In August 2016, Logic released the music video for “Super Mario World,” a song from his Bobby Tarantino mixtape. In the clip, Logic and someone dressed in a Mario costume dance on top of an oil tanker called the Mary A. Whalen. At the end of the video, it’s revealed they were granted permission to film on the boat after the person wearing the Mario costume claimed it was for “a summer-school project.” Now, Logic has been accused of deceiving the ship operators and not paying the location shooting fee, according to a new report from IndieWire.

Carolina Salguero is the founder and president of PortSide, a Brooklyn, N.Y.-based nonprofit that operates the Mary A. Whalen. She says that the video’s ending was not staged and that she granted Logic permission to film on the boat because he and his team claimed they were from a nearby high school. “I looked at Logic; he’s so scrawny, I mistook for him a high school student,” she told IndieWire. “I thought the videographer [Justin Fleischer] was his dad, graying hair at the temples, and his friend was dressed in the [beat-up] Super Mario costume—I was busy and trusted I was helping high school students.” Salguero and Fleischer reportedly entered a verbal agreement, later confirmed via email, that they could film on the boat if they credited the Mary A. Whalen and everyone who was in the video.

Salguero says that she did not learn until after the video was released that Logic was not, in fact, a high school student, but a rapper signed to Def Jam; he was also 26 years old when the video went online. At that point, she reportedly requested for his team to donate $5,000 to PortSide. (According to a New York Directors Guild of America union location manager, the going rate for filming on the Mary A. Whalen is $10,000 for one day or $5,000 for a half-day.)

In December 2016, Harrison Remler, one of Logic’s managers at Team Visionary, reportedly told Salguero, “UMG Def Jam, Logic’s label handles all budgets for his video shoot and we can revisit a cost in the new year. Their offices are closed until early January. We are confident we can get some funds your way.” Salguero says she has still not received compensation.

Pitchfork has contacted Logic’s representatives for more information and comment.