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Oct. 23, 2023 - MyronGainesX
03:13:25
Fed Explains Keefe D Arrest & Tupac's Murder
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Time Text
And we are live.
What's up guys?
Welcome to Fed Reacts, man.
I apologize for the late, but we got a lot to talk about on this two-pack one and I actually got some exclusive content that no one else got, man.
We're going to get into it right now.
I'm a special agent with Homeland Security Investigations, okay, guys?
This is what Fed Reacts covered.
So here's what 6ix9ine actually got to this attack shifted the whole US government.
This guy got arrested espionage.
Okay, trading secrets with the Russian John Wayne Gacy, aka the killer clown, okay, one of the most prolific serial killers of all time, killed 33 people.
Zodiac killer is a pseudonym of an unidentified serial killer who operated in Northern California.
They really get off on getting attention from the media.
Many years Jeffrey I've signed sexually exploited and abused dozens of minor girls at his home.
It was OJ working together to get Nicole killed.
We're gonna go over his past, the Yang Top so that this all makes sense.
And what's up guys, welcome to Fed Reacts Man.
We are going to be covering Tupac today, guys.
Uh this one's gonna be a good one.
I g did a bunch of research on this one.
We got some stuff ready for y'all.
Um the reason why we're late is because I actually went ahead and you know, um made a last minute purchase for y'all to give you guys something that um you know no one else really has that's covering this case right now.
Uh before I get into it though, uh Bill Z Mo on the back, man.
What's up guys?
You guys want to say what up to the people?
Yo, what's going on?
This is Mo or Big Mo or Medium Mo apparently.
Or small nowadays.
Or Penny Mo or small mo Vampire Mo the vampire demon.
But um Yeah, man, I'm I'm glad that you know, glad to be here.
I'm always happy to be here.
Happy to be with you guys.
Going to be laughing with you guys in the chat.
You guys can, I love all the roasts.
I love all the penny roasts.
But you guys can follow me at Big Mo underscore B-I-T-W.
That is B-I-G-M-O underscore B-I-T-W.
Don't forget the memo to believe in Big Mo because that is the M-O.
Cool.
What about you, Bills?
Shout out uh Henny Chris and Penny Mo.
W to the W's in the chat for them for sure.
Uh you guys can follow me on Instagram at J V I L L Z. Uh thank you for all the love.
It's gonna be a fun federal act today.
We're gonna be talking about uh Tupac's killer, so yeah, let's get into it.
Uh Andy, you have anything you want to tell the people?
You weren't here Last week, so you wanna Yeah.
Yeah, you were sick.
Yeah, I was feeling a little bit under the weather last week.
And I wanted to come, guys, because I knew uh the whole like direction of the whole stuff.
It was gonna be a little bit messy.
Because I was telling Marion, play this, play that, play this video, but then play this other one.
And and I was like trying to direct him through text, and he couldn't understand me for some reason.
And yeah, but I we wanted to come so bad, but um he told me to stay home, so I stay home.
And yeah, that's what happened.
But um I've heard that people be talking shit.
Um this lately.
Nah, that's fine.
We already addressed that.
You're fine.
Don't worry about it.
That's crazy.
Yeah, people stalk your life.
But that that it is what it is.
But we're gonna.
Yeah, guys, buy a live, please.
Buy a life.
Yeah.
Well, you can't.
I don't think you could buy it.
Go to the gym or something.
Get off the internet.
Jesus.
Um, yeah, I wanna I wanna show you guys the cases that I've been receiving lately because I haven't um done it like a f uh for a while now.
So um we made a poll yesterday.
I made a poll f uh for this case, the YW Melee um update case.
Uh Myron's gonna do it, I guess, lately in the week, I don't know.
And um the North Hollywood shooting.
Yeah, they've been asking for that one for a year now.
Yes, and another one was it?
Was it four?
Uh let me show it.
The North Hollywood YW Melly, as you guys know with the Y and W Melly case, there's been a lot of developments as far as like uh it's a disaster for the prosecution right now.
We're talking about Brady's stuff going on.
We're talking about the prosecutor had to leave the case.
Uh she was taken off the case by the judge.
Uh, new prosecutors getting involved.
They had jury selection, Melly's getting hit with different charges now.
I think they just hit him with um some stuff uh with like witness uh tampering, and I think they just hit him with drug charges as well, because he was apparently inv involved with like smuggling drugs into the jail.
So um they're throwing everything at Melly, and I have a theory as to why they're doing that.
Um, but we will definitely cover the Y and W Melly uh trial debacle going on uh right now.
I think they had jury selection a couple days ago.
So um there's a lot of new updates on that case.
Um also the fact that there's like Brady stuff in the case that wasn't disclosed over to the defense is a huge thing, and I don't think enough people are talking about it.
I've only seen like one other YouTuber really cover the um how severe Brady's situation is.
Um but that's for another episode because uh for me to explain to you guys I'd have to explain to you guys what Brady material is, then go into what the detective did and then explain what ended up with the prosecutor while she ended up testifying, which is never where you want to be.
Um and then the North Hollywood stuff.
We had done research on that case before, guys.
It's just that with that one, there's not that many good documentaries on it.
Um and then all but now we got Rumble.
I think I did find one good one, but I think we might get hit with copyright, but since we're on Rumble now, we can actually do it.
And then also I keep forgetting, but I uh promise guys it's gonna come up.
Uh I have the Menendez brothers and I have Columbine.
Yes, and I have Osama bin Laden.
I have those three episodes kind of in the tank.
Um those videos got taken off of YouTube um either for copyright or too much violence or whatever the hell it may be.
So I will go ahead and upload those to Rumble Rumble.com slash Fred Reacts.
Right now we're live streaming on YouTube and Rumble, as you guys know.
I'm gonna try to keep this up on YouTube as much as I can.
If we do get hit with copyright or anything like that, you guys already know what time it is.
We're gonna go ahead and just move over to Rumble.
If they suspend the stream midway, we don't want to, you know, risk anything.
Um and uh, you know, quick little side note, fresh and fit, man.
If you guys watch our channel now, the timestamps are back.
So we're fully out of YouTube jail, guys.
Um so that is great, man.
Cause the past what we've been in YouTube jail since June.
June.
To some degree.
You we've been in YouTube jail, YouTube probation, YouTube death row, and now we're like we're not completely free yet.
But um we're definitely uh doing better.
So if you guys watch the YouTube channel now, Fresh and Fit, y'all are gonna see that the timestamps actually show on the you know, the progress bar, that red progress bar.
So um and you know, for me that's very important because I'm big on timestamps, me and Mo are huge on it.
Uh, because you know, we understand that watch time is important, and you know, a lot of people don't want to scroll all the way down through the description to see what's going on.
They'd rather just kinda like move around the bar and see uh, you know, different parts of the show and everything else like that.
So um, you know, I'm completely aware that we make long form content and timestamps are a necessity.
So uh, you know, we got that back, so I'm really happy, really excited about that.
And then uh we'll see what happens as far as um the other stuff with YouTube.
But for now, doing pretty good, man.
Um I was like, oh my god, is that breaks?
Yeah.
I forgot YouTube had that feature, bro.
Yeah, bro.
Yeah, it's like crazy, man.
For like literally since June, because we got our first strike in June.
Since June, we've had that stuff gone, bro.
Cause anytime you get a strike, guys on YouTube, it's a weird thing.
You uh the timestamps don't show in the the progress bar when you're watching.
So, you know, yeah.
So I kind of want to give them an update on the cases that you guys be requesting.
So no matter what we do, no matter what we say, you keep asking for foreign uh for any cases.
So uh foreign.
Frain?
Foreign?
Is that the word that I'm looking for?
Frain?
Foreign.
Oh, okay.
All right.
All right, yeah, foreign.
You got it.
Uh, yeah, foreign.
Um cases.
So from Canada, Paul and Bernardo, Paul Bernardo and um his wife case.
They call them the barbecueers.
Oh, yeah, yeah.
It's on Netflix right now.
Yes, it's on Netflix.
We we watched a few episodes, I think.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Before and also from UK.
We have a big following in the UK.
People want cases from the UK, the George High Killer, uh, Marilee McCann, I can mention it.
Oh, Yorkshire.
Okay, yeah, the the second um Ripper case, basically.
Yeah.
Yeah, they won that case too.
Yep.
Um, A. Chase Holmes.
That's the zero key later.
That's the doctor, right?
Yeah.
I'm not mistaken.
Uh they won the Mexican cartels.
You guys keep asking for the Mexican cartels.
You guys keep asking for the Alcatra Escape.
Um, the Akas uh Alcatra Scapes, because there's a few ones.
And um El Chapo, they won't chapo.
Yep.
Uh they have to shoot her for Me Paso at Walmart.
That is another one.
What else?
They gave asking for Jada and Will Smith.
What?
Yeah.
Selena Quintanilla, that's a big one too.
Um, you guys know the story about Solina Cantonia.
That's not a mystery or anything.
Like it's she was killed by her um her biggest fan, aka best friend, whatever.
Okay.
Um, they keep asking for a chew back.
We're gonna do it today.
Uh Marley Monrose.
Marilyn Monroe's case.
Are you familiar with that one?
Oh, Marilyn Monroe.
Yeah.
There's a lot of theories on on her that she was killed by um some people, etc.
I think maybe uh those people.
JFK too.
It's pretty similar to um Michael Jackson too theories.
Okay, conspiracy theories.
So Stephen Avery from Making a Murder, Trebo Bauer, just to mention a few.
Uh Larry Ayler, High War into State Killer.
Uh what?
What was that last one?
Larry Ayler, highway interstate killer.
Okay.
20 Teenage Boys and Joe Man uh be murder, I think.
Okay.
Uh okay.
2015 San Bernardino Terrorist attack.
I think the next serial killer will do oh, the San Bernito.
Uh actually, I w Oh, you know what?
I have a good one for that one.
Um that was a terrorism case.
I have uh that documentary remember we've been watching FBI True.
They have one on the San Bernard Bernardier now.
That's gonna be rumble, yeah though.
But that that's a really good documentary on that that shooting guys, um, the San Bernardino uh terrorist attack.
Yeah, um, you're not gonna like this, but they keep asking for South uh Park Mexican.
So yeah.
OJ Simpson case.
Let's see how no.
I do a lot of cases that I don't like for you guys, man.
That I don't want to do for you for you guys.
Like I'll look and I'll be like, man, I don't want to do this shit, but you guys asked for it, so I'm like, all right, we'll do it.
But there's a bunch of there's been a few cases that I gripped my teeth to do, and I didn't want to do.
But um all right, cool.
So let's go ahead and get into this because um we got a lot to cover here.
So um get some early chats.
Early chats?
Okay, then let me I'll read these real fast and then we'll get into it.
Uh what do we got here?
Okay, we got um Julio Ponce, five bucks.
Appreciate that, my friend.
Uh and then we got uh and guys, if you want to donate into the show and get involved, FNF Super Chat.com again, it's FNF Super Chat.com.
