Loopy City Seth Binzer
Battle Over Rockstar’s Property
Two Years After Overdose Demise
Revealed
Musician Seth Binzer’s household is battling over the late rock star’s property two years after his demise … TMZ has discovered.
In line with court docket docs, obtained by TMZ … the musician’s ex, Tracy Shelor, requested to be appointed administrator of Seth’s property, which she estimated to be price $140K, again in Might 2025. Tracy had a 17-year-old son, Gage, with Seth.
Tracy mentioned Seth — AKA Shifty Shellshock — died and not using a will and was survived by his grownup son, Halo Binzer, and two youthful sons … Gage, who lived with Tracy … and one other son, Phoenix Lennard, whom Seth had with ex Jasmine Lennard.
In July 2025, Halo filed his personal docs to take management of the property, which he claimed was solely price $90,500. He later disputed claims introduced by Tracy about him “in some way squandering” Seth’s royalties and hiding “private results underneath undue affect of his grandmother.”
Halo mentioned there have been “no tangible private results of any worth,” including that his late father “had a extreme substance abuse downside and offered something of worth to help his life-style.”
Halo’s lawyer wrote, “What we now have here’s a unhappy state of affairs, a tragic demise leaving three younger boys fatherless, however Shelor’s actions are making a tragic state of affairs extra devastating in that now funds that might have been used to help the heirs must be used for probate administration.”
Phoenix’s mother, Jasmine, filed her personal docs opposing Tracy taking on, claiming to have had points with Tracy previously.
Tracy fired again at Halo, claiming he had not supplied any accounting for Seth’s property, together with an unreleased album, two attainable documentaries, and different potential contracts “entered into when he was in extreme psychological decline.”
As TMZ beforehand reported, Seth died on June 24, 2024, on the age of 49. His supervisor advised us on the time that Seth died from an unintended drug overdose, mixing prescription tablets and avenue medicine.

