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Takeoff’s mother sues Houston bowling alley where he was killed

Rapper Takeoff wears black sunglasses as he poses for photos wearing a black shirt, black blazer and a gold necklace.
Rapper Takeoff’s mother filed a lawsuit in Houston this week against the owner of the bowling alley where her son was killed.
(Jordan Strauss / Invision/AP)
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The mother of Migos rapper Takeoff has filed a wrongful death lawsuit against the venue where her son was killed. Takeoff, whose real name is Kirshnik Khari Ball, died after being shot multiple times on Nov. 1, 2022, outside a Houston bowling alley. He was 28.

Titania Davenport alleges that the property owners of 810 Billiards & Bowling failed to provide adequate security measures at their venue on the night of Takeoff’s death, despite being made aware of the increased need, according to court filings obtained by The Times.

Davenport is seeking more than $1 million in damages to cover Takeoff’s personal injuries, funeral expenses, mental anguish and more.

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“[The venue was] informed that the event required extra security and would draw a large crowd, many of whom could be celebrities, which in itself presents unique and advance security considerations, none of which were taken,” reads the document filed Wednesday by Davenport in Harris County District Court in Texas.

Rapper Takeoff of the Atlanta trio Migos died early Tuesday in a shooting outside a bowling alley in Houston. He was 28.

Davenport’s legal team pointed to social media video that they said showed “advance planning and consideration should have been taken into account” on that November night.

Takeoff was “an innocent bystander” who was “in the wrong place at the wrong time,” Houston police said at the time of his death. The Atlanta rapper had been in a crowd, leaving a private party at the bowling alley, when he was shot in the head and torso. He was pronounced dead at the scene.

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A Houston-area man suspected in the November shooting death of Migos rapper Takeoff has been indicted for murder by a grand jury in Harris County, Texas.

In late May, a grand jury in Harris County indicted Patrick Xavier Clark, who is accused of shooting and killing Takeoff outside the Houston bowling alley, on a murder charge.

Houston Police Department detectives previously said that video surveillance, cellphone video and audio, physical and ballistic evidence and shooting reconstruction led to Clark’s arrest.

The group’s rapid-fire ‘Migos Flow’ dramatically changed not only rap but pop music as well. Takeoff was fatally shot on Tuesday. He was 28.

Clark, a 33-year-old DJ and nightclub promoter, was arrested by Houston police in December and has been out on a $1-million bond. He is under house arrest awaiting his next hearing in August.

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Takeoff was one of three members of the Atlanta-based hip-hop group Migos, along with his uncle Quavo, 32, and friend Offset, 31. The Grammy nominees are known for hits such as “Hannah Montana,” “Stir Fry” and “Bad and Boujee.” A month before Takeoff died, he and Quavo released an album, “Only Built for Infinity Links,” under the name Unc & Phew — short for uncle and nephew.

Following his nephew’s death, Quavo posted a tribute online that emphasized Takeoff’s unmistakable presence.

Quavo and Offset are the latest musicians to pay tribute to their Migos band mate, Takeoff, who was killed this month in a shooting in Houston.

“Nothing ever really bothered Take and he didn’t bother anybody. He was the most unbothered person in the world,” he wrote. “He never got mad, he never raised his voice, and when he did he silenced the room because what Take said was law and he wasn’t changing his mind fa na, not even Unc could.”

In a Variety interview last month, Offset spoke about how he was processing his friend’s untimely death.

“He’s not here. That s— feels fake, bro,” he said. “I get through my day thinking it’s fake. And I don’t say nothing to nobody about it.”

Times staff writers Nardine Saad, Jonah Valdez and Kenan Draughorne contributed to this report.

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