LAS VEGAS (KLAS) – Tremaine Neverson, also known as Trey Songz, is scheduled to appear at Drai’s Beach Club in Las Vegas on Sunday, according to the club’s website.
The singer has faced multiple allegations of sexual violence against women, and physical assaults, and settled a lawsuit with an alleged victim for an undisclosed amount last month, court records show.
The 8 News Now Investigators reached out to Drai’s for a comment about the appearance of Trey Songz scheduled for Memorial Day weekend and did not yet receive a response.
Timeline: 2024
On April 10, a notice of settlement was documented for a lawsuit filed by “Jane Doe” in Los Angeles County last year. She alleged that Trey Songz sexually assaulted her at his home in 2016.
“Songz repeatedly asked Plaintiff if he could ‘get that ass,’ meaning have anal sex,” the lawsuit alleged. “Plaintiff repeatedly told defendant Songz “No” in response to defendant Songz’s requests.”
The woman claimed that the singer then threw her to the ground and brutally sexually assaulted her. The woman ran out of the home, called a Lyft, and the driver, who noticed that the woman was in distress rerouted the ride and took her to the hospital, the lawsuit alleged.
The medical center contacted Burbank Police, but the woman did not cooperate with police because she was terrified of Songz, according to the complaint.
On at least two occasions, the woman and singer happened to be at the same events, the complaint stated.
“Songz would shout ‘get that slut out of here’ and create an environment so terrifying that Plaintiff would be forced to leave,” the lawsuit alleged.
At a New Year’s Eve party, Songz saw the woman and started screaming that she was a “slut” and a liar,” and then his security detail assaulted the woman and told her to leave, according to the complaint.
The woman said that she relocated to another state because the singer’s terror was so severe.
On Feb. 20, court records show a request for dismissal for a lawsuit previously filed against Trey Songz by two additional women in Los Angeles County.
“Jane Doe A” and “Jane Doe B” claimed they woke up to Trey Songz sexually assaulting them at his California home in 2015. Both women believed that they had been drugged the night before and they described the singer as violent, aggressive, and controlling during their visit to his Bell Ranch home, according to the complaint.
“Trey Songz, cloaked in his celebrity status, believed he could act with impunity. He is wrong,” the complaint stated.
Both women went to the Bell Canyon, California, home of Trey Songz on Aug. 2, 2015, expecting a celebration, according to the complaint.
“Instead, they were subjected to acts so heinous, so contrary to basic human decency, that they defy comprehension,” the complaint stated. “Through this action, we will shed light on their ordeal, ensure such acts are never repeated, and secure justice for two lives forever altered.”
“Jane Doe A,” a San Diego resident, and “Jane Doe B,” a Denver, Colorado, resident were in Los Angeles to celebrate a birthday.
“While in LA, Plaintiff A’s Snapchat post, geotagged to the city, caught the attention of Defendant Songz,” the complaint stated.
Trey Songz extended several invitations to his home and the women took an Uber to his home as they were “intrigued by the prospect of a memorable evening with one of their favorite recording artists,” according to the complaint.
The complaint referred to a “stringent security procedure” at the singer’s home. The women had to provide a password and were ordered to turn in their cell phones, they alleged.
The gathering consisted of approximately 20 to 30 females, three males, and the singer’s security personnel, according to the complaint.
The singer’s demeanor “shifted ominously into anger and violence” as the evening unfolded, according to the complaint.
Female guests were pressured to drink from unsealed but full bottles, the complaint alleged.
The singer’s hostility peaked when the women in his home declined his offer to have a twerking contest for $3,000, according to the complaint.
“In a menacing outburst, Songz unleashed a torrent of verbal abuse, hurling bottles at select women and demanding, with a threatening edge, that they dance because he ordered them to dance,” the complaint alleged.
Both women claimed they drank a moderate amount of alcohol yet “felt an overwhelming and disproportionate sense of intoxication as if their senses were being smothered, their cognition clouded, and their physical autonomy slipping away,” according to the complaint.
This led the women to believe that the singer had drugged them; the women said that the singer later brought them to a room upstairs, the complaint stated.
“Jane Doe A” claimed that when she woke up the next morning, she realized that she was unclothed and that Trey Songz who was also naked was sexually assaulting her. When she tried to resist, she said that he became more aggressive.
“Jane Doe B” claimed that also woke up naked with the singer sexually assaulting her.
Both women never consented to the singer’s “sexual attacks,” according to the complaint.
Trey Songz then demanded that both women join him in a shower and when they refused, “he lashed out with a venomous tirade and screamed, ‘You are little
Attorney George Vrabeck represented the plaintiffs. He said that they did not complete rape kits or go to the police.
“However what they did do is tell their family and friends when they got home about what happened,” Vrabeck told the 8 News Now Investigators in a previous interview. “I’ve never spoken to them together. I’ve spoken to them individually many, many times and I’ve spoken with some of their family members and everything matches.”
Both women seek damages for sexual battery, sexual assault, negligence, intentional infliction of mental distress, and interference with civil rights.
“This is not just a lawsuit; it is a reckoning,” the complaint stated. “It is time Defendant Songz and his entourage learn that no one is above the law.”
