According to a lawsuit filed in federal court, Snoop Dogg offered two underage girls marijuana and ecstasy to flash for the "Girls Gone Wild Doggy Style" cameras.
The evidence is part of an ongoing probe of "Girls Gone Wild" Founder Joseph Francis.
Francis is facing raketeering charges and is accused of taping underage girls naked, drug possession and the promotion of prostitution.
The two girls in question appear on the box cover of "Girls Gone Wild Doggystyle" and Jaime Capdeboscq, who was a minor at the time of the filming, is accusing Snoop of illegally using their images.
The lawsuit claims that Francis referred to Snoop as his "b*tch magnet" and used Snoop's "notoriety, financial success to promote his image as a celebrity, which puts him in a position with young females to commit the felonies which have been uncovered so far."
Snoop has distanced himself from "Girls Gone Wild."
"If you notice, there hasn't been no girls of (ethnicity) at all on none of those tapes," Snoop told the Associated Press in June.
"No black girls, no Spanish girls - all white girls, and that (stuff) ain't cool, because white girls ain't the only hoes that get wild."
The lawsuit against Snoop was filed in federal court in New Orleans where they were taped flashing for the cameras. Capdeboscq is seeking unspecified damages.
The evidence is part of an ongoing probe of "Girls Gone Wild" Founder Joseph Francis.
Francis is facing raketeering charges and is accused of taping underage girls naked, drug possession and the promotion of prostitution.
The two girls in question appear on the box cover of "Girls Gone Wild Doggystyle" and Jaime Capdeboscq, who was a minor at the time of the filming, is accusing Snoop of illegally using their images.
The lawsuit claims that Francis referred to Snoop as his "b*tch magnet" and used Snoop's "notoriety, financial success to promote his image as a celebrity, which puts him in a position with young females to commit the felonies which have been uncovered so far."
Snoop has distanced himself from "Girls Gone Wild."
"If you notice, there hasn't been no girls of (ethnicity) at all on none of those tapes," Snoop told the Associated Press in June.
"No black girls, no Spanish girls - all white girls, and that (stuff) ain't cool, because white girls ain't the only hoes that get wild."
The lawsuit against Snoop was filed in federal court in New Orleans where they were taped flashing for the cameras. Capdeboscq is seeking unspecified damages.