Rihanna
Rihanna and her mentors Jay Z and Madonna are known
copyright thieves. Their entire careers are based on it. Madonna has
bribed U.S. federal court judges in incidents the Judiciary Report
has covered over the past several years. This bribery and corruption
has led to Americans and foreigners shunning the U.S. federal
courts, opting to file copyright lawsuits in other nations when
their work is infringed by Hollywood.
James Car's imagery from 2006
Rihanna's rip off from 2012
Rihanna has been sued again in another foreign
court, this time France, for copyright infringement. The disgraceful
thief has been sued by artist, James Clar, over her music video
“Rockstar 101.” Clar's attorney stated, "French laws on plagiarism
are more favorable in France than in the US." This is true.
Copyright infringement cases don't see the light of day in U.S.
courts thanks to judicial corruption, as Hollywood illegally gives
corporate stock and cash to federal judges to throw out cases, in
disgraceful acts that is becoming common knowledge in America and
around the world. Hollywood is not worth the court system's name,
but it is the government's fault for looking the other way to the
corruption and it has come at a heavy price - social disgrace and
decline in federal court revenues.
STORY SOURCE
Artist Is Suing Rihanna For Plagiarizing Her "ROCKSTAR 101" Music Video
Artist Is Suing Rihanna For Plagiarizing Her "ROCKSTAR 101" Music Video
By Leigh Silver | Jun 13, 2014 | 11:01 am - The
first seven seconds of Rihanna's music video for "ROCKSTAR 101"
shows a flashing neon sculpture: the illuminated words "ROCK" with
the glowing words "STAR" hanging from them. Even though this image
appears before the beat drops and RiRi belts out "I told ya," artist
James Clar, who often works in neon lights, is suing the pop star
for plagiarizing this part of her music video. Rihanna's neon
sculpture looks a lot like Clar's 2006 work You & Me. Clar's piece
also uses neon letters hanging from other letters, but instead of
"ROCK/STAR," his work spells "YOU/ME":
Clar is asking for $6.64 million in damages and has
submitted his complaint to Paris’ Grand Instance Court. According to
Clar's lawyer, who is arguing that his client's unique art piece has
been reproduced without the artist's permission, “French laws on
plagiarism are more favorable in France than in the US.” ...