Um Bitch Thy Nuian goes, whatever haters are your haters, the DGG and Tradcons are waiting for uh both your downfall, and they can pick up the pieces, their strength of collaboration, whatever is not your enemy.
I never said they were.
It's just that like I said before, we did we don't we don't have certain things that align, my friend.
That's that's like I said before.
People assume just because I'm not gonna work with someone I hate them or some shit like that.
No, it's just that we're not I already explained uh on the last one what it was.
Um FNF and and you know, we wish them the best, but I just don't align with some of their values.
Uh shout out FNF.
Uh I've been on the grind and seeing crazy results since watching the pod.
Um 21, 6'5, 190 pounds in the USAF.
Been with uh talking to a girl that says she doesn't care that I don't have a bag and yet spends a lot of money on me.
Should I cuff or chase the bag?
Um chase the bag, my friend, and then let her chase you.
Um what else we got here?
Uh Taco Flavor Kisses goes, Myron, what's the best workout plan for a three-day split?
How many sets do you recommend for beginners?
Shout out, Myron, Angie Mo and Blitz.
I'll make this simple.
Three-day split, bro, just do full body workouts and then uh and then make sure that you're hitting, you know, 10 to 15 sets per muscle group per week, and you'll be fine for a beginner.
Do you think that full body workouts are good for people that are just taught in?
Yes, they're the best actually for people that are just starting.
Because you're getting a lot of stimuli without necessarily too much um you're you're you're getting adequate volume and you're doing it through frequency, which is good.
Frequency is really the main thing.
So it's not too tiring.
Nah.
At the beginning.
It's only three times per week.
Oh, three times a week.
It's only three times per week, yeah.
Um do you plan on putting your other previous YouTube videos here so I don't have to use YouTube?
Yeah.
Uh oh, you mean like the old ones?
Uh yes, I can potentially do that as well.
Um read rent and math.
Goes, uh, Myron, would you guys hire someone with a master's in maths and economics and undergrad and math and physics, do the statistics work for you where you can probably display the data to the 304s?
Um, potentially uh if you actually have those credentials and you are very well versed in intersexual dynamics studies, then go ahead and shoot Angie a text right and uh a DM right now on Fed Reacts Um and say uh type in stats in all capitals and she'll see it, and I'll go through it and we can potentially look at it.
Right because I'm looking to update the stats.
This is the hood, ain't it?
Okay.
It definitely is.
And that's from one Marv.
And then we got uh again, rumors are Jada Smith is watching this.
Yeah, I saw that come in before.
We actually had to chuckle it before the show when that chat came in.
Uh what else?
The qu reason I posed the question is because it isn't only about giving people the data, it is how you present the data in an appealing, attractable way since most data is noisy like through a dashboard.
Yeah, we could do that, man.
Uh the reason why I've been refraining from like, you know, name dropping a million studies like I used to do is because bro, that shit just gets boring.
People don't care.
The girls tune out, and it's like, yeah.
I I know there's some statisticians that watch the show and like jerk off to that shit, but bro, in general, um, what you guys see versus the atmosphere in the studio are two different things, and we gotta keep the energy up to keep the show entertaining.
That's just what it is.
That's why I try not to refer to studies too too much.
Uh I saw a bit on X of this chick screaming in Walmart that was graped in the past, and she can't stand being touched by a man.
Here's someone's exact response to the tweet.
Hope it happens again to her.
The fuck?
Okay.
Uh I just want to say at first, wasn't sure about Bills, but he grew on me.
You're alright, man.
You're all right.
F what the haters say.
Appreciate you, bro.
All right.
Um then Dark Knight goes.
Since I don't listen to music, I thought the seventh stream wasn't worth watching.
Uh the seven-hour stream wasn't worth watching, but I watched it anyway, and it is the best stream of the history of streams.
W everyone, W Ludge Hostage situation.
Okay, I appreciate that definitely.
You don't even like the music, but uh, but uh he watched it.
Cool, and you enjoyed it.
Ken Rose 07, cool.
And then guys, um, we might not be able to do the DBZ stream this Wednesday because um I'm gonna be in Vegas.
Uh last minute uh schedule change.
We're gonna go to Vegas to you know do a rumble event, might do some collabs while we're out there.
I'll be there from Tuesday to Thursday, so we'll be back on Friday to do a show for you guys.
But um Wednesday, I think we're gonna go ahead and film either one or two podcasts for you guys out there.
Hell, maybe we might do Access Vegas um type collab again.
But I will be in Vegas from Tuesday to Thursday this week, guys, for an event, okay?
Um but anyway, uh cool.
I think we're caught up, guys.
From this point forward, we're gonna read um.
Yeah, uh, yeah.
We'll go, we'll go 20 and up on uh FNF Super Chat or Rumble, um, just so that we can go ahead and get through all this stuff because we got a lot to cover.
Um, guys, and again, FF Super Chat.com if you guys want to get involved, Cronson put five bucks.
I appreciate that.
And every single chat that gets shown that gets uh thrown in will be shown on screen, guys.
So we appreciate that.
Um anything else?
Not caught up.
That's it.
Alright, so let's hit the first one, guys.
As you guys know, Tupac's uh alleged killer was arrested a few weeks ago.
And uh we're gonna kind of go through uh how this all unfolded, okay.
Um so let's share screen bills, please.
Alright, so first we're gonna talk about well, first let's go to the first tab with um the Wikipedia, um, which is um we're gonna talk about if you've been living under a rock.
Who is Tupac Shakur?
Uh Tupac Amar Shakur, uh born Lizane Parish, crooks.
Oh, damn, I did not know that was his real name.
Okay.
Uh June 16, 1971, died on September 13th, 1996.
Also known by stage names, Tupac and Machiavelli was an American rapper.
He has widely considered one of the most influential and successful rappers of all time.
Shakur is among the best-selling music artists, having sold more than 75 million records worldwide.
Much of Shakur's music has been noted for addressing contemporary social issues that plagued inner cities.
Shakur's born in New York City to parents who were both political activists and black party men members.
A lot of people don't know that Shakur was actually born in New York City, even though he had a whole all his issues with the East Coast.
Raised by his mother, Effendi Shakur, he relocate relocated to Baltimore in 1984 and to the San Francisco Bay Area in 1968.
With the release of his debut album Tupac Clips Now in 1991, he became a central figure in the West Coast hip hop for his conscious rap lyrics.
Shakur received uh further critical and commercial success with his follow-up albums Strictly for My Niggas and Meet Against the World, uh, released in 1995.
His Diamond certified album, All Eyes on Me, that is a classic, double-sided, by the way.
The first double-length album in hip hop history abandoned his introspective lyrics for a volatile gangster rap.
In addition to his music career, Shakur also found considerable success as an actor with his starring roles in Juice 1992, Poetic Justice 93, Above the Rim 94, Bullet 96, Gritlock 97, and Gang Related 97.
During the later part of his career, Shakur was shot five times in the lobby of a New York uh recording studio and experienced legal troubles, including incarceration.
Shakur served 11 months in prison for sexual abuse charges, but was released pending an appeal of his conviction in 1995.
Following his release, he signed to Marion Shug Knight's label, Death Row Records, and became heavily involved in the growing East Coast West Coast hip hop rivalry.
Yes, guys, Tupac and Biggie used to be friends before all the crap happened.
Um on September 7th, 1996, Shakur was shot four times by an unidentified assailant in a drive-by shooting in Las Vegas.
He died six days later.
Following his murder, Shakur's f friend turned rival, the notorious B.I.G. was at first considered a suspect due to their public feud.
He was also murdered in another drive-by shooting six months later in March 999 while visiting a Los Angeles.
Okay.
So um there is a Wikipedia page for Dwayne Davies, Keefe Davies.
Yeah, yeah.
Um I got it here.
Okay.
Um so uh so next we're gonna go ahead and hit um so who here's the person who everyone thinks was the killer.
Click that Orlando guy real quick, uh Bills.
Orlando Anderson.
Yeah, the third, the third tab.
Third tab?
Oh, okay, gotcha.
Yeah.
Um so you go here, Orlando Anderson scroll down.
Uh this is who people thought was the killer uh for a very long time.
And the reason why is because this is the guy that got that Tupac and his entourage assaulted in the I think it was MGM Grant Hotel.
Uh Orlando Ty, baby Lane Jan Anderson, born uh August 13, 1974, died May 29th, 1998, was an alleged gang member suspected in the murder of Tupac Shakur.
Anderson belonged to the California-based gang known as a Southside Compton Cripps.
Detective Tim Brennan of the Compton Police Department filed an affidavit naming Anderson as a suspect.
He denied involvement and was never charged.
Anderson's uncle Dwayne Keith Davis was charged Shakur's murder on September 29th, 2023.
Well, who is Dwayne Keith Davis?
That is the guy, second tab, real quick, Bills, who has hit the headlines, okay, guys, all over the place.
AKA Keefe D for uh the murder.
And just so you guys know, the individuals that were all involved, there were four individuals that were in the vehicle that night.
Three of them are dead.
Okay.
Um, and Keefe D is the last r uh surviving member from the individuals that were in that vehicle when Tupac was shot in Las Vegas.
The other dies in in gun activity.
Yeah, they died in shootings and stuff like that, because these guys were all uh Crips.
Uh scroll down real quick, uh, Bills.
Um, so we can go, we can hit his Wikipedia real fast.
Uh bottom right, uh see the right.
No, scroll up right there.
It's purple.
Nope, up more right there.
Boom.
Okay.
Keep Davis is an American uh member of the California-based gang known as the Southside Compton Crips, who was charged with first degree murder in 1996 murder of Tupac Shakur.
Davis, a childhood friend of NWA front man, Easy E claims that he was in a vehicle with the perpetrator when Shakur was shot.
Detective Tim Brennan of from Comte, California, filed an after David naming Davis and his nephew Orlando Anderson is suspects.
Anderson was killed in a gang-related shootout in 1998.
That's the guy we just read about.
On September 29, 2023, Davis is arrested arrested and charged in connection with the murder of Shakur.
So let's go ahead and go into the press release, guys, which is the first tab.
Uh Bills.
This one?
Yep.
Um, this is the press release, guys.
Uh, when the Las Vegas Metropolitan Police Department announced the arrest.
Let's enlarge and play it on 1.5 speed, please.
Thank you.
All right, good afternoon.
My name is Kevin McMahil.
I'm the sheriff of the Las Vegas Metropolitan Police Department.
Thank you for joining us this afternoon.
Twenty-seven years.
Twenty-seven years.
For 27 years, the family of Tupac Shakur has been waiting for justice.
We are here today to announce the arrest of 60-year-old Dwayne Keith Davis, aka Keefe D for the murder of Tupac Shakur.
Navis was arrested this morning by my LBMPD criminal apprehension team.
And this investigation started on the night of September 7th, 1996.
It is far from over.
It has taken countless hours, really decades, of work by the men and women of our homicide section to get to where we are today.
Several of those detectives that are standing here with us include Detective Cliff Mogg, the lead detective detective on this case.
He is now retired.
Well, I know there's been many people who did not believe.
