Snoop Dogg and Daz Blast Each Other Via Social Media: “Leave Me Alone”

The cousins are locked in a war of words following Daz’s departure from Death Row Records.

Snoop Dogg meets with Jackson State University students and signs autographs following the “Generation Z & HIV: Human Issue. Southern Solution. An HBCU Tour” panel discussion hosted by GLAAD on October 28, 2025, in Jackson, Mississippi.
Snoop Dogg meets with Jackson State University students and signs autographs following the “Generation Z & HIV: Human Issue. Southern Solution. An HBCU Tour” panel discussion hosted by GLAAD on October 28, 2025, in Jackson, Mississippi.

Snoop Dogg and Daz Dillinger are in the middle of a feud over publishing, contracts and Death Row Records. The two West Coast legends—and cousins—each took to social media to call the other out over their dispute. Dillinger has previously accused Snoop of kicking him off Death Row Records after Daz refused to sign over the publishing rights to his music catalog. 

“They tried to go behind my back and trademark all of my work,” Daz explained in a YouTube video. “And then flaunt it in my face like, 'We got it. That's all we wanted because we're gonna sell everything for a billion dollars to Universal.'"

Of course, Snoop and Daz both began their careers on Death Row Records in the early 1990s. Snoop was the label’s biggest star in its heyday, and Daz was one of the label’s in-house producers as well as one-half of the platinum-selling duo Tha Dogg Pound with fellow rhymer Kurupt. After Daz went public with his accusations, Snoop shared his own response.

“I see you ain't got s**t to do but hate on me, huh?" Snoop said in a response video. "In a minute, I’m gonna to f**k you up, cuz, on some real s**t. Not physically but business wise 'cause you broke as a motherf**ker right now so I'm gonna f**k you up in a minute, cuz. Leave me the f**k alone."

Daz previously called out Snoop during a radio interview last month, again sharing why he was kicked off Death Row Records.after his cousin acquired the iconic label in 2022. Daz also said he realized the two had an issue after he wasn't invited to a recent performance. 

"He's just like, 'You ain't signing your catalog over to me,'" Dillinger said. "And I'm like, 'I'm keeping it. It's worth a lot.'"