2Pac and Snoop Dogg‘s Death Row pendants from the ’90s are now up for auction and it’s expected that the bidding could reach somewhere around seven figures.

According to TMZ, the icy pendants will be up for auction from Thursday (October 26) through November 10 via Gotta Have Rock And Roll.

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They are expected to fetch anywhere between $500,000 to $1,000,000 a piece and both came from Reggie Wright Jr.’s collection, who is the former head of Death Row’s security team.

Sources relayed that former Death Row boss Suge Knight owned the chains and would commission them to his artists as the best were reserved for the likes of 2Pac and Snoop Dogg.

See pics of the chains below:

2Pac & Snoop Dogg Death Row Pendants Expected To Fetch Up To $1M At Auction

CREDIT: Gotta Have Rock And Roll

A personalized ticket and performance envelope for 2Pac’s 1996 performance on Saturday Night Live is also available in the auction, and experts estimate that could go for around $10,000 as well.

Among the other items in the collection is video footage of The Notorious B.I.G.’s final performance in Jamaica, signed paperwork from that show, and unseen ‘Pac and Biggie mugshots.

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2Pac’s New York State mugshot, taken with a Polaroid, is dated October 12, 1995. That was the day he was released on bail from Clinton Correctional Facility.

According to recording engineer Dave Aron, ‘Pac immediately flew to Los Angeles and recorded “Ambitionz az a Ridah” and “I Ain’t Mad At Cha.”

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Biggie’s photo dates from 1996, and comes with a thank you note addressed to someone named Megan (“Thanks 4 the phone call!!”). The rapper was arrested several times that year — in March for an alleged assault on autograph seekers and in July after a search of his house turned up firearms and marijuana.

It is unclear from the photo which incident of the two the photo dates from, or if it is from a different run-in with the police.

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A photo from the New Jersey arrest, previously auctioned by a different house, shows Big wearing a different outfit than in the GottaHaveRockandRoll.com shot, but the prior auction shows that while being booked, Big signed a similar thank you note to someone named Teddy.

According to TMZ, the mugshots are expected to sell for between $20,000 to $40,000 each. Footage of Big’s final concert may, the outlet says, go for over $1million.