And don't worry, guys, I have the arrest footage.
We'll play that as well.
We're pulling out everything today, man.
This is gonna be a very interesting pod.
Um so don't worry, I'll play that probably after this press conference.
I think it's important to get to listen to press conference because you guys are gonna kind of see.
Um of the crap that they had to endure to get this thing going.
And I have a comment on Las Vegas Police Department, but I'll wait to give it to you guys here because a lot of people don't know this about um L L V PD.
Let's go.
...that the murder of Tupac Shakur was important to this police department.
I'm here to tell you that was simply not the case.
It was not the case back then, and it is not the case today.
Our goal at LBMPD has always been to hold those accountable and responsible for Tupac's violent murder accountable.
Just like we do for every homicide victim in our city.
Every single victim, every life that is lost, is important and remains a priority to this police department.
As we methodically built this case to move forward with an arrest, it was also important that at the same time we're building towards a successful prosecution.
We work closely with our Steam District Attorney Steve Wilson in his office to ensure that is going to happen.
Mr. Davis' own words reinvigorate reinvigorated our case in 2018.
Pause.
I'm gonna give you some of those details.
His own words reinvigorated.
I got my purple can here, guys, for a reason.
Because this dude was on some real stupid nigga shit, man.
And you guys are gonna see that this is a fantastic example of self-snitching.
We've talked about self-snitching before on this podcast.
You know, we've talked about some of the most egregious offenders of self-snitching.
We talked about OBLOC.
We talked about how some of them wore Louis Vuitton shoes or was it Gucci shoes with like a duck getting, you know, ambushed with a flash and them like posting it on their Instagram and talking about how they killed FBG Duck, etc.
Um, lyrics, etc.
And also don't forget, guys, I'm gonna go ahead and cover one of the worst self-snitches of all times, A.R. Ab as well.
Um man, if you you guys know who A.R. Ab is no.
No?
Isn't that uh someone that had beef with Meek Mill or something like that?
I don't know if he had beef with McMill, but he was a Philly rapper um that would constantly be talking about how he's like the top dude in Philly and he was selling drugs and all this other shit, and then bam, next thing you know, FBI polls up.
FBI open up and gets him with a Rico, and he's still in prison to this day.
I think he's probably, you know, yeah, he's as someone here in the chat said, I seen him do it.
Yeah, he refers to how he witnessed to murder, and he points to this boy on the camera like I seen him do it.
He's a real nigga, blah, blah, blah.
And him and a bunch of his guys ended up getting indicted for racketeering conspiracy, bro.
It was really fucking bad, man.
Uh but I'm gonna cover that.
He's probably one of the worst self-snitchers ever.
But this guy is bad too.
You y'all about to see, man.
Y'all about to really see.
So there's a reason why I'm drinking my purple drink today.
Right.
This is the hood, ain't it?
Yeah, yeah, for real, bro.
I'm actually drinking gorilla mine.
Yeah, she's drinking some gorilla mine as well.
Link is below if you guys want to go ahead and use the code Fresh at discount.
Uh great stuff.
Um, but uh yeah, I seen it, yeah.
Yo, that was crazy.
Um that gorilla mine is fucking good, bro.
But let's get back into it.
I'm going to introduce to you our homicide lieutenant, Jason Johanson, and he will provide you many of the details on how we got here today.
Thank you.
Thank you, Sheriff, and thank you everybody for being here today.
My name is Jason Johansson, and I'm the homicide lieutenant with the Las Vegas Metropolitan Police Department.
Pause.
My goal here today is to walk you through the case.
Real quick, just you guys are probably wondering, well, hold on, what do you mean by homicide lieutenant?
So this guy, more than likely the way it goes, guys, with um the uh major city police departments is you're gonna have um lieutenants that go over each individual um area or uh or section, right?
So you got um in a big PD like Las Vegas, they probably have a homicide unit, they have a auto theft unit, they have maybe like a gambling slash retail fraud unit, they got a you know, counterterrorism unit that's assigned to the FBI, they're gonna have a drug unit, etc.
So this guy oversees all the homicide detectives that do the homicide investigations in Las Vegas.
Okay, so he is think of him as the first line super.
No, he's probably actually no, because they're all gonna be sergeant.
He's probably a second line supervisor.
So he's like um the guy who runs, he's the top guy for homicide, and then above him are the captains, etc.
But he runs homicide, so um, so he's gonna obviously talk about this, but he's in uniform because this is what you would be considering brass at this level.
The homicide detectives themselves wear plain clothes, but the lieutenants and up, they're gonna typically be in uniform.
Uh let's keep going.
Through our investigation and what led us to the indictment of Dwayne Davis, also known as Keefe D for the murder of Tupac.
This case has been reviewed by our homicide team and homicide detectives for over two and a half decades.
And ultimately, our persistence in this investigation has paid off.
Let me walk you through a timeline of events uh that as we know them right now.
Prior to September 7th of 1996, as we all know, Tupac Shakur was an artist who was signed with Death Row Records, and that Death Row Records and its CEO, Marion Sug Knight, were closely affiliated with the Mob Hyrule criminal street gangs, and that they had an ongoing feud with the Southside Compton Crips.
All right, pause Dwayne Davis.
Um, just so you guys know, uh Mob Pyro, to simplify this, are a set of bloods, okay.
Um Pyru is is is a blood gang, and then you got the Southside Compton Crips.
Um California guys, Los Angeles, especially is dominated by gangs, guys.
So I just hate like that's just the reality of what it is.
If you're a celebrity, if you're somebody in Los Angeles, you are more than likely gonna have some type of loose affiliation with a street gang, whether it's the bre bloods or Crips, because if you don't, then you're probably gonna get touched to some degree.
This is why if you look at someone like Chris Brown, etc.
Right, a lot of these subs that live in LA, they typically have associates um or representatives of these gangs, and that's kind of how you keep peace.
It's it's very uh it's a very different atmosphere out there.
Now, are there sets of bloods and crips that get along with each other, etc.?
Yes, there are.
Um, but uh you know, for decades there's been a gang war out there in the in the West Coast between uh the Bloods and Crips, and there's different sets, etc.
And you got subsets, you know, you got Hoovers and all this other crap.
And you know, maybe I'll do an episode for you guys on gang culture in LA in general, but the main thing I want to put out there is that Los Angeles is absolutely run by gangs.
It's so widespread and prevalent that even celebrities are involved with them to a degree, not necessarily from a I'm a member of the gang, but more along the lines of if you aren't associated with somebody who has a tie to the street, you are more than likely gonna be a victim of many, many crimes.
Okay, um, and that's kind of how it works in the hip hop industry.
So in this case, um you got a set of bloods and you got a set of crips that didn't necessarily get along with each other um on the streets, okay.
And uh and he's gonna kind of go into the events that transpired prior to that led to this shooting.
Let's keep going.
Was the leader and shot caller of the South Side, Compton Cripps.
And both of these gangs operated out of the Southern California area of Compton.
On the ninth of September 7th of 1996, Tupac Shakur, along with Sug Knight and members of their entourage, which include members of Mob Hyrule, came to Vegas to attend the Mike Tyson fight at the MJM Grand Garden Arena.
Pause real quick.
Members of the South Real fast.
Um you guys are young and might not know this, but in the nineties, boxing was it, okay.
Like, you guys look at like something like a Floyd Mayweather fight, etc.
Um, think of that times 20.
Okay.
Um boxing was really the only widespread combat sport that was widely televised and widely viewed by people.
This is before MMA, this is before, you know, the explosion of um UFC.
This boxing was it.
And then back then, Mike Tyson was the man.
So any Mike Tyson fight, millions of people were watching all around the world.
Okay, so um it wasn't unfamiliar, sorry, it wasn't strange to have A-less celebrities ringside at Mike Tyson fights or boxing fights in general, because boxing was it back then, guys.
Any of my older people out here, you guys can, you know, testify to this.
Um, it was a big deal.
Um, it's the equivalent, like, you know, you guys look now at like maybe you know, UFC where you got like a um, you know, who's a big UFC fighter, goddammit, um John Jones.
Like John Jones or something like that, where everyone is buying it on pay-per-view and they're showing up and you see celebs In the front row, you know, you got Joe Joe Rogan commentating or whatever may be.
Take that times 20 back in the 90s for boxing, especially with Mike Tyson.
It was huge, man.
So um, so everybody was there.
Let's get back to it.
Outside content Crips, which included Dwayne Davis, along with his nephew Orlando Anderson, were also in attendance at the same event.
As both were leaving the fight, members of Death Row Records spotted Orlando Anderson near an elevator bay bank pause inside the MGM.
And at that time, three Douglas made a good comment.
He said messy is a good comparison.
Yeah.
I I would say Mike Tyson was like messy back then in the 90s, bro.
Like worldwide, what like everybody knew him, everybody was watching unboxing.
And then the other reason too why people love Mike Tyson was because he was an entertaining fighter.
He would literally go in there.
You knew you were gonna get a knockout.
He wasn't gonna go there and like box defensively and you know win off points.
Nah, man.
He was gonna fucking you know use his little peek-aboo method, like boom, boom boom, and then bam, let knock you out.
So um, and that was a style that was relatively unstoppable at the time in the 90s.
So people loved Mike Tyson because he was a um if we're gonna talk boxing here real quick, he was a fantastic example of um fantastic footwork with strength, agility, and power.
And on top of that, he fought a lot of fighters that were bigger than him.
Mike Tyson was like only 5'10, 5'11, but his boxing style, no one can really stop it because he would aggressively pursue you, right?
Using uh something called the peekaboo method, where he would be slipping, he'd keep his gloves up like this, and he'd go like this, right?
He'd slip one side, then another side, as he's approaching you, so you're throwing jabs and punches, he's ducking it like this, and then next thing you know, he sidesteps and then bang and then bang, and you're fucking like done.
You know, he would hit you with like a like a three-piece or whatever, and you would just you'd you'd get knocked down or you'd get severely injured, and he was just beating the shit out of people, and that's what people really loved back then.
Um it was like very entertaining uh fighting because Mike was extremely aggressive.
I mean, uh, yeah, man, one of the best for sure.
If you watch his his fights, one of the best combination uh box.
I I mean I'd put him up there with you know with Ali.
I think I honestly I I like watching him more than Ali.
Um and I think he was more and way more entertaining than Floyd as well.
Um, even though Floyd is is a great boxer, but I don't want to make this a discussion on boxing only, but sorry, you had something like that.
Yeah, what was his downfall like Mike Tyson?
Yeah, he had a like a big fight with somebody.
Uh if he he fucked us.
I'll uh do a stupid shit outside the ring, fucked him up, getting arrested, you know.
Um drug use, I think he was doing drugs.
Uh he he just kind of like lost that hunger once he got really um good, you know, and and that that that messed him up.
Like uh fame, the status.
The fame and the status came in and hurt him.
But when he first came in, you know, he was a hungry boxer from New York, and he was just like aggressive.
And the thing too is that like he didn't just want to box, he'd like he was really trying to kill you.
You know, he probably would have been a great MMA fighter.
