LOS ANGELES, March 30 -- A judge has ordered rap mogul Marion "Suge" Knight to pay $107 million to a woman who claims she helped start Death Row Records, ruling that Knight and his attorneys failed to answer questions and provide information in the case.
Superior Court Judge Ronald M. Sohigian ordered Knight and his companies, including Tha Row Inc., to pay Lydia Harris, who claims she is owed money from the recording label she helped establish.

Rap producer Marion "Suge" Knight has a history of legal difficulties.
(Kevork Djansezian -- AP)
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She is married to Michael "Harry O" Harris, an imprisoned drug dealer, who has claimed he put up $1.5 million from behind bars in 1991 to help start Death Row Records. Knight has repeatedly denied that contention.
The judgment includes $60 million in punitive damages, $45 million in economic damages and $2 million in noneconomic damages.
The judge issued the ruling this month after finding that Knight and his attorneys violated court rules requiring them to answer questions from, and provide information to, Harris and her attorneys.
A phone call to a Knight attorney seeking comment was not returned Wednesday.
In her 2002 lawsuit, which didn't reach trial, Harris claimed she and Knight in 1989 became equal founding partners of Death Row Records. When Knight realized how lucrative the label would become, he pushed her out, Harris claimed.
Knight has had a series of legal and criminal troubles.
In 2003 he was ordered to pay $5.5 million to managers of artists who accused him of stealing one of their acts.
Knight was released from prison in 2001 after serving time for assault and weapons violations. He recently served an additional 10-month prison sentence for violating his parole and striking a Hollywood nightclub valet.