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Thursday, April 25, 2024 | Back issues
Courthouse News Service Courthouse News Service

GWAR Accused of Stealing Singer’s Remains

RICHMOND, Va. (CNS) - Members of the heavy metal band Gwar stole their late leader singer Dave Brockie's artwork, bass guitars and cremated remains, and refuse to return them to his family, the musician's father claims.

Brockie, who formed Gwar in Richmond in 1984, and performed as the character "Oderus Urungus" for over 30 years, died on March 23, 2014. An autopsy performed by Virginia's state medical examiner's office later concluded the cause of death was acute heroin toxicity.

In a lawsuit filed in the Richmond City circuit court, William Brockie, the administrator for his son's estate, says Gwar's members are trying to capitalize on the singer's death, and named drummer Brad Roberts, also known as "Jizmak Da Gusha," as the leader of the conspiracy.

Brockie says in the months following his son's death, band members pilfered guitars, artwork, a gold record, tour ephemera and other personal effects from Brockie's home, and padlocked them in an office at the band's Slave Pit Inc. headquarters.

The lawsuit says Roberts also made off David Brockie's cremated remains, and that when the singer's father attempted to retrieve them, he was made to wait across the street from Slave Pit Inc. until he was given a small fraction of his son's ashes, "delivered in a used plastic bag with Discover credit card logo on it."

Brockie also claims his son was never compensated for performing on Gwar's 2014 Far East tour of Asia and Australia.

He also says that following his son's death, various members of Gwar and their lawyers, tried to wrest control of the estate from him, falsely accusing him of failing to accept responsibility for administering his son's estate.

After Brockie's death, his bandmates set up the charitable "Dave Brockie Fund" in his honor. According to their website, the charity is "a resource for artists in the fields of music, film, literature and all visual arts who cannot find funding through mainstream channels," and seeks to preserve "the legacy of Dave's body of works."

Brockie's father alleges he never gave consent for his son's likeness to be used for the charity "at the discretion of Slave Pit Inc." or for memorial t-shirts and merchandise sold during the 2014 Gwar B Q concert last summer in Henrico, Va.

Brockie seeks $1 million in compensatory damages, punitive damages, and injunctive relief on claims of conversion, breach of contract, and unauthorized use of David Brockie's image.

He is represented by Christopher Malone and Zachary Cohen of ThompsonMcMullan PC in Richmond.

Brad Roberts could not be reached for comment.

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