Two months after Prince’s death, lawyers are still poring through thousands of boxes of the musician’s business documents in search of a will dictating the beneficiaries of his estate, estimated to be worth between $100 million and $300 million. But as the search for Prince’s last decree continues, the number of parties eagerly filing paperwork to claim some of the musician’s fortune has climbed to an undignified figure.

That number, according to People, is 29—between Prince’s one full sibling, sister Tyka Nelson, and an assembly of potential long-lost relatives and business associates, two of whom are currently incarcerated and one of whom boldly claims he is entitled to $1 billion. (Prince, who was married and divorced twice, has no known children.) Among Prince’s alleged heirs:

Five alleged half siblings

One alleged half niece

One alleged half grandniece

Three alleged long-lost half sisters

One alleged long-lost half brother

Eight alleged distant cousins

One alleged illegitimate son

One alleged adopted son

One alleged (but unspecified) relative

One Minnesota resident who suggests that the absence of a will means he could be an heir

Four non-relatives alleging Prince owed them between $46,000 and $750 million in business expenses

One non-relative alleging that, according to People, “he had a verbal agreement with Prince that gave him complete ownership of the artist's musical catalog and vast vault of unreleased recordings”—maintaining that he is owed $1 billion

As if that list of alleged beneficiaries did not signify the complexity of Prince’s estate, the Star Tribune reports that more than 20 lawyers, representing assorted alleged heirs, showed up in court on Monday “to debate how Minnesota’s probate laws interact with laws for determining parentage.” At one point, Bremer Trust attorney David Crosby resorted to using “a large flow chart” to give the court a clearer visual.

“We have literally been through thousands of boxes of documents and four physical locations,” Crosby told Carver County judge Kevin Eide. “We’ve looked under every box lid. . . . We have no indication a will exists. . . . The inquiry is coming to a close very soon.”

Eide admitted that legislative revisions, and the above family claims, will make the inheritance issue one of the most complicated in recent memory if not history.

“This case is perhaps unique in the state of Minnesota,” Eide said. “In many ways, we are in [unchartered] water here.”

Although Eide did not give any idea of a time frame in which the issue of Prince’s inheritance would be solved, the judge did convey that he wanted to get through the matter quickly as to not “dissipate” the value of the estate. According to NBC, a Bremer Trust attorney warned that “state and federal taxes due early next year could eat up as much as half of the estate’s cash value.”

“Delay can damage the estate,” he said. “That is a reality of this business.”

Earlier this month, the Midwest Medical Examiner’s Office confirmed that Prince’s death was caused by an accidental overdose of an opioid painkiller called fentanyl. Sadly, Prince was reportedly scheduled to see an addiction doctor the day after he died.

In the weeks since Prince’s death, the musician has been celebrated all over the world in a series of moving tributes, from the likes of Aretha Franklin, Beyoncé, Sheila E., Madonna, and Donatella Versace.