A federal judge has halted sales of Notorious B.I.G.'s breakthrough 1994 album Ready to Die after a jury decided the title song used part of an Ohio Players tune without permission.
The jury awarded $4.2 million in punitive and direct damages to the two music companies that own rights to Ohio Players recordings on Friday.
To "vindicate the integrity of the copyright law," U.S. District Judge Todd Campbel banned all store sales, Internet downloads and radio play of Ready to Die.
The jury decided that Bad Boy Entertainment and executive producer Sean "Diddy" Combs illegally used a part of the Ohio Players' 1992 song "Singing in the Morning."
Lawyers for Combs said the verdict was without merit and vowed to appeal the decision.
The ruling and harsh penalty are expected to make waves in the rap industry, which routinely takes beats or melodies from older hits in what is known as sampling.
The jury awarded $4.2 million in punitive and direct damages to the two music companies that own rights to Ohio Players recordings on Friday.
To "vindicate the integrity of the copyright law," U.S. District Judge Todd Campbel banned all store sales, Internet downloads and radio play of Ready to Die.
The jury decided that Bad Boy Entertainment and executive producer Sean "Diddy" Combs illegally used a part of the Ohio Players' 1992 song "Singing in the Morning."
Lawyers for Combs said the verdict was without merit and vowed to appeal the decision.
The ruling and harsh penalty are expected to make waves in the rap industry, which routinely takes beats or melodies from older hits in what is known as sampling.