Arsenio Hall has hit back at Sinead O'Connor with a $5 million lawsuit. This comes days after the songstress accused the comedian of supplying drugs to Prince as well as her claims that she was drugged by Hall.
O'Connor took it to her Facebook to say that the DEA should investigate Hall. She even called Hall "Eddie Murphy's b***h" and said that anyone who imagined that Prince was not a long time hard drug user is living in cloud cuckoo land. She added that she has reported Hall to the Carver County Sheriff's office adding, "Expect their call. They are aware you spiked me years ago at Eddie murphy's house. You bet get tidying your man cave," ABC 7 reported.
In a report by Rolling Stone, O'Connor continued to talk about the time she was drugged by Hall. She wrote on her Facebook page that Hall invited her to a party at Murphy's home on the night of the Grammy Awards.
O'Connor claims that she chose not to attend the party and so Hall acted maliciously towards her. She added that in Hall's "unfathomable narcissism, he has deduced that my not attending is specifically an act against him, and all that he holds dear." O'Connor pointed out in her post that during that time, it was only the second time she hung out with Hall.
It is possible that the Grammy Awards night she was referring to was back in 1991 as she claimed that her win further provoked Hall causing him to offer her laced marijuana. She also claimed that the comedian stuck his tongue in her mouth when the incident happened.
The lawsuit of Hall was then filed in Los Angeles on May 5. He called O'Connor a desperate attention seeker and claimed that her story was "outlandish defamatory lies," People reported. The lawsuit also says that O'Connor has bizarre and unhinged internet rants.
Hall pointed out that O'Connor and Prince had a quarrelsome relationship citing that one time, the singer and the songstress were engaged in a violent fistfight. During that fight, O'Connor allegedly spat on Prince repeatedly and told the late singer to "go f**k himself."
Hall is seeking not less than $5 million in damages. O'Connor has not yet commented on the lawsuit.