Hip Hop Photographer Chi Modu Wants To His Ensure His Rights In Lawsuit Against The Notorious B.I.G.'s Estate

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New York, NY – Among the many iconic photos of 1990s Hip Hop legends such as Snoop Dogg, Tupac Shakur and Wu-Tang Clan that you’ve seen, there’s a good chance that Chi Modu snapped those camera shots.

Earlier this week, the New York Post reported the veteran Hip Hop photographer is in a legal dispute with The Notorious B.I.G.’s estate in a copyright lawsuit. The case stems from Modu using his 1996 Biggie Smalls photo for a snowboard deal with Swiss company Yes Snowboards.

The image in question is Biggie wearing one of his multi-colored Coogi sweaters, Versace sunglasses and Kangol flat ivy cap standing along the Hudson River in Jersey City, New Jersey with the Twin Towers looming in the distance.

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In 2018, Modu and B.I.G.’s estate couldn’t to other terms as he wanted a “livable wage” of approximately $100,000 per year from the revenue of its lucrative licensing deal.

Modu says he’s been underpaid for several years by the Biggie’s estate for the use of his photography.

The creators and executors of The Notorious B.I.G. LLC are Biggie’s widow and R&B singer Faith Evans and his mother Voletta Wallace.

“I think the number was $100,000 that I say, but the reality is, that’s actually a small percentage of what’s being made,” Modu said. “And it’s not a very big number, but the whole point is, kind of the foundation of this case is the right of publicity has been abused. That’s the bottom line.”

Modu filed a lawsuit in California against The Notorious B.I.G. LLC citing defamation and interruption of an existing contract and future contracts.

“When a contract expires, you have the ability to renegotiate,” Modu said. “That’s normal. You see it in sports. You see it in every industry. So, to renegotiate a contract, or to try to renegotiate a contract, is quite acceptable and common practice.”

The estate filed a countersuit against Modu in California and called him a “parasite” because he was not given permission to use a memorable Biggie photo in his portfolio to sell the Biggie-screened snowboards.

The lawsuit marks the first time the veteran Hip Hop photographer has been sued in a 30-year career.

“Usually the copyright holder sues people for infringement on their copyright,” Modu said. “This is a situation where a subject is trying to sue a copyright holder for using their legally, federally, copyrighted creation. So, it’s completely backwards. And the main reason for the suit, it’s very clear to me. It’s to scare artists and creatives out of their rights.”

Modu said that Yes Snowboards has sold less two dozens of their Biggie-screened products and had merely profited between $5,000 to $10,000 at press time.

“When you get a cease and desist, or a letter from an attorney, and it’s a top 100 law firm, most people start to shake in their knees because it’s intimidating. But at some point, when your back is up against the wall, you have nowhere to go but up.

“If someone tries to sue you for less than 20 snowboards in a world of seven billion people, and they take you into federal court, and they chase you all over the globe, and try to chase down the snowboard company in Switzerland to serve them, it’s clearly not about money.”

Biggie’s estate also sued Yes in March 2019 for selling the skateboards without permission of the image and not paying them, according to The Blast.

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“Once I press that shutter, I’m the copyright holder, unless you can show in a written document. And it must be written. It’s not in conversation,” Modu said. “That’s the beauty of copyright. It must be on paper that I transferred my copyright to you. Because it has to be transferred. That’s kind of the beauty of photography because upon creation, you’re the copyright holder and the creator.

“Copyright is a very powerful right. And copyright is a federal right. It’s not a state right. Right of publicity is a state right, and it’s not even consistent from state to state. Copyright is honored in 100-plus countries around the world, so it’s very clear. Copyright gives the creator the first right to make copies of the work, distribute the work, display the work, publicly perform the work, and make derivatives of the work.

“Those are exclusive rights of the copyright holder. And what happens sometimes is the term right of publicity, that’s the legal term that folks use. But another term people use for right of publicity is name and likeness rights. The problem with that language, name and likeness rights, is that it confuses people.

“It makes them think that, ‘Well, I control my name and likeness rights,’ and in fact, you don’t. You control your name and likeness rights around the content that you own and control yourself, but I control your copyright of an image of you.”

Modu filed an additional lawsuit against The Notorious B.I.G. LLC in New York citing defamation, unfair competition, intentional interference with a contractual relationship and intentional infliction of emotional distress.

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The impetus for Modu filing multiple lawsuits in this case is not just to pay his bills but to fight for artists’ rights.

“Copyright holder for an individual is debt plus 75 years. So, even when I go, the copyright remains with my heirs for 75 years after I’m gone,” Modu said. “The whole point was to prevent an artist from thinking that they could monetize their creative work.

“That’s what has to stop. Because artists aren’t earning a livable wage, as if a visual artist isn’t as important, or more important at times, than a performing artist. We have people, they actually behave as if we have nothing to do with how these pictures look. In fact, we had everything to do with it.”

Check out Modu’s extensive photography portfolio by following him on Instagram or his ChiModu.com website.