But yeah, that's that's the thing that people really couldn't stop, was that he was really good defensively.
Um he was really strong, he was really fast, and he had amazing footwork.
Like you'd used to do these like shuffles where he'd be in front of you, like you'd be good, he'd be coming up to you, right?
Like doing this shit, and you can't hit him, and then he hits you, hits you again, and then next thing you know, you're you try to throw another uh punch to get back at him, and the dude does a quick shuffle and then he hits you from the side while you're still trying to throw a punch.
So that's what made him so dangerous, is that he was strong, fast, and you couldn't really hit him.
Um and he was using a style that not many people used, uh, which which is it's called the the peekaboo, which is basically you take your gloves, right?
I don't know if y'all ninjas want me to describe this shit to you.
You guys really want me to give me ones in the chat.
If not, we'll get back to the documentary.
Let's see what they say.
Someone already super chatted about winning a demonstration.
They want a demonstration?
All right.
You know what?
Fuck it.
I'll do it for y'all ninjas right now, man.
Domonko.
Oh my god, what his head is.
Yeah, because I gotta do it.
I'm gonna have to get up to show this shit.
So are you a bunch of ones?
Okay.
Alright.
Oh shit.
So Artie bunch of ones.
Yep.
Now, of course, this isn't gonna be.
No.
I'm dead.
Uh and you as a punching bag.
You guys mean really hating women here, huh?
Damn.
So this is uh 15.
Well, it's in.
Got it.
Widen this one.
Hit one for me, Bills.
So this is why Tyson was so entertaining.
So I'm not gonna do it a hundred percent justice, but basically this is what he would do, okay?
He would come in, right?
Gloves up like this, right?
And he would gloves up like this, so you got your your your your gloves, right?
Protecting your face, but it's right under your eyes so you can see what's going on.
And he'd progress towards you and he'd slip this way, right?
So you throw a jab, he's blocking it.
Then you throw another punch, and you come this way and you slip again.
And then again, and each time that he's stepping, guys, each time that he's stepping, you're loading that that foot, right?
So that you can throw a power shot.
So he would come in.
So could you imagine, like, right?
Somebody coming at you like this.
I'll do it from from like this.
You got fucking Mike Tyson coming at you like this, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, right?
And you're like throwing jabs and shit, and he's ducking him.
He's he's fucking weaving, blah blah blah.
And then next thing you know, he go bomb bomb, and then you would try to like do something.
He slip this way, and then he comes this way, and then bang, bang again.
And you're done, bro.
You're fucking done.
So um, and he and he would hit you hard as fuck.
And Mike Tyson had huge legs, guys.
So and and with boxing, the power comes from your legs.
So he's coming in, right?
Again, he's coming in, boom, boom, boom, right?
And then each leg is loaded, so when he hits you, he's violently twisting, and then bum like that.
You're getting knocked out, man.
Because he's using his legs and he's using the torque from his uh trunk, twisting and hitting you.
So that's why Mike Tyson was so exciting.
And shout out to Mike Tyson.
He appears in one of my favorite movies.
They hung over.
Oh yeah.
He had the fucking uh so one of the actors screen that hula you said.
So uh to Mike Tyson.
I'm gonna try to get him on the show, god damn it.
I'm gonna really work to get him on the show, guys.
But um, but that's a very watered down version of the Piku Boo method.
It was it was really good because it would protect your your body, right?
He's the elbow, the arms are tight to the body to protect your uh torso, and then you protect your head with the gloves in front of you, and you're just slipping, and then bang get in close and then just fuck his ass up.
And he was convicted.
Yeah, of grape.
Which probably was a lie, but accusations are not all right.
Let's go back to the to the thing.
I knew he was gonna like that sound bite.
Oh, hold on.
You want to do some rats?
What was that?
Want to do some rumble rats and chat?
Uh we'll go back to the to what we were um watching the the press conference.
But that's why everyone liked Mike Tyson, guys.
They began to kick and punch him near that elevator bank.
I'll now show you hotel security footage, as many of you have already seen related to this incident.
And on this incident, you will see Tupac Shakura who's wearing hit a shiny satiny shirt along with Marion Shig Knight, who's a large man in a brown suit, punching and kicking Orlando Anderson.
Following this incident, you'll see hotel security intervene, and then they will leave the fight.
That's lame.
Little did anyone know that it is this incident right here on this pause.
We got you, ninjas.
Yo, could you could we click the uh the um search on the side?
Uh uh Tupac uh Orlando Anderson thing, and then we'll see that.
So you guys can see the that's like a very good um quality.
The one that we watch in the documentary.
Yeah, it was pretty shitty, but we're we're yeah, we'll I want y'all to see this because this is actually uh no, don't do TMZ, fuck them.
Um they're losers too, because they'll sit there and they'll copyright you like even though it's not even their shit.
It's fine.
Find it on the side, uh, Bills, while we while we keep watching this.
To the retaliatory shooting and death at Tupac Shakurt.
Following this incident, Tupac and Shug Knight both left the MGM to make their way to a post-fight party, which was to occur at a local nightclub.
At the same time, word it spread amongst members of the Southside Compton Crips of what it occurred inside the MGM, and then that's when Dwayne Davis began to devise a plan to obtain a firearm and retaliate against Shug Knight and Mr. Shakur for what occurred inside the hotel against Mr. Anderson.
Pause after Davis obtained a gun.
And I have evidence of that that we're gonna play for y'all during this podcast, okay, guys, from his own words, by the way.
So get like the goddamn video.
Because we got something special that we're gonna play for you guys a little bit later.
Um let's go ahead and go back into it.
And guys, do me a favor, like the goddamn video.
We got I think uh a little over 1,000 of you guys watching here on YouTube, and then we got another one or two thousand of y'all, I think two thousand watching on Rumble.
So, guys, like the video, open if you're watching on Rumble, no problem.
Obviously, Rumble has better quality anyway.
Just open up oh, almost three thousand on Rumble, sorry.
Um, open up another tab, watch us on YouTube as well, guys, so that we can get back up in the algo on uh YouTube.
Because as you guys know, we watch we we stream on YouTube and on Rumble, so that splits the audience, it doesn't help us hit the algo as hard as we need to on YouTube, so for discovery purposes.
So if you guys really want to support, you don't have to donate a dollar to the show.
Open up another tab, watch us on YouTube, watch us on Rumble as well, and keep just keep the tab open so we can keep the viewers up, and then we can go ahead and have more people find this content.
Let's quickly in the back is was the last picture of Tupac.
Yes, yes.
The last one.
Yes, this was the yeah, and a random guy snapped it too.
Yeah, uh, right as they were pulling out.
Uh let's get back.
And that next to him.
He entered into a white Cadillac along with Terrence Brown, DeAndre Smith, and Orlando Anderson.
Based on our investigation, this is where we know they were seated.
At some point, as they were in the white Cadillac, Mr. Davis took the gun that he had obtained and provided it to the passengers in the rear seat of the vehicle.
As they were both both as they were driving west on Flamingo Road near Coval, they located the BMW, which was driven by Shug Knight and then passion.
Um so go go back real quick, because that diagram is just go like hit the arrow just as like a one second back, like the left arrow.
Yep.
So y'all can see who's in the car, right?
And uh all these guys are deceased, but you got Keefe Keefe B, KFB, whatever, he's in a front passenger seat, right?
So he knows what's going on, you can see everything that's going on.
And then go tab right real quick.
And can we pull that uh that um uh that intersection up on Google Maps, by the way, Bills on the side?
We keep playing the road uh Flamingo and Coval Lane out there in Vegas.
You could pull it up on the side while we uh while we do this.
Keep going, keep playing though.
She was Tupac Shakorp.
And as they turn around, they pulled up near the pasture side of that vehicle and immediately began shooting at Mr. Knight and Mr. Shakur.
Following that shooting, the white Cadillac fled the area southbound on Koval.
And as our after officers arrived on scene, Tupac was later transported to the University of Medical Center where he's treated medically and died approximately six days later on September 13th.
My homicide section handled this investigation from its onset and for a short amount of time.
And within a short amount of time, what we knew is that we were working at a gang investigation where our victims, our witnesses, and our suspects were all from Southern California and not local to Las Vegas.
Pause.
Within the real fast, uh uh, and and I gotta give Las Vegas um police department credit on this.
So you have a gang investigation, right?
That automatically is gonna make it a pain in the ass because getting witnesses is gonna be tough.
People are gonna want to testify, people are gonna want to cooperate because of the gang culture, right?
That's number one.
The only time people will cooperate in a gang case is you got really hard charges against them, and they might cooperate at that point.
A lot of guys don't break, right?
A lot of people snitch, but a lot of people also don't break.
We only know about the snitches.
We don't know about all the guys that actually sit there and do their time.
So that's number one.
Number two, you got individuals that don't live in your jurisdiction.
They live in Los Angeles.
We've talked about this before, guys, on this podcast.
Um Las Vegas is the um the playground for people from Los Angeles, okay?
It's only about three hours apart.
Uh a lot of people make that drive every weekend because to be honest with y'all, Los Angeles nightlife sucks.
It's trash.
So a lot of people go to Vegas because everything is open in Vegas.
You could drink longer, the clubs don't close at 2 a.m.
Like they are in California.
The liquor laws are very strict as far as like establishments like if you don't have a hookup with house parties every weekend, you're not gonna have a good time in LA.
So Vegas is where everyone goes from Los Angeles to kind of like blow off some steam.
And then you got a Mike Tyson fight, so I can only imagine how pop uh pop in Vegas was back then.
With LA people.
Exactly, with Los Angeles people.
So your uh homicide department that's working a high profile case on individuals that are involved in gang activity while simultaneously not being in your jurisdiction.
So doing interviews with witnesses of pain in the ass, going out and trying to collect evidence from these people that live in Los Angeles a pain in the ass.
You gotta coordinate with Los Angeles Police Department to enter their jurisdiction to conduct your investigation because that's not your jurisdiction.
You're going to another state, you're going to another um uh uh city.
So it's very cumbersome to do these types of cases as a city agency trying to go ahead and investigate individuals that live in another major city that's in another state.
Yeah.
Okay.
So um, from an investigator perspective, it's a fucking nightmare.
Um I wouldn't be surprised if they didn't have someone over at Los Angeles that worked the case full time alongside them.
And then they probably maybe even brought a Fed in or two to assist them with this because I can only imagine doing an interstate case like this would be a pain in the ass.
And here's another thing, too.
Little tip for y'all.
If you're gonna commit a crime, don't commit it in Las Vegas.
Okay, guys, and I know this from my professional experience.
Um Las Vegas, Metropolitan Police Department is one of the few police departments that will extradite you almost no matter what.
Okay.
What do I mean by this?
Let's say you get like a DUI or you do some dumb shit thinking, oh, everything stays in Vegas.
Woo-hoo-hoo, Sin City, you do some dumb shit, right?
And you get arrested, and then you decide, no what, I'm not gonna go to court.
It is what it is, or you know, you think that you could kind of just get by.
Let's say you get pulled over in Massachusetts, right?
