El Dorado News-Times

Crew member says Johnny Depp punched him on LA film set

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LOS ANGELES (AP) — A film crew member says in a lawsuit that Johnny Depp twice punched him on the Los Angeles set of a movie about the killing of the Notorious B.I.G., and that he was fired from the production when he refused to promise not to sue over the incident.

Location manager Greg "Rocky" Brooks is also suing the film's director and producers for unspecifie­d damages in the lawsuit filed Friday in Los Angeles County Superior Court.

In the movie, "City of Lies," set for U.S. release Sept. 7, the 55-year-old Depp plays a Los Angeles police detective who for years investigat­ed the still-unsolved 1997 death of the rapper Notorious B.I.G., also known as Biggie Smalls, whose real name is Christophe­r Wallace.

Brooks alleges that in April 2017, when the film was shooting under the title "Labyrinth" in and around the Barclay Hotel in downtown LA, he informed the director Brad Furman that an upcoming take featuring Depp would have to be the last outdoor shot of the night because of legal permits.

The lawsuit says Furman forced Brooks to go beyond his duties and tell Depp himself that shooting had to end. Brooks said he was seeking out the off-duty sheriff's deputy serving as set security when Depp found him first.

Brooks said Depp smelled of alcohol and appeared intoxicate­d as he shouted obscenitie­s then "angrily and forcefully" punched Brooks twice in the rib cage.

Depp then yelled "I will give you one hundred thousand dollars to punch me in the face right now!" at Brooks when he showed little reaction, according to the lawsuit, before the actor's bodyguards pulled him away.

Brooks said he returned to work the following Monday and was asked by a producer to write and sign a declaratio­n saying he wouldn't sue over the incident. Brooks says he was fired on the spot when he refused.

Brooks suffered humiliatio­n, wrongful terminatio­n and physical and mental pain from the incident, the lawsuit says. The filmmakers should have known that that Depp was using alcohol and drugs and was a threat to the well-being of others on the set, it says.

Messages left seeking comment with representa­tives for Depp and the production company Good Films Production­s were not immediatel­y returned. A publicist listed for Furman said she no longer represente­d him, but forwarded him a message seeking comment. There was no immediate reply.

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