In January, a federal civil suit filed against Trey Songz in 2018 was dismissed. Both parties agreed to the dismissal which indicates there was likely a settlement.
Two men, Robert Avery who was working crowd control as a sergeant for the Detroit Police Department and Andrew Potter who was a professional photographer with credentials, filed the lawsuit in the Eastern District of Michigan Southern Division.
Trey Songz became irate, hurled heavy equipment off of the stage and into the crowd, destroyed items on the stage, and picked up a microphone and threw it at Potter, according to the complaint.
In a dressing room, Trey Songz was combative and shouted racially derogatory expletives to officers, the lawsuit alleged. Trey Songz struck Avery in the face with a closed fist and then caused Avery to hit his head on the concrete and injure his hip, the complaint stated.
The complaint also referred to videos posted by Trey Songz showing disdain for law enforcement days before the incident in which he yelled, “
Also in January, a federal judge dismissed a lawsuit filed by another “Jane Doe” in June of 2023. She alleged that Trey Songz pulled down her bikini top to expose her breast in front of a crowd of people including her co-workers at an event in Connecticut in 2013.
“Plaintiff, while nervously laughing to mask her shock and humiliation, immediately pulled her top back on and prepared for another assault, holding her arm over her chest for an extended period of time,” the complaint filed in the Central District of California stated.
The incident is captured on video.
2023
In early 2023, Trey Songz pleaded guilty to a disorderly conduct violation after he was accused of assault in New York, records show.
That June, Trey Songz was accused of violence in a lawsuit in Las Vegas.
Tyrelle Dunn, a Maryland resident, alleged in a complaint that Neverson, also known as Trey Songz, and his security guards beat him after he tried to get to his wife who was in a hotel room with Neverson and had screamed for help and reported being held against her will.
Four months after a complaint was filed in Clark County District Court in Las Vegas, the singer had not yet responded, according to the plaintiff’s attorney Craig Drummond.
The allegations stem from an incident at The Cosmopolitan in Las Vegas on November 28, 2021. The Las Vegas Strip property is also named as a defendant in the lawsuit along with a “private security company.”
“Plaintiff’s wife was escorted by Defendant security personnel to room 6014 where she was told she would meet Trey Songz,” the lawsuit alleged. “That while in room 6014, the plaintiff’s wife was assaulted, tried to leave, and had her phone taken away.”
Dunn began searching for his wife and walked toward the room, according to the complaint. Dunn heard his wife screaming for help and reporting that she was being held against her will, the complaint stated. This is when Dunn said that he was attacked.
The 8 News Now Investigators obtained 911 calls made by a worker at The Cosmopolitan who said he was in security dispatch.
“He was battered in a room and we can’t go up there because we’re not sure if the people are armed,” the worker told the operator. “They battered him and they stole his money and his chain.”
A total of four calls were obtained through a records request.
In a fourth call, he said a woman said that she was sexually assaulted.
“We already had two fights, three fights, and now alleged rape while we were waiting for you,” the caller told the operator.
Las Vegas Metro Police responded to the incident.
In March of 2022, police said that Trey Songz would not be charged.
“The LVMPD has concluded the investigation into the sexual assault allegations against Tremaine Neverson and determined that no criminal charges will be filed. If any new evidence comes to light, the case will be reopened for further investigation,” the department said in a statement.
Court records show the lawsuit is ongoing.
2021
In December of 2021, Dylan Gonzalez, a former University of Nevada Las Vegas basketball player tweeted, “Trey Songz is a rapist.”
“With what seems like endlessly reoccurring news of the alleged sexual assaults committed by Trey Songz, I am forced to repeatedly relive in my mind, and suffer anew, the long-suppressed horror and unbearable PTSD of my rape by his very hands at a well-known Las Vegas hotel,” she said in a statement. “I want to send my love, strength, and hope to all who are victims of sexual assault and its fatal nature. You are not alone.”
2020
In 2020, a woman filed a lawsuit accusing Trey Songz of sexual assault and battery at a Miami nightclub in 2018.
“Jane Doe” claimed that he forcefully and inappropriately touched her without her consent.
The woman and her friends had spent New Year’s Eve celebrating at the home of Sean “Diddy” Combs when Trey Songz invited them to EllEVEN nightclub, the complaint stated.
“Jane Doe” stated that another woman had confided in her that Trey Songz had also sexually assaulted her earlier that night.
2017
In 2017, actress and singer Keke Palmer said that Trey Songz put her in a music video without her consent. Palmer told Larry King in an interview that she was at a party which turned into a music video and repeatedly said that she did not want to be in the video. She referred to “sexual intimidation.”
“I feel as a female often I’m in a situation where sometimes males will use their masculinity, their sexuality to taunt you,” Palmer told King. “It would be like you going to party where the biggest jock is there and the whole time he’s like you know, ‘you can get screwed, you ain’t this, you ain’t that, and you ain’t no little girl no more.’”
Palmer was later removed from the video.
2016
In 2016, Trey Songz was accused of assault at a concert in Detroit. He agreed to a plea deal for two counts of disturbing the peace and received probation.
Songz had two top ten Billboard hits more than 10 years ago. “Say Aah” and “Bottoms Up” both peaked in 2010.
This is a developing story.