Report Claims ALICE IN CHAINS Are Among Artists Who Billed US Taxpayers For Luxury Hotels, Shopping Sprees, And Million-Dollar Bonuses

report-claims-alice-in-chains-are-among-artists-who-billed-us-taxpayers-for-luxury-hotels,-shopping-sprees,-and-million-dollar-bonuses

Report Claims ALICE IN CHAINS Are Among Artists Who Billed US Taxpayers For Luxury Hotels, Shopping Sprees, And Million-Dollar Bonuses

According to an exclusive report from Business Insider, the members of Alice In Chains are among a handful of musicians who misused US taxpayer funded COVID relief grants. Other artists named in the report include rapper Lil Wayne, R&B singer Chris Brown, and DJ Marshmello.

The money came from a program called the Shuttered Venue Operators Grant. Signed into law by Trump in 2020 and championed by lawmakers including Sen. Chuck Schumer, it was established as a lifeline for struggling independent venues and arts groups during the pandemic. But pop stars used the program as a piggy bank to keep the party going, reporting by Business Insider shows.

As per the report: On March 23, 2022, records show, the Alice in Chains singer and guitarist Jerry Cantrell took in $1.4 million as an “SVOG distribution.” The band’s drummer, Sean Kinney, received the same amount, and its bassist, Mike Inez, booked half that sum, about $682,000.

In all, $3.4 million of the $4.1 million the grant allotted for payroll went to the three musicians at the top.

Like other grant applicants, AIC Entertainment — the three band members’ touring business — had to tell the government only that the money was “necessary.” But the month before they took their grant payments, the band members recorded about $48 million in income from selling the copyrights on their catalog. They made hundreds of thousands of dollars more from merchandise sales and other profit distributions in 2022.

The band spent some money to pay its staff. It paid hundreds of thousands of dollars to sound-equipment-rental firms, videographers, and managers. But the precarious nature of working in the live-entertainment business didn’t change for some of its employees. Scott Dachroeden, a guitar tech and tour photographer who had worked with the band for years, received a cancer diagnosis in late 2022. The band, which records show did not spend grant money on benefits like health insurance, circulated a GoFundMe page on Twitter.

“He has no health insurance and now cannot work to pay his bills,” the page said. The band’s lead singer said on Facebook that Alice in Chains helped out behind the scenes, but a person familiar with the situation said that Dachroeden didn’t get much, if any, money from the band during the pandemic and that after his diagnosis, the band connected Dachroeden with a charity that helps with medical bills. Dachroeden died soon after his diagnosis.

Alice in Chain’s publicists and manager didn’t respond to requests for comment.

Read the full report at Business Insider.

(Photo – Pamela Littky)


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