And a warrant comes back because you didn't show up to court in Vegas.
You went out there, you had some fun.
What happens if Vegas stays in Vegas?
I left now.
Woo, I'm safe.
You get pulled over in Massachusetts, right?
For speeding.
They run your name, they see that you got an active warrant out of uh Las Vegas Metropolitan Police Department wants you, right?
They're gonna call them, right?
And they're gonna say, hey, do you want to extradite, right?
Which means they're gonna have to pay the money, go out to Massachusetts and get your dumbass, right?
Most police departments or law enforcement agencies, if it's not a major crime, they're gonna say no and they'll let the guy go.
Right?
They'll just they won't even tell you you have a warrant, they'll be like, all right, get out of here or whatever.
But if they do confirm that the agency wants you, they're gonna arrest you and say, hey, you got a warrant, blah, blah, blah, and they'll book you and they'll take you to the department, and then the agency that wants you is gonna show up and pick you up.
But obviously that's gonna be costly if they're if you're or you're cross-country, whatever.
Las Vegas police department is one of those agencies that they will come and get you no matter what.
Dumb the moment.
Little fun fact for y'all.
Las Vegas is one of the few city police departments where if you do some dumb shit in Vegas and they got a warrant for you, they will come back and get you, even if it's for some dumbass crime that you did while you were there.
They will come and get you.
Oh, yeah.
They extradite most of their time people.
Oh shit.
Yeah, so guys, don't don't um don't commit a crime in Vegas and think it's sweet, bro.
They're gonna come after you.
That shit is not staying in Vegas.
That's why like people talk shit because uh with Las Vegas and this Tupac thing, it's this this Tupac murder, just so y'all know from a law enforcement uh law enforcer perspective, and I know this just from being on the job, even at the Fed level.
This murder of of Tupac and it being unsolved was a black eye for Las Vegas for decades, guys.
They used to make fun of Vegas saying, like, oh y'all can't even find a murderer, we know it's Orlando, you got this guy, Keefey going on fucking interviews with Vlad talking about it.
Why aren't y'all arrested him?
Blah, blah, blah, blah, blah.
Right?
So this was very bad from a public perception uh for Las Vegas for a very long time.
And then you guys also know the Las Vegas shooter that we covered on this podcast a couple weeks back.
You had the Las Vegas shooting, you had um this guy, and for any of you guys that have ever been to Las Vegas, right?
I want you guys to really think about this.
You don't see the police that much on a strip.
Have y'all thought about that?
Mo, I know me and you talked about this and you didn't notice until I mentioned it.
I didn't know you really don't see the police like that on the strip.
We talked about it in the industry.
When we were there, like you might see them like at a certain casino, like in one area, and they'll kind of just stand there, but you're really not gonna see cars patrolling the strip like that.
You're not gonna see them walking around like other major cities, like New York City, for example, you're gonna see cops everywhere.
They're walking around Times Square, you're gonna see see units everywhere.
There's a lot of here, too.
Here at Miami, you're gonna see the a good amount of them.
But in Las Vegas, on the strip, especially, you don't see the police that much.
And I think they do that on purpose to create this atmosphere where it's like the cops aren't around, have fun, blah, blah, blah.
They call it Sin City, right?
But with that said, right, if you commit a crime over there and they arrest you and you don't show up for court or you do some other dumb shit, they will absolutely come after you if you're you get caught in Wyoming or some other shit.
Whereas most other city departments would be like, I'm we're not gonna spend the money to go get this nigga for a DUI.
They're they're coming.
They got time today.
So don't commit a crime in Vegas, guys.
Yeah, I got time.
Yeah, they're gonna come, bro.
They're absolutely gonna come because they want to set a message out there that if you're gonna come to Vegas and commit crimes, we will come after you.
Which is, you know, I gotta give them their their flowers here.
That's why they were relentless on this Tupac case.
It was a black eye for the agency, it was a black eye for them in general.
Um, and they want to send that message home that if you do something in Vegas, we're gonna come after you.
So I gotta give them credit because commit doing a homicide investigation that spans interstate to another major city that might not take the crime as seriously as you did, by the way, because LAPD did not take it as seriously as Las Vegas did because they got so much gang murders.
Um is a pretty big feat.
Yeah, it took them damn near 30 years to do it, but you know, doing an investigation like that is very tough.
Yeah.
Damn near 30 years.
This whole thing.
Because this investigation is uh probably wasn't closed like at all, but what triggered them to keep investigating.
It's 2018.
2018, Keefe being a dumbass and talking.
Oh that's what that's what got them back back on it.
And they're gonna talk about this here in the president.
He mentioned it subtly, but we'll keep going.
Let's keep going.
But yeah, I just wanted to share that little nugget of knowledge with you guys that you wouldn't really know unless you work in law enforcement.
Las Vegas PD does not play around.
So don't commit a crime in Vegas, guys.
Be careful, don't be idiots.
Just because the police aren't around doesn't mean that they're not gonna come after you if you do some dumb shit.
Uh let's hit play.
A few months of the investigation, our detectives knew most of the information I just briefed you on.
However, we never had the necessary evidence to bring this case forward and present it for criminal charges.
As time went on, this case had been reviewed multiple times by different investigators assigned to my section, but it wasn't until 2018 that this case was reinvigorated as additional information came to light related to this homicide.
Specifically, Dwayne Davis's own admissions to his involvement in this homicide investigation that he provided for numerous different media outlets.
In our section, we knew at this time that this was likely our last time to take a run at this case to successfully solve this case and bring forth a criminal charge.
It was at that time that this case was assigned to Cliff Mogg.
A detective within my homicide section.
And over the last five years, this my section worked closely, hand in hand with the Clark County District Attorney's Office and followed a systematic investigative plan over the last five years.
We've conducted countless interviews and corroborated numerous facts that were not only consistent with the crime scene on the night of the incident, but also corroborated and were consistent with the sequence of events that night.
This ultimately led to us procuring a search warrant, which was executed at Mr. Davis' residence in Henderson, Nevada.
And following the execution of that search warrant, in close coordination with district attorney's office, this case was presented to the grand jury, which ultimately led to Davis being indicted on charges of murder.
But Paul, sorry.
Before I hand it off to the district attorney, just so you guys know, they went to the grand jury about four times to get this thing fully out.
They had that many witnesses, and they really like, you know, went through the the whole uh rigor of getting this thing indicted.
I know a lot of you guys are wondering, like, yo, what the fuck?
If he's going on media outlets, etc., why didn't they indict sooner?
Well, number one, what they're referring to, guys, is he went on Vlad TV and did an interview, and he also uh released a book, okay, which we got the book here for y'all.
We're actually gonna play it for y'all on Audible, and uh we're gonna go through how this guy actually self-snitched on himself.
But he did an interview on Vlad and the book, which exposed a lot of details to about this murder, right?
Now, with that said, guys, right, even if someone confesses to a crime or talks about a crime, right, and being potentially involved in a crime in a book on media outlets, etc., you still have to do your due diligence and make sure that their story lines up with the physical evidence that you actually have, okay?
Because you guys gotta remember it's not a crime to clout chase, just keep it a million.
A lot of people will take credit for and or implicate themselves in criminal activity for the notoriety, the publicity, and eventually the money that comes from being involved in the crime, okay?
So if someone goes out and says, Oh, I committed this crime, right?
And they say it in music or they say in an interview or whatever else like that, that's not enough for them to go in and say that's a confession.
It needs to line up with the physical evidence because they can always make the defense.
Well, I didn't really do it.
That's freedom of speech.
I was just doing that from an entertainment perspective.
I didn't really do it.
So you need to line it up with the physical evidence.
And that's why they had to do their due diligence and be like, okay, what did he say in the interviews?
Combine that with what's the physical evidence that we got, and then do we have enough with those two things married up to establish probable cause to arrest this individual, right?
That's why they had to gather the grand jury multiple times to go ahead and get the indictment.
And real quick, because I know some of you guys are new viewers, what the hell is a grand jury?
What the hell's an indictment?
A grand jury, guys, is a group of your peers that are organized and come in and sit and listen to cases, okay?
The investigator and the prosecutor Walk into the room.
I've testified in grand jury hundreds of times, and you present your case.
Hey, this is what it is.
These are this is, you know, I'm the investigator.
I'll present my case.
If I have witnesses in the case, I'll have them come in and they'll testify, etc.
And then whether it's one grand jury session, two grand jury sessions, three, four, five, whatever it may be, they hear out all the evidence, and we establish something called probable cause.
And then if they feel they'll after we're done presenting our case, the grand jury deliberates, and then they decide if they're gonna do something called a true bill of indictment.
And a true bill of indictment, guys, is nothing more than a formal charge, you know, charging you with a crime.
So that's what probable cause is.
Not to be confused with beyond a reasonable doubt.
So if I'm gonna physically show this for y'all, you got probable cause right here, right?
You probably did it.
Okay?
We can keep it simple.
And then you got beyond a reasonable doubt.
That's all the way up here.
Okay.
So beyond a reasonable doubt is the standard that they need to get to to prove you guilty in a trial.
But probable cause is down here.
This is all they need to arrest you.
Okay?
Now, more than likely, if they establish probable cause, they're probably prepared to go to trial and get you beyond a reasonable doubt.
But, and this is the big one.
When they go to the grand jury and they present their case, they're only gonna present enough evidence to get here.
Probable cause.
Okay?
So I give you an example.
Let's say they say, all right, um, we know that he was a shooter because we found showcasings and we got DNA.
Okay, that's enough.
Probable cause.
But what they're not saying is we got five witnesses that saw it.
We have CCTV footage, blah, blah, blah.
Right?
That's what they're saving for the trial.
All right.
So a lot of the times, what the prosecutor and what the investigators will do as a strategy is they'll provide enough information to reach the bare minimum of probable cause, and then when they go to trial and then they do discovery, that's when they give the defense all the information.
And then that's when they're like, oh crap, we don't we can't win this.
Like what the fuck?
Because then that get then they get everything.
All right.
And that's the issue with the Y and W. Melly case, because they didn't turn everything over like they were supposed to, and that guy, they got hit with Brady because you're supposed to turn over information that might be favorable to the defense, and that's where they fucked up.
So you're supposed to turn over evidence against them and evidence that might even exonerate them from a prosecutorial standpoint.
And if you don't do so, that's considered a lack of ethics.
That's what the Y and W. Melly case is fucking up with, and we'll cover that in way more detail later on.
But my point is is that, and you see, and you guys have seen this when we do our show when we read the criminal complaint affidavits.
They put in there, this affidavit is written solely for the purpose of establishing probable cause, and not all the facts in the case known to me are in this affidavit.
They say that in almost every affidavit, it's like boilerplate language to put in there.
I'm just giving y'all a probable cause.
This is not every single fact known to me in the case.
Um, that's gonna be coming later, and that will come out during trial or in the discovery process.
All right, guys.
Give me uh ones in the chat.
That makes sense, and you guys now understand the difference between probable cause and beyond a reasonable doubt, what a grand jury is.
