in another mans name.
The issues started when Hammer allegedly agreed to pay Newstyle Media over $250,000 to produce and distribute a CD.
Newstyle claimed it shipped almost 600,000 CD's in November of 2001, when Hammer dropped another album, Active Duty, on his own label.
Newstyle claims Hammer transferred the house into his trust's name, so it couldn't be listed as an asset during the debt collection process.
Hammer said that accusations were ridiculous and that he didn't remember doing business with the company.
Source: allhiphop.com