Dame Dash Claims Jay-Z Wrongfully Transferred ‘Reasonable Doubt’ Streaming Rights 

Jay-Z & Damon Dash during The 44th Annual GRAMMY Awards - Clive Davis Pre-GRAMMY Party at Beverly Hills Hotel in Beverly Hills
(Photo by J. Vespa/GettyImages)

The legal battle between Dame Dash and Jay-Z isn’t over.

In the latest report, Dame is accusing Hov of taking his streaming rights for Reasonable Doubt

The dispute has been going on for the last few weeks. The issue is over a proposed NFT of the classic 1996 album. In Dame’s new claims, he said Jay-Z allegedly transferred the streaming rights to Reasonable Doubt from Roc-A-Fella to S. Carter Enterprises LLC without any prior authorization. Since S. Carter Enterprises LLC is owned entirely by Jay Z, Dame believes Jay-Z simply transferred the streaming rights to himself. 

As reported on Hollywood Reporter, “Dame is claiming unjust enrichment, breach of fiduciary duty, replevin, and conversion. He’s currently seeking at least $1 million in damages.”

Initially, Dame wanted to sell the copyright for Jay’s debut album. However, the judge shot that down. As a result, Dame cannot sell Reasonable Doubt as an NFT due to the judge blocking the request. Dame says he planned to sell his one-third share in Roc-A-Fella Records. The article also points out, “Dame is also upset with other dealings he’s had with Roc-A-Fella and wants to disqualify its lawyers at Quinn Emanuel from representation and bring the suit against him.”

The case is still pending…we’ll keep you updated. 

Via