A jury has ruled against Kanye West in a copyright infringement case, ordering the rapper to pay $438,558 in damages to four musicians whose work was used without authorization during a high-profile listening event in 2021. The verdict marks the second legal loss Kanye West has suffered this year, adding to a growing list of legal and financial complications that have followed the artist over the past several years.
The case centered on a version of the song Hurricane that was played during a listening party for Kanye West’s then-unreleased album Donda. The event, held at Mercedes-Benz Stadium in Atlanta, drew nearly 40,000 attendees and was broadcast more broadly, giving the performance a reach well beyond those physically present that night.
The sample at the center of the dispute
The version of Hurricane performed at the event featured a sample drawn from an instrumental track created in 2018 by four musicians: Khalil Abdul-Rahman, Sam Barsh, Josh Mease, and Dan Seeff. The track reportedly made its way to Kanye West through a producer, but no formal agreement was ever reached with the creators before it was incorporated into the performance.
When Donda was officially released, Kanye West removed the sample from the final version of Hurricane and added the four musicians to the songwriting credits. That acknowledgment, however, did not satisfy the composers, who argued that the damage had already been done. The sample had been heard by tens of thousands of people at the stadium and by a broader audience through the broadcast before any clearance process was initiated or compensation was offered.
The musicians brought the case to a Los Angeles court, arguing that the use of their work without a license or agreement entitled them to damages regardless of the subsequent changes made to the released version of the song.
How the jury decided
The jury sided with the four plaintiffs, concluding that Kanye West had infringed on their copyright by publicly performing the work without authorization. The $438,558 damages award reflects the jury’s assessment of what the musicians were owed for that unauthorized use.
Kanye West appeared in court in person during the proceedings. He addressed the case in terms that framed the verdict as the product of opportunism directed at him because of his celebrity, suggesting that the damages being sought exceeded what the situation would have warranted involving anyone else. The jury did not share that assessment.
A pattern of legal setbacks
The Donda lawsuit is not the only legal matter to have gone against Kanye West in recent months. Earlier this year he paid $140,000 to settle a dispute brought by a contractor who alleged he had not been compensated for renovation work performed at a property the rapper owns in Malibu. That settlement, combined with the latest jury verdict, reflects a pattern of legal exposure that has followed Kanye West alongside the ongoing controversies that have defined his public profile in recent years.
For the four musicians at the center of this case, the verdict represents both financial recognition and a legal affirmation of the principle that a sample does not need to appear on a finished commercial release to trigger copyright liability. Its use in a public performance, they successfully argued, was sufficient.