Um we have explained it.
Etc.
We've explained it a few times, but I know for a lot of people, you know, it gets conf it can get confusing.
People confuse the grand jury all the time with a jury trial, and that's not the same thing whatsoever.
So give me ones in the chat that makes sense, and y'all learn something.
Awesome, awesome.
Rumble and YouTube chat's looking good.
Okay.
Awesome, awesome, awesome.
Good, good, good.
All right, let's uh let's keep going.
But yeah, they they convened the grand jury, just so you guys know about four times for this investigate for this case.
Uh throughout the summer.
I would be remiss if I didn't thank Detective Mogg and all the other detectives that were not only assigned this case or reviewed this case, but all the other detectives from other agencies that assisted us in this investigation.
They know who they are, and thank you very much for all the assistance you provided.
It does not go in notice.
And lastly, one of the most important things in my opinion is we need to make this be a reminder that the charge of murder does not have a statute limitations.
This agency has been and is invested in solving our cold case homicides so that we can bring closure to those families and justice for those victims.
Um, Bills, I have the um this search warrant here that it's gonna seal the affidavit for these guy.
Do you want to read it?
Oh, you have the search warrant for that they used, yeah.
Oh shit.
Um give it to um give it to send it to me on Telegram or something, then I'll send it to them.
Good.
Keep going though.
I was gonna say um just send me send it to me.
Yeah.
Okay.
All right, keep going, Bills.
Angie find out certified.
And with that, I will turn it over to the Clark County District Attorney, Steve Wolson.
Pause.
Ron B. X said, yo, four grand juries is people weren't convinced that he did the crime.
No, they had that many witnesses, my friend.
They had to they had to bring out all the different witnesses to to put to bring their case together.
So that's not uncommon, actually, to convene the grand jury multiple times to uh present all the facts.
And you're talking about a murder that happened almost 30 years ago, high profile, etc.
They're gonna definitely make sure their T's are crossed and their eyes are dotted, my friend.
So um, four grand juries uh to um establish wobble cause actually isn't that that far fetched.
Let's keep going.
Oh, now this is the I appreciate it from the doctor's.
I am the Las Vegas Clark County District Attorney Steve Wolfson.
It has often been said justice delayed is justice denied.
It's a quote we hear often and for many, many years when talking about our legal system.
But not in this case.
Today, justice will be served in the murder of Tupac Shakur.
I'd like to acknowledge the relentless work of the many Las Vegas Metropolitan Police Department homicide detectives.
We've mentioned Detective Cliff Mogg many times, and we can't mention his name enough.
He is the detective, along with his colleagues that brought this case here today to you.
A Clark County grand jury has indicted Dwayne Keith Davis with one count of open murder with use of a deadly weapon with a gang enhancement.
Davis will appear in court in the next few days or so for a hearing to determine his custody status and to set a jury trial date.
This grand jury has been receiving evidence for months and has determined there is sufficient evidence to justify the filing of this criminal indictment.
I've assigned two of my top prosecutors, Mark De Giacomo and Banu Pilal to prosecute this case.
Yeah, then I'm messing up.
I know a lot of people have been watching and waiting for this day.
Tupac Shakur is a music legend.
And for a long time, this community and worldwide have been wanting justice for Tupac.
Today we are taking that first step.
Tupac was actually quoted as saying death is not the greatest loss in life.
The greatest loss is what dies inside while still alive, never surrender.
Well, we didn't surrender thanks to the great work of the Las Vegas Metropolitan Police Department under the leadership of Sheriff Kevin.
Bro, you know this DA was bumping some Tupac on the way to this press conference.
He was playing that bitches of a rider as well as he's driving up to this goddamn press conference, bro.
Like I I know for a fact he was like, Yeah, we got him.
Yeah.
And and and again, like I said before, I'm not surprised, guys.
I mean, they're very proud.
I mean, and they should be.
Yes, it took them 27 years to um bring someone in and arrest them, but uh, you know, you got an international superstar like a Tupac who you know released countless albums, is I would consider uh an icon in in hip hop in general.
I would say this is probably the most famous case in all of hip hop history.
Yeah.
Uh yeah, there's gonna be an enormous amount of pressure on the Las Vegas police department to solve this.
Um and I told you guys before how they move when it comes to uh you know going after criminals that commit crimes in their jurisdiction.
They want to send a very heavy message that, yeah, we might not be out on the strip like that, but you're not gonna commit crimes in the city of Las Vegas and get away with it because um they want to go ahead and let people know that you can't just come here and fuck around.
Because a lot of people do that.
They go to Vegas to go like, oh yeah, what happens if Vegas stays in Vegas.
So um they definitely don't want that uh and here's the other reason too why they're tough on crime and they go after people.
Um guys, crime is the fastest way to kill your business.
Okay?
Like, if people don't feel safe, they're not gonna get drunk.
If they don't get drunk, they're not gonna want to spend money in the casino.
They don't want to spend money at the casino.
Guess what?
Economy drops.
And Las Vegas is absolutely dependent upon the casino industry that they have.
Is it changing a bit?
And is Las Vegas kind of moving a bit uh away from that, creating other industries?
Yes, a lot of people are moving to Las Vegas.
I think it's one of the better real estate markets to invest in nowadays.
A lot of people are kind of moving over there to get out of California, no state income taxes, etc.
But at the end of the day, Las Vegas always has been and still is heavily reliant upon their tourists slash casino industry, and the fastest way to kill tourism and to kill uh tourists from coming in and spending money, which is what you want, is crime.
So that is why they're so hard on it and why they go after people even after the fact.
Um let's keep going.
Uh we'll finish this and then we'll uh go through it real quick.
All right.
Kevin McMahill, Lieutenant Johanson, retired Detective Cliff Mogg, I am proud to announce the return of this document.
This is the indictment we've been waiting almost three decades for.
There it is.
It spells out the facts and circumstances and what justifies a Clark County grand jury in returning an indictment.
Justice will be served.
Thank you.
That's a flex for them.
Thank you, Steve.
Um, I just like to say that the Las Vegas Metropolitan Police Department homicide section year over year solves over 90% of the homicides that occur in our jurisdiction.
Damn.
You won't find that anywhere else in the United States.
For those family members that have lost somebody that we haven't solved that case, I want you to know.
Just like in this case, we're not going to give up.
Pause.
I also guys, just so you know, yo.
Ninety percent solve rate is fucking crazy.
That is crazy, bro.
Like that just to put things in perspective for y'all.
Most cities, especially major cities, probably are barely 50%.
Barely.
Most crimes almost never get solved.
The fact that they got a 90% solve rate for murders is wild.
Yeah.
That's a WhatsApp.
Yeah, that's crazy, bro.
Yeah, I gotta give them a young man.
That's actually insane.
I didn't know it was that high.
Um, but again, I'm not surprised because I told y'all before I already knew that how they moved when it came to like going after fugitives and shit.
So I'm not surprised that they have such a high solve rate for for their murders.
But like I told y'all before, the reason why is because they gotta protect their tourist industry, bro.
It also it all comes back to money.
If people are getting killed, crime is being ha ha is happening a lot, etc.
Um, they're they're gonna make sure that they bring that shit down because at the end of the day, they have a very strong incentive to keep the city safe because the city is can is uh dependent upon tourism, tourism is dependent upon safety for successful tourism.
So um that's wild though.
90% solve rate?
I don't I've never seen a police department have it that high, let alone a major city police department.
What's what's the highest you've seen?
Bro, like if you're if you're doing 50, you're pretty good.
50?
Yeah, man.
If you're doing fifty, you're pretty good.
Because think about it, like you got like a major city like New York, LA, etc.
Bro, they're getting that Houston, Dallas, Chicago.
You're getting hundreds, if not thousands of murders a year.
So if you could solve half of them, you're you're doing pretty damn good.
Especially since a lot of these police departments are significantly understaffed.
Well, I have I have here the crime rates in Vegas from a comparison from Las Vegas 2009 and tonight, 2023.
And uh definitely like the biggest um crimes here are aggravated assault and larceny and theft.
That makes sense.
And that's probably I guarantee that's mostly pride from tourists getting in fights and doing dumb shit like that.
I'll have to dig into that.
Yeah.
But the lowest is murder and manslaughter.
Yeah.
The lowest.
So that's the crimes that they less committed.
And those people that are committing the aggravated assault, whatever, that's probably fights at casinos or at clubs or whatever, maybe very much, yeah.
So let's see here.
Um, let's keep going.
They don't have they don't have coaches of vendettas over there in Vegas like that.
They don't have what?
Like coaches of vendettas, like names.
Nah, nah.
Like you got like that, all that bullshit is like in North Vegas or whatever.
You know what I mean?
That's not like by the strip and stuff.
So um, but yeah.
Say to you that as we begin, we're gonna take a couple of questions.
I want you to remember in your questioning that this investigation, subsequent arrest, now indictment is only the beginning of the process.
And we are committed and invested in ensuring a successful prosecution as we move forward.
So with that, we'll take any questions that you might have.
Y'all about to see some ducking and weaving right now.
Uh and so he's asking right now, uh, was anybody from the Shakur family contacted after the family has reached out to my office.
I imagine also to Metro.
We've been in communication with them.
We understand that they are welcoming this news, they are pleased with this news, and they are certainly aware of the return of this indictment.
You anticipate them being at court for arraignment of Mr. David.
I don't think they'll be at the arraignment.
I mean, that's a a relatively short hearing, but I know that they'll be involved.
I know that they'll want to be apprised of what goes on on a frequent basis.
Pause.
I have the indictment here.
The arraignment, guys, is nothing more than your charges being read to you, right?
And then the judge tells you um you have the rights to remain silent, blah, blah, blah.
They tell you what you're being formally charged with, reads your rights, and then you enter in a plea.
Okay.
Um, and you guys might be wondering, well, hold on, Myron, isn't that an initial appearance?
Yes.
The arraignment and the initial appearance are different.
So the initial appearance is when you're arrested in the United States, you have legally between 24 to 72 hours to be Brought in front of a judge to be formally read your charges, right?
At the initial appearance, you know, they bring you in, and like when I was an agent, for example, I'd arrest somebody.
Next day I'm taking them to the judge, right?
He gets the stuff read to him, and then a week or two later, he gets something called an arraignment.
And the only difference between an arraignment and an initial appearance is that at the arraignment you enter in a plea, okay?
Whether it's uh, you know, how do you plead guilty, not guilty, 99% of the time they say not guilty, and then they continue the discovery process as a defense attorney gets more and more of the evidence that comes in.
Because like I told y'all before, when you get indicted or you get charged, it was only on probable cause.
They're giving you just enough information to get the probable cause.
After you've been arrested and the discovery process begins, and remember, discovery guys is nothing more than sharing the evidence between the defense and the prosecution.
The prosecution is giving the defense all the material during the discovery process, and then as the defense gets more and more material, that's when they can go and say, Okay, uh, you're fucked.
We're gonna take a plea deal, which happens 95% plus of the time.
