Beyoncé’s father, Matthew Knowles, has expressed strong disapproval after unreleased music by his daughter was reportedly stolen from a rental car. The veteran music manager said if he were still managing the pop star, her choreographer would be in “hot water.”

According to reports, unreleased Beyoncé tracks and sensitive documents were taken in July, just days before she kicked off her four-night residency at the Mercedes-Benz Stadium in Atlanta as part of her ongoing Cowboy Carter tour.

The theft allegedly occurred when thieves broke into a rental vehicle used by Beyoncé’s choreographer, Christopher Grant, and dancer, Diandre Blue.

As reported by The Hollywood Reporter, an incident report stated that the suspects made away with hard drives containing “watermarked music, some unreleased music, footage plans for the show and past and future set lists.”

Grant and Blue reportedly parked the rental car at a parking deck around 8 p.m. When they returned about an hour later, they discovered that someone had broken in through the boot and stolen two suitcases.

In addition to the hard drives, the stolen items included clothing, MacBooks, and AirPods Max headphones belonging to members of Beyoncé’s team.

Matthew Knowles, speaking on The Don Lemon Show, questioned why the choreographer had access to such critical material.

“I don’t know anything other than what I’ve heard in the news. But I can tell you, Don, her choreographer had better be glad that I’m not still managing her because he would be in hot water!” he said.

He added,

“Why did he have a hard drive with all of her music? He’s a choreographer. And if he did have it, why didn’t he secure it?”

Atlanta’s ABC affiliate WSB-TV reported that the police have since issued an arrest warrant for a suspect. The Atlanta Police Department confirmed that a Jeep Wagoneer was broken into at the reported location, with two suitcases stolen.

Officers from the Larceny from Auto Unit led the investigation and dusted the rental car for fingerprints, finding two sets. Surveillance footage from the area also captured the incident.

The incident report noted that officers tracked the AirPods and laptops using Apple’s Find My feature. Though the exact locations were redacted, police reportedly performed a “suspicious person stop” in the flagged area.

The investigation is ongoing.