The battle between
The Source and its former co-owners David Mays and Ray "Benzino"
Scott continues, as the new owners of The Source have sent a cease and
desist notice to the pair’s new venture, Hip Hop Weekly.The
letter, which was sent to executives at Hip Hop Weekly and Mays’ attorney
David J. Finkler on behalf of The Source Enterprises, is dated Jan. 11. The
Source accuses the recently launched Hip-Hop tabloid of trademark infringement
and unfair competition. At
issue is Hip Hop Weekly’s header in bold above the magazine’s title which
exclaims "brought to you by the founders of The Source." "The
concern for The Source is that the masthead of Hip Hop Weekly is
a problem because it creates some confusion as to whether or not the magazine
has an affiliation with The Source," The Source’s attorney
Andy I. Corea told AllHipHop.com. "If you saw a restaurant and it had on
the sign ‘from the creators of the Big Mac, you would have every reason to think
the company had an affiliation with McDonald’s. That’s how we feel about that
language. You are entitled to make true statements and there is nothing that we
are trying to do to interfere with the magazine, we just want some changes to
that language in the masthead to prevent people from thinking that Hip Hop
Weekly
has an affiliation with The Source. We are open to other options,we just want people to know Hip Hop Weekly is not affiliated with The
Source."The
letter also states that Hip Hop Weekly is benefiting from an association
with The Source that could possibly dilute The Source brand name."We
just received the cease and desist letter and we are evaluating it," Hip
Hop Weekly’s
attorney David J. Finkler told AllHipHop.com. "I don’t thinkthere is any merit to the letter on first glance. I don’t think that anyone can
deny that Dave and Ray were the creators of The Source. We will respond
accordingly."Mays
founded The Source in 1988 in his Harvard dorm room with former partner
Jon Shecter. In
2006, The Source defaulted on an $18 million dollar loan while Mays and
Scott were running the company. They
were ousted from The Source in 2006 after a court battle and were replaced
by a board of directors from investors with the Black Enterprise/Greenwich Street
Partners.The
pair formed Global Hip Hop Media in 2006 and launched their biweekly tabloid publication,
Hip Hop Weekly. The
publication recently announced nationwide distribution and can be found on news
stands, in Wal-Marts and in various drug and book stores across the United States.The
Source’s
cease and desist letter calls for Hip Hop Weekly to immediatelyhalt printing the phrase and The Source is also demanding a retraction
from Hip Hop Weekly in the next issue. Page 1 of The
Source’s
cease and desist letter against Hip-Hop WeeklyPage 2 of The
cease and desist letter against Hip Hop Weekly