Death Row Producer Claims Tupac Shakur Estate Owes Him Unpaid ‘All Eyez on Me’ Royalties - News

Death Row Producer Claims Tupac Shakur Estate Owes...

Death Row Producer Claims Tupac Shakur Estate Owes Him Unpaid ‘All Eyez on Me’ Royalties

Daz Dillinger is accusing the late rapper’s estate of owing him money stemming from more than a dozen songs

LONG BEACH, CA - AUGUST 05:  Rapper Daz Dillinger of Tha Dogg Pound performs onstage during Summertime in the LBC festival on August 5, 2017 in Long Beach, California.  (Photo by Scott Dudelson/Getty Images)

Daz Dillinger claims that Tupac Shakur’s estate owes him royalties.Scott Dudelson/Getty Images

A lawsuit has been filed against Tupac Shakur’s estate by Death Row Records producer Daz Dillinger, born Delmar Arnaud, who is claiming it owes him unpaid royalties from more than a dozen songs he co-wrote and produced.

In a May 8 filing obtained by Billboard, the songs under question include five tracks from Shakur’s final album released during his lifetime, All Eyez on Me, including “Ambitionz az a Ridah,” “Skandalouz,” “Got My Mind Made Up,” “2 of Amerikaz Most Wanted,” and “I Ain’t Mad at Cha.”

Tupac Shakur Estate Faces Lawsuit Over 'All Eyez On Me' Song Royalties

In the complaint, Arnaud claims that after he requested royalties in 2024, he was paid $91,000 by Amaru Entertainment, the company that manages Shakur’s music assets, but was not given any royalty statements to validate the amount.

A lawyer for Arnaud declined to comment to Rolling Stone. In a statement to Billboard, an attorney for Arnaud, Bret Lewis, argued that, “At a minimum, Amaru has failed to render statements and/or pay sums due within the applicable limitations periods and continuing to the present.” He added, “The precise amount owed will be shown according to proof after an accounting and discovery.”

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A rep for Shakur’s estate did not immediately respond to Rolling Stone‘s request for comment.

In 2001, the late Afeni Shakur, Tupac’s mother and co-administrator of his estate, sued Arnaud for copyright-infringement and claimed he was planning to release, without permission from the estate, master recordings by Shakur that Arnaud produced while working for Death Row Records. That case settled out of court the following year.

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