Bad Bunny Faces One Million Dollar Claim Over Filming Location In Puerto Rico

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Credit: Livestream, screenshot

The house that inspired the small casita in Bad Bunny’s short film has now become the center of a legal dispute. Its owner, Román Carrasco, known as Don Román, filed a lawsuit against the Puerto Rican artist and the companies Rimas Entertainment, Move Concerts, and A1 Productions, claiming damages tied to the filming of “Debí Tirar Más Fotos.”

The Lawsuit And Its Claims

Attorney Juan R. Dávila presented the lawsuit on behalf of the 84 year old Carrasco, seeking at least one million dollars in compensation for what the filing describes as emotional damages and mental anguish, as well as the annulment of contracts and payment of legal fees. According to the complaint, Don Román signed documents without knowing their content and allowed the use of his property in Humacao, a municipality in eastern Puerto Rico, for the filming of the video that has now surpassed 22 million views on YouTube.

The lawsuit argues that representatives for the companies asked Carrasco to sign on the blank screen of a cellphone, later transferring the digital signature to two separate contracts without his knowledge. “Officials of the co defendants required the signature of Don Román on the blank screen of a cell phone. Said officials digitally transferred, and in a fraudulent manner, the referred signature to two different contracts,” states the legal filing.

Carrasco also claims that the contracts were never delivered to him, that their contents were never read or explained, and that he could not read them himself due to his inability to do so. “From the start, these contracts were not given to Don Román, their contents were not explained or read to him. The plaintiff also could not read them because he does not have that ability,” the document reads.

The complaint further states that Carrasco continues to receive frequent visits from Bad Bunny’s fans who associate his home with the video. Images of his property circulate across social media, yet he has received no compensation for the constant exposure. The lawsuit makes clear that “the plaintiff does not seek to harm Bad Bunny or the companies, but rather to obtain fair compensation.”

The Artist’s Next Chapter

The legal filing comes as Bad Bunny prepares for a special Amazon Music broadcast of his residency “No me quiero ir de aquí,” which closed after a record thirty concerts. With that chapter complete, he is set to launch his global tour “Debí tirar más fotos,” named after his most recent album. The tour will open in the Dominican Republic on November 21 and close in Belgium on July 22, 2026, with more than two and a half million tickets already sold.

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