And that's why most cases plead out because they get enough for probable cause, then they actually give everything out for um that they would go to trial with, and then that's when the defense attorney makes the decision to do a plea bargain.
Okay, most cases United States actually go through plea bargain 90% plus because um it's way more expensive and way more dangerous for the defense to go to trial.
Because if you go to trial, right, and you lose, you're probably gonna get the higher end of whatever sentence would have been imposed on you, um, because the charge is gonna be more serious.
But if you take a plea deal, let's say you get arrested for a murder, uh premeditated murder, and you decide, you know what, I want to um cooperate, right?
I want to uh plead dip plea uh plead this down.
They might give you a murder too, they might give you a murder three, depending on how egregious the crime was, and that will give you significantly less time.
Versus if you say, Fuck it, I'm gonna go to trial, they're gonna hit you with everything.
That's kind of what happened with Tory Lanez.
They were gonna give him a uh uh deal for I think some like firearm discharge, right?
It's a lower level felony, might do one or two years in jail, but he would have been a felony uh f a felon, which would fuck up his immigration status.
So he decided to fight it.
Since he fought it, they hit him with the full brunt of the charge, and now he's doing 10 years.
So that is what happens when you don't take a plea deal and go to trial and lose.
Okay.
Um I found a indictment.
Free Tory man.
Uh, yeah, send it to Mo.
And we'll go we'll skim through it after this.
Uh, let's go back uh with the questioning uh on the press conference.
Your curiosity again are not you back into the case.
Jason, what answer?
We're not gonna talk about any particular statements, but maybe he can address that quote.
What I'll say is there's lots that's gonna come out when it comes to life for trial, but he he provides his own uh series of the case.
You said it right there.
A lot's gonna come out during trial.
With the evidence that we have on the scene that we've obtained through our investigation.
I'll leave it at that.
Pause service of the warrant in July.
Translation.
A lot of the statements that Keith made during interviews lines up with the physical evidence they have.
Let's go back to it.
If you didn't know before, yeah, that's a good question.
What I'll say about the search warrant that we did in July that we obtained information or evidence during that execution that search warrant that corroborated information obtained through our investigation, and I'll leave it at that until we go to trial.
Yeah.
So they don't even want to say what they got in the search warrant.
Let's pull out that search warrant real quick, if we can.
Um we'll skip through this, guys, because obviously we're not gonna read the whole document.
Yeah.
Uh so let me go ahead.
And actually, this is the first time I've looked at this search warrant, guys.
Shout out to Angie for finding this.
Um, oh, they sealed it.
Okay, I'm not surprised.
Upon the expart application of detective Clifford Mogg, a commission officer with the Las Vegas Metropolitan Police Department and Af yent, by the way, uh Clifford Mog guys was the lead detective on this investigation.
Um, it is here by order that have David and supported the attached search warrant be sealed pending further order.
Okay, so this is a seal, guys.
So basically what happened is um you can ask a seal order for your for your warrant, right?
We have this at the federal level too.
Um, when you have a sensitive investigation like this and you don't want shit getting out there, you after you exit uh once you get the search warrant, etc., you can go ahead and get it sealed so that people can't go ahead and look it up in the database.
Let's keep going here.
And they did this on the 15th day of July 2023.
Let's keep going.
Okay, the state of this is a search warrant, DeAndre Keith Davis.
Um, the state of Nevada to any peace officer.
So this is them telling this is the actual search warrant.
Um, and then it puts here what they're trying to search.
Computers say include but not limited to laptops, tablets, desktops, electronic stores devices, um, notes, writing ledgers, uh, YouTube episodes.
Yeah, see what we did here.
Oh shit.
Um, photos, movies, CDs, writing or other documentation showing Dwayne Keith Davis, aka K V D involvement in the Southside Compton Crib seller telephone belonging to Dwayne Davis, copies of the book Compton Street Legend.
Stupid.
Um, and articles of personal property, right?
So there's you can see here, guys, when you do a search warrant, you gotta show what you're trying what you're gonna search, what you're intending to search, and what you intend to find.
You have to put all that, okay?
So let's keep going.
Um, so keep going.
Um boom.
That's the judge.
Jacqueline M. Bluth was the district judge that signed this.
Keep going.
Okay, this is the return.
Okay, this is what they took from his house.
Okay.
This is the return.
And this was executed on July 17, 2023.
So a few months ago.
Okay, so a few months ago.
So number one, they took a pokeball USB drive.
Number two, a black iPhone and a black case.
Number three, a gray iPad with a broken screen, white iPad with a broken screen again, a gold iPad, a purple Toshiba laptop, a great Toshiba laptop, a black Toshiba hard drive, um, gray sky devices, um, black HP laptop with charger.
Uh, let's see here.
Black HP desktop.
Damn, then they can everything.
Yeah, they go.
40 caliber cartridges, copy of the book, Compton Street Legends, copy of the Vibe magazine on Tupac, Purporter Marijuana, um, Blackdell desktop, or laptop, sorry, um, documentary documents, two black tubs containing photographs, uh, okay, so some old school photographs.
Let's see here, what else we got?
That's it.
Okay, so that's what they got.
Do they have the affidavit in here?
No, that's all.
Nah, they don't, right?
They just have the this the search warrant.
What they okay, they just had the actual search warrant, not the affidavit in support of the search warrant.
I'm intrigued to look at the affidavit for probable cause for this search warrant, how they got the probable cause of search's house.
Because if they got the probable cause of searchers house, that means more than likely they had a they had an informant, that informant that went inside the house and gave them this information so that they were able to justify going in there.
The fact that they took a Pokeball fucking USB drive, like, well, come on, man.
I guess they thought you got to catch them all.
Anyway, uh I said no, the indictment.
Okay, there it is.
And this is the indictment, guys.
Um Dwayne Keith Davis, aka Keith D defendant.
Um and this is just this is the indictment.
I don't know if they're gonna go into the facts of the investigation here.
Let's go down, scroll through.
Let's see here.
Scroll through.
Oh, okay.
So it's just um all right, we can read through this real quick.
Let's fly through this.
Okay.
The defendant, uh, the above-named defendant, um, Dwayne Keith Davis, accused by the Clark County grand jury of the crimes of murder with use of a deadly weapon with the intention with the intent to promote further or assist criminal gang, category A felony, committed at and within the county of Clark, State of Nevada, honorable seventh day of November, uh September 1996, as follows.
Did willfully unlawfully feloniously and knowingly for the benefit of at the direction of or in affiliation with a criminal gang to wit, Southside Compton Crips, which had as one of its common activities engaging in felonious criminal activities other than the conduct uh which constitutes pri the primary offenses,
offense, and the defendant with specific intent to promote further or assist the activities of the Southside Crips gang with malice afterthought, kill Tupac Marshall court, a human being with use of a deadly weapon to wit, a firearm by shooting at and or into the body of the said Tupac Amarsha court and killing,
having been willful, deliberate, and premeditated, the defendant being criminally liable under one or more of the following principles of criminal liability to wit by indoor by directly committing this crime and or two by aiding or abetting in the commission of this crime with intent that this crime be committed by counseling,
encouraging, hiring, commanding, inducing, and or otherwise procuring the um other commit the other to commit the crime to wit, defendant obtaining a firearm for the purpose of seeking retribution against Tupac and Marshall Core and or Marion Knight, aka Shook, and while in a vehicle with Terrence Brown,
aka Bubble Up and or DeAndre Smith, aka Big Dre, and or Orlando Anderson, aka Baby Lane, did provide said pie firearm to DeAndre Smith, aka Big Dre, andor Orlando Anderson, aka Baby Lane, with the intent that said co-conspirators commit said crime and or three pursuit to a conspiracy to commit this crime with the intent that this crime be committed.
Defendant andor Orlando Anderson, aka Baby Lane, and or DeAndre Smith, aka Big Dre, and or Terrence Brown, aka bubble up, adding or abetting and or conspiracy by acting and concert throughout.
God damn, that is the longest sentence I ever read, niggas.
Uh and you can see here that this was signed uh dated uh on the twenty eighth of September 2023.
And the reason why it's read so broadly like that, guys, is because they don't actually know who the real trigger man was.
They just speculate, and that's why all four individuals, you know, if they were alive today, all four of them would have been hit with this crime, by the way.
Just so y'all know.
Um it's just that only one of them is here.
So that is why they had to write it broadly like that, because they don't know who the actual trigger man is.
And you guys can see from the way that they were sitting in the vehicle.
Um the shots came from the back of the vehicle, but they're not sure if it was Orlando that did the shots or the other guy, I think it was DeAndre.
Um, real quick, do we have the Google map of where the shooting happened?
Bill uh Bills?
Yeah, I got it.
Let's pull that up, man.
We're gonna put the number one fucking true crime channel on YouTube, guys.
All right, man.
Subscribe to the channel if you haven't already.
Like the video, so uh and uh bro, this is gonna be the best breakdown of this um situation on YouTube by far.
We're giving y'all all the sauce.
And on top of that, we even got the book where he sells sniffs.
Dumb the monk.
Y'all are gonna hear it with his own words.
What went down that night, and we're gonna play it for y'all.
Hopefully, we don't get hit with a copyright.
Um, so this is it, Bills.
Yep.
This is a the okay, so let's hit that street view real fast.
So this is what it looks like, guys, today it looks like, right?
Is this uh what year was this?
Okay, just okay, so December of 2022.
So, yeah, about a year ago.
Um so this is the the intersection where it happened.
So like it ha the shooting happened at that intersection, and then they just went south on Cobalt, right?
They ran away and they just went they fled down.
Okay.
So this is what it looks like now.
It probably would have been way different.
Um they're wearing the traffic light, right?
Yeah.
Yep.
The traffic light, and the this is where the shooting went down.
Granted, I guarantee you probably looked a lot different back in 1996, but you guys get the idea.
A bunch of old cars back then.
Yeah, and a lot less buildings.
A lot, probably less buildings, yeah, because Las Vegas was not as developed back then as it is now.
It's still developing now.
Yeah, yeah.
Vegas is guys, if you go there now, that there's high rises being built, there's apartments being built, the Raiders moved there.
Um I predict in the next five to ten years that uh Vegas will definitely be the next Miami.
I I don't know if it'll I'll go that far and say it's gonna be the next Miami, but it's gonna be They're trying to be.
It's gonna be okay.
So what need Miami is to New York, where a lot of New Yorkers moved here to get away from like high taxes and high cost of living and you know, bureaucratic bullshit from the left, the Democrats.
A lot of people came to Florida for that.
That is what's gonna be for Los Angeles.
Las Vegas is gonna be LA's Miami.
Yeah.
Just like uh Miami is obviously New York's counterpart.
Yeah, well, I heard LA's trash right now.
Yeah, LA is trash.
I could say that.
Definitely terrible.
Anytime I'm there, I'm just like there do interviews and get the fuck out, man.
It's not safe.
Well, I mean, well, LA especially.
LA especially.
I could stay in Texas.
I'm okay with Texas.
L LA, I'm like, get me the fuck out of here.
I'm done with my interviews, I'm gone.
Uh all right.
What else what else do we got?
