An insurance company
claims it is not liable for a $10 million lawsuit against 50 Cent, claiming the
rapper took more than a year to report the assault of Richard "DJ Xzulu The
Big Lipped Bandit" Dunkerson at 93.9 WKYS-FM in Lanham, Maryland.According
to The New York Post, National Fire claims 50 Cent, born Curtis Jackson,
waited more than 12 months to report the assault, which effectively nullified
the rapper’s coverage.The
lawsuit was filed after former G-Unit member The Game and an entourage appeared
on Xzulu’s show in Jan.
of 2005, weeks before the release of his chart-topping G-Unit/Aftermath debut
The Documentary hit stores. During
the interview, Xzulu allegedly made an off-color remark about a cell-phone ear
piece being worn by The Game’s manager, Jimmy "Henchmen" Rosemond.Shortly
after the interview was over, police said a group of men confronted the DJ and
punched and kicked Xzulu, causing serious internal injuries.In
April 2005, another man named Kwasi Jones came forward and claimed that he
was beat by the pack of men the same evening as well. Jones
filed a $280 million dollar civil-assault case against The Game, G-Unit, Shady
Records, and Aftermath Entertainment.He
also claimed the labels were negligent for releasing several remixes to Game’s
"Hate It or Love It" single which featured 50 Cent. On
the song, The Game rapped: "I’m rap’s MVP/Don’t make me remind y’all what
happened in D.C."While
charges against The Game were eventually dropped, Rosemond was found guilty of
misdemeanor assault in Feb. 2006. Rosemond
was later sentenced to three years of unsupervised probation and fined $2,500
for his role in the incident.