A judge has upheld Lil Peep‘s mother’s claims of wrongful death and negligence against her late sonâs record label First Access Entertainment (FAE) and tour manager Belinda Mercer.
Teresa A. Beaudet has rejected FAE’s request to dismiss the claims on the grounds that Liza Kathryn Womack, who is also the executor of her sonâs estate, failed to show any âcausal connectionâ between FAEâs alleged negligence and Peepâs overdose from fentanyl and Xanax on a tour bus in 2017.
Rolling Stone reports that Beaudet ruled at a court hearing in Los Angeles yesterday (February 17) that Womack’s case still stands, which is also due to providing other viable reasons for lodging such claims.
These include that no one on the bus was trained to recognise the signs and symptoms of an overdose, the bus was not equipped with a defibrillator, Narcan or any other âlife-saving apparatusesâ for overdoses, and that no one on the bus gave Peep a life-saving aid.
The judge added that while she agreed with FAE that sections of a highly damaging statement from Peepâs fellow musician Cold Hart were indeed inadmissible hearsay in the civil case, the courtâs decision to pare down Hartâs statement submitted in 2021 wasnât enough to scrap the wrongful death lawsuit first filed by Womack in 2019.
In Cold Hart’s disputed statement, he testified that he was travelling with Peep for the rapperâs ‘Come Over When Youâre Sober’ tour from November 8, 2017 until the rapperâs death on November 15, 2017. Hart alleged that âthroughoutâ that duration Belinda Mercer, the tour manager hired by FAE, âprovided and supplied Xanax, cocaine, marijuana, Percocet, and ketamineâ to âthose traveling on the tour busâ.
Beaudet upheld a substantial amount of Hart’s allegations in her latest ruling, but cast doubt on a section of the statement in which Hart, whose real name is Jerick Quilisadio, claimed that on November 14, 2017 Peepâs managers told the rapper he should make âhimself sick from taking a bunch of Xanaxâ so he could trigger âan insurance claim and not lose moneyâ on a show he wished to cancel.
FAE argued that Quilisadio had failed to state that he personally witnessed someone directing Peep to take the âexcessiveâ amount of Xanax, so the statement was hearsay, which judge Beaudet agreed with.
âThereâs no question thereâs a triable issue as to whether (Mercer) provided the drugs or not,â Judge Beaudet said during the hearing. âIf youâre going to create an environment like that where drugs are flowing, and youâre providing it, and hey, you actually donât have any life-saving device or any Narcan to help people who are going to have a problem with these drugs, it seems to me you are creating a very dangerous situation there.â
She added that while âthereâs actually no evidenceâ Mercer provided any fentanyl, the rapper âsomehow got fentanylâ. It may be left to a jury to decide whether Mercer unknowingly supplied a drug âthat might be laced with fentanylâ, Beaudet added.

âIâm not saying thatâs what happened, but thatâs what (Womack alleges),â the judge explained. âThe fact (that defendants) didnât give the decedent adequate protection for that environment, I think that could add up to causation here.â
FAE denied the allegations after the lawsuit first went public, saying that the claim that it was âsomehow responsible for, complicit in, or contributed to [Peepâs] death is categorically untrueâ. The label then claimed Peepâs death was âself-inflictedâ and said that they couldnât be responsible for Womackâs âadult sonâs risky behaviourâ.
Before the end of Wednesday’s hearing, FAEâs lawyer John Amberg again pressed that Womackâs negligence and wrongful death claims were inadequate because she presented no smoking gun linking FAE âagentsâ to the actual drugs that killed Peep.
âThey failed to make that case. They failed,â said Amberg, to which Beaudet replied: âNo, sir, I donât agree with that. They have established that drugs were provided to him. They didnât stop at the 24-hour period.â
Tour manager Mercer admitted in a deposition last year that authorities found âthreeâ illegal substances on the bus, both in the common area of the touring vehicle and in one of her bags in her bunk.
She said that she couldnât remember what the substances were exactly but stressed she wasnât âarrested,â only detained, and that the $2,000 she ended up paying to gain release was âa bus fineâ that she put on her credit card and never expensed.
Mercer also claimed during her deposition that Peep repeatedly asked her to supply drugs. She then invoked her Fifth Amendment right against self-incrimination when asked multiple questions about whether or not she provided Peep with drugs prior to November 5, 2017.
When Mercer was shown October 2017 text messages in which she allegedly asked the rapper, âHow many blue?â and Peep wrote to her, âPerc, pleaseâ, allegedly referring to the drug Percocet, Mercer pleaded the Fifth.
Despite Womack’s success on Wednesday, Judge Beaudet dismissed another part of her suit in which she alleged negligence and wrongful death against Peepâs co-manager, Bryant âChaseâ Ortega. Beaudet said that Womack failed to present sufficient evidence that Ortega âdirectedâ any of the alleged negligence on the tour bus leading up to Peepâs overdose.
Womack also claimed last year that sheâs owed $4million (ÂŁ3million) by the late rapperâs record label, and that theyâre refusing to pay. FAE denies owing Womack the money. The case in ongoing.
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