Nelly is once again mired in courtroom drama, with his attorney’s proposed $78,000 sanctions bill facing resistance from Santos Ali, who claims the charges are bloated with vague entries and paperwork disguised as legitimate labor.
Ali Jones, who performed with Nelly in a hip-hop group, accused Nelly of copyright infringement and unjust enrichment, claiming he was denied credit and compensation for his contributions to songs on Nelly’s 2000 debut album Country Grammar.
A judge dismissed the suit, saying Ali had waited too long to file suit. Nelly was awarded attorney’s fees and claimed more than $78,000.
In a recent court filing, Ali’s legal team accused Nelly’s attorney, Kenneth D. Freundlich, of inflating work hours on invoices and overcharging partners for routine tasks.
The dispute stems from a previous ruling that granted Nelly the right to collect legal fees from attorney Precious Felder, who a federal judge found made baseless claims and delayed the case with unnecessary motions.
Now, the court must determine which portion of those fees are actually reasonable.
Ali’s attorneys argued that the bill as filed was far from reasonable, calling Freundlich’s records “vague, flat-rate, redundant, excessive for the limited work performed, and filled with clerical tasks disguised as legitimate work.”
The objection noted that Nellie’s legal team charged the highest fees among many entries for reading court records, checking emails and filing documents – tasks typically handled by support staff.
One example flagged in the filing shows a senior attorney charging fees for a “court order for review,” without any details about the nature or significance of the review.
Another article combined multiple tasks (drafting, research, filing, and internal meetings) into a single project, making it difficult to assess how much time was spent on each task.
Ali’s lawyers also took issue with what they described as an overcrowded legal team, with multiple attorneys paid for the same tasks, such as reviewing emails or editing drafts, even though the case did not involve any discovery, no hearings, just some motions.
The invoices “reflect paperwork billed at attorney’s rates,” the filing said, adding that the hours documented on the sanctions motion were “excessive and disproportionate to the work performed.”
The dissenting opinion urged the judge to cut the proposed fees by at least half, arguing that the amount Nellie sought “cannot be imposed on the plaintiffs” because the sanctions were intended only to reimburse costs directly related to Felder’s misconduct.

