The lawsuit claims that after Doe attended Zulu Nation meetings, Taylor began inviting Doe to his apartment “several times a week” and encouraging him to use a gym on the premises, where Taylor “would comment about Plaintiff’s muscular body and would touch Plaintiff on the shoulders, biceps and torso.” At Taylor’s apartment, Taylor began touching Doe’s “private areas” and encouraging him to masturbate while watching pornographic videos together, the lawsuit alleges, and the “mutual masturbation” later “progressed to sodomy.”
The lawsuit claims that Doe is also a sex trafficking victim, as Taylor allegedly transported Doe to other locations and offered Doe “for sex to other adult men” in exchange for money. During these encounters, Taylor “would watch as Plaintiff was sodomized by other adult men.”
Doe claims that he suffered “physical injury, severe and permanent emotional distress, mental anguish, depression and embarrassment” as a result of the alleged abuse, was “prevented from obtaining the full enjoyment of life” and “has been unable to keep a steady job.” This led to a loss of income and/or loss of earning capacity, the lawsuit states.
Doe did not speak of the alleged abuse until informing his mother while in his early 30s, according to the lawsuit, and filed the lawsuit under the New York Child Victims Act passed in 2019, which extends the statute of limitations for survivors of child sexual abuse in New York. The deadline to file such suits fell was Aug. 14. Doe is seeking compensatory and punitive damages.
The lawsuit also names Zulu Nation, Universal Zulu Nation and XYZ Corp., an entity believed to be affiliated with them, as defendants, accusing them of providing Taylor “with access to children, including Plaintiff, despite knowing that he would likely use their position to groom and to sexually abuse them.” Universal Zulu Nation cut ties with Taylor in 2016 after he was accused of sexual abuse by Ronald Savage, a music executive who was one of Taylor’s “crate boys” — kids who helped haul records for DJs. Taylor has denied those allegations, calling them a “cowardly attempt to tarnish my reputation.”
In a statement provided to Chicago’s Metropolis, the first publication to report on the suit, representatives for Zulu Nation said: “Nothing has changed since 2016 when these decades ago accusations first surfaced. This is a personal matter for Afrika Bambaataa and his lawyers to deal with and has absolutely nothing to do with the 10 year long UZN-DOCA mission, programs and projects which continue in the revolutionary legacy of both The Black Panther Party & The Young Lords Party to ‘Serve The People, Body & Soul.'”