Wednesday, July 8, 2026
Home / Entertainment / Jermaine Dupri Sues Sony for $18 Million in Royalt...
Entertainment

Jermaine Dupri Sues Sony for $18 Million in Royalties Tied to Mariah Carey, Usher, and More

CN
CitrixNews Staff
·
Jermaine Dupri Sues Sony for $18 Million in Royalties Tied to Mariah Carey, Usher, and More

By Nancy Dillon

Nancy Dillon

Contact Nancy Dillon on X Contact Nancy Dillon by Email View all posts by Nancy Dillon July 7, 2026 BEVERLY HILLS, CALIFORNIA - JUNE 26: Honoree Jermaine Dupri attends the 10th Annual Culture Creators Awards Brunch at The Beverly Hilton on June 26, 2026 in Beverly Hills, California. (Photo by Jerritt Clark/Getty Images for Culture Creators ) Jermaine Dupri on June 26, 2026 in Beverly Hills, California. Jerritt Clark/Getty Images for Culture Creators

Grammy-winning producer Jermaine Dupri has filed a blistering lawsuit against Sony Music Entertainment (SME), accusing the company of underpaying and concealing royalties tied to his work with artists including Mariah Carey, Usher, Kris Kross, Xscape, Bow Wow, and Da Brat.

The Atlanta-based producer and songwriter, known for shaping the sound of Nineties hip-hop and R&B, claims Sony Music “knew that it was violating” contracts with him and his influential label, So So Def, but “never attempted to disclose its contemptuous accounting practices.” Dupri’s lawsuit, filed in Manhattan federal court, is seeking at least $18 million in damages.

“Given the systemic pattern of underreporting royalties, failure of reporting royalites, and altering and/or updating statements to report previously earned royalties, [Sony Music Entertainment] has engaged in willful deceitful actions designed to harm plaintiffs in their business,” the new 13-page lawsuit obtained by Rolling Stone reads.

In the case of Kris Kross, Dupri claims Sony hid royalties owed on Kris Kross’ catalog for more than two decades. According to the complaint, Sony kept those funds in “a separate royalty accounting system unknown to plaintiffs.”

Dupri alleges Sony also knowingly concealed additional money owed from Jagged Edge’s 1997 album, The Jagged Era, and altered royalty statements dating back several years. He and his lawyer, Chris Brown, list at least seven contracts between the producer and Sony Music entities covering more than 25 years. They claim an accounting audit conducted last year uncovered millions owed to Dupri and his companies, So So Def Recordings and So So Def Productions.

Reps for Sony Music did not immediately return Rolling Stone‘s request for comment. Dupri’s lawyer said he had no comment when reached by email Tuesday.

In the lawsuit, Dupri is described as a “mastermind” of the Southern hip-hop and R&B sound. It notes Dupri was inducted into the Songwriters Hall of Fame in 2018, and that he won the Grammy Award for Best R&B Song in 2006 for the track “We Belong Together,” which he co-wrote with Mariah Carey and Johntá Austin. The lawsuit links to the song’s Spotify stream count, which listed more than 942,000,000 streams as of Tuesday.

Trending Stories

Yungblud Receives Support From SZA, Alyssa Milano, More After Opening Up About ‘Industry Plant’ Discourse

Originally reported by Rolling Stone. Read the full story at the original source.