Uh let's go back to um the we looked at the indictment, we looked at the search warrant, we know what they took.
Let's go ahead and go back to the press conference real quick, and then we're gonna play some of these interview clips.
Is there anyone else being looked at at this point?
I know a lot of people have passed ways since it's his name, but it's anyone else being one guy.
Is anyone else being looked at is what she's asking?
In this case, the only living suspect related to this investigation is Dwayne Davis.
All other three suspects are deceased.
Thank you.
Uh Nath and Murphy Channel.
Can you talk about the murder charge if he is not the one to lead to uphold the trigger?
Yes, well, under Nevada law, and this is the law in most states in this country.
Um, you can be charged with the crime, whether you're directly involved or whether you're an aider and a better.
We have an aiding and abetting statute, which provides that if you help somebody crime, you can be equally as guilty.
The best example is two guys that agree to commit a bank robbery, and one of them goes into the bank with a gun and actually commits the robbery, and the other guy is the getaway driver.
Never went in the bank, but he assisted the guy that went in the bank.
So he's equally guilty.
That is one of the theories in this case as well.
Do investigators believe that Davis was the only person behind the plan to kill Hupac, or was he one of multiple people who came up with the plan?
I I think The best way to characterize that is Dwayne Davis was the shot caller for this group of individuals that committed this crime, and he orchestrated the plan that was carried out to commit this crime.
Didn't he say how many from the Donovan?
Uh we know that he attained it from a close associate.
Uh, doubt a lot of the actual details of who specifically all that come out of trial, but he attained it from the show.
Oh, don't worry.
We go we got c get it come out tonight.
Pause.
We got the book.
Don't worry.
They don't want to talk about it, but we we got the book for y'all.
We're gonna play it tonight.
Um, the other thing too, guys, just so y'all know, he had the highest rank in the vehicle, if I'm not mistaken.
He was the top guy in that car uh from a gang perspective.
So that's another reason too why he got hit with it, because um a lot of times you guys know they go on hierarchies with the with these gang type investigations.
He was definitely the highest ranking guy in the vehicle at that time.
I have here that he was the ringleader.
Yeah.
Yeah, definitely.
Um okay.
Uh let's pull up those tabs real quick, uh, Bills, because uh we got some more to cover.
Uh okay.
So here's um here's some stuff.
Shout out to Law and Crime again.
We'll play this at 1.5 speed.
Um, you're gonna notice that this guy's really speaks he's a little hard to understand, so let's make sure we hit subtitles, man.
This nigga, man.
This guy's worse than Chris, bro.
I was watching this earlier, and I was like, oh my god, I need um Myron to translate this.
Yeah, man.
He kind of yeah.
Can we increase the quality from 480p?
Or is that just quality bottom?
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
We enhanced now, baby.
Yeah, he's blacking another little bit.
And hit the subtitles.
He was hanging out the window.
Tupac?
Yeah.
What was he doing?
Yeah, half his body out the window.
Yeah.
You know, that Bay Area.
Dwayne, Keefe D. Davis's own words, eyewitnesses and a gang expert, led a grand jury to indict Keefe D for Tupac Shakur's murder after 27 years.
We have testimony from witnesses who told the story of what happened that night.
Thanks for joining us here on Law and Crime.
I'm Anginette Levy.
We are learning more details about what witnesses told a grand jury in Las Vegas as they met to investigate the murder of Tupac Shakur.
That grand jury met four times between July and August.
A number of people testified about Keefy D's involvement in Tupac Shakur's murder.
Others testified about what they saw that night or heard about what happened from those who were involved.
Tupac Shakur was shot on September 7th, 1996 in Las Vegas.
He died six days later on September 13th.
Tupac and Death Row Records CEO Should Knight went to the Mike Tyson fight at the MGM Grand with other people.
Surveillance cameras recorded them at the casino.
Then they encountered Orlando Anderson, a member of the Southside Compton Crips.
Tupac, Should Knight and others jumped Anderson.
Why?
A grand jury witness, Devonta Lee said it was payback.
Yeah, there's Pac right there, guys, in the uh white with the with the um uh with the hat.
He's kicking him while he's on the floor.
And Orlando, just so y'all know, let's pull up that picture again on that Wikipedia, just so they know exactly who we're talking about here.
Orlando is the guy that they attacked.
And the reason why was because Orlando and his people had beat up a death row um associate and took his chain.
So um, and this had happened this had transpired before the Mike Tyson fight.
So Pac's people see Orlando at the MGM and they're like, yo, that dude is here.
So they go, they find him and they beat his ass.
Tupac and a bunch of death row guys just beat his ass because again, they had attacked one of their people and took the chain.
So it was a big guy.
Yeah, it was a bit, yeah, the one of those death roll chains.
So that's what ended up happening, and why Orlando got attacked because his people had beaten someone else.
So as you guys can see here, when it comes to this gang stuff, man, like it's back and forth retaliatory stuff all the time.
They're always exacting revenge on some shit that transpired before.
And, you know, you know, and it's on site a lot of the times with these guys, right?
It doesn't matter if you're in Vegas or whatever, street politics bleeds into wherever you're at.
And like I told y'all before, if you're in Vegas, right, Vegas is the playtime location for all the LA people.
Mike Tyson fight, everyone from LA is gonna be out there, all the celebs, all the top gang members, etc.
There's no doubt about it that you're gonna probably run into an op.
And that's what ended up happening here.
Uh let's uh go ahead and um keep going.
Yo, y'all like these camera angles, man.
Y'all better, man.
Like the video, bro.
Because uh, you know, we're gonna keep giving y'all this high content quality, man.
These are all cinema line cameras, just so you guys know, man.
We go hard in the paint for you guys.
Um and we will not stop.
We will continue to be the best men's podcast, the best true crime channel.
We are the best, goddammit.
All right, so like the goddamn video.
Subscribe to the channel if you haven't already.
Okay, um, if you're watching on Rumble, open up another tab, by the way, please.
And uh like the video on YouTube.
Let's get the engagement up so that this can get found.
If you're watching it on Rumble, you know, shout out to Rumble.
Uh make sure to click watch it on 1920, because that's the highest quality, so you guys get the full power of these cameras uh there.
And uh yeah, let's keep going.
For Anderson and other members of the Southside Compton Crips beating up members of the mob Pyru Bloods in California earlier that month and stealing a death row records chain from this man, Trayvon Lane.
That's a blood and a friend of Should Knight.
Lee said Should Knight gave those chains to people, and that taking that chain was quote, like taking the crown.
The grand jury watched an interview of Keefy D with The Art of Dialogue, where Keefe D said he knew about that incident involving the chain.
Oh I wouldn't wear that.
I wouldn't put that on on it.
So how you know the chains with our saying it?
How you seen it?
Oh, he's at it.
We gave him back on the wall.
Surveillance video shows Orlando Anderson at the MGM brand.
Another witness testified that Anderson wanted to fight Tupac Shakur, but a more sinister plot to shoot Tupac Shakur or Shug Knight unfolded.
The man who took this photo told the grand jurors he snapped it with a camera in his car as he was picking up food.
It's the last photo of Tupac Shakur before the shooting.
Moments later, shots were fired from a white Cadillac.
In that Cadillac, driver Terrence Brown and backseat passengers, DeAndre Big Dre Smith, and Orlando Anderson.
Keefy D was in the front seat.
A witness testified Keefy D was a South Compton Cripps original gangster or OG, a shot caller, who dealt drugs and had a lot of money.
Keepy D recalled the shooting.
Orlando is the shooter, he's the known shooter.
I mean, everybody knows Orlando Anderson was a shooter.
So Drake got gold, he didn't want to do it.
He did go to Orlando and Orlando shot.
Tupac and shooter.
And he did his thing, yeah.
Sure, just ducked his head.
Hold on, man.
Hold on, hold on, bro.
Oh shit!
Oh yeah, he did his thing.
Like, yeah, he did it.
And you guys best believe that that footage, the book, the DJ Vlad interview, all that shit is about to be used as evidence in the trial.
I promise y'all.
He did his thing.
Okay, bro.
He actually translation.
He actually he's actually a compliment what he just did.
Yeah, and by the way, Orlando is the one that we showed y'all before.
Because he's the one that got jumped, so obviously he was the most invested in exacting revenge.
So um anyway.
Let's keep going.
He did his thing.
Oh shit.
He was like, he was going to break down trying to jump in the back seat or something.
Yeah.
What the f look like he was trying to jump in the butt it was the bullets was in his But DeAndre Smith's former roommate told the grand jury it was actually Smith who confessed to shooting Tupac Shakur and Shug Knight.
The roommate said Smith told him that Orlando Anderson simply couldn't reach across him to take the shot.
A rapper in Tupac and Shug's caravan told the grand jury he found Tupac.
And that makes more sense, guys, because Orlando, if you guys know, right?
In the he's so okay, let's pretend me and Angie are in the backseat, right, of that vehicle on that night.
I'm Orlando, she's uh uh DeAndre.
She, right, Tupac is to her left.
So it would have been easier for her to shoot versus me reaching over and doing this shit and then reaching over her and shooting.
Like that that that it's a little awkward and weird, huh?
Yeah, you will shoot me.
Yeah, well, I mean, I w I would obviously get the gun out the window over you, but that's still gonna be awkward position for me.
I'd be damn near have to be on top of you and shoot the gun like this is not stable, it's not a good position to be in.
So I mean, from a logistical perspective, unless they switched seats somehow in the back of the uh uh the vehicle, it would make more sense for DeAndre to shoot the shots versus Orlando reaching over.
Now, granted, you know, he had just gotten his ass whooped by Tupac and his people.
Maybe he was in a fit of rage and he was like, I don't care, I'm gonna go ahead and get this back of blood no matter what.
He just reaches over DeAndre's fat ass and just shoots.
But um, it would be more practical that it would be DeAndre, who's closer to the target vehicle to actually fire the shots.
Right.
I mean, we're a little bit in a semantics here because from a legal perspective, all of them are guilty, all four of them, because they obviously knew what the fuck was going on.
Yeah, they they pulled the pulled the gun out the window.
You the gun cleared the window.
Okay.
So um so yeah, but but i I I would say it probably makes more sense for uh for DeAndre to shoot uh from like a you know, a logistical perspective, etc.
Because the shots were fairly accurate.
Yeah, you know.
Um they missed a few, but they definitely hit a few as well.
Yeah.
Well, Tupac was shot like four times.
Yeah, yeah, they definitely hit him.
Um, okay, let's go back to it.
Talk in the passenger seat of the BMW.
He said, Tupac told him, get on the ground.
They're going to shoot you.
The rapper said Tupac was referring to police who had arrived on the scene.
Crime scene photos from that night.
Show the damage.
Bullet holes riddled the passenger side of the BMW, blood spattered on the car seats.
Forty caliber shell casings in the vehicle and in the street.
One round shattered a windshield.
In the days that followed, a number of shootings erupted in Compton, California in retaliation for the shooting of Tupac Shakur.
A retired Compton police gang expert told the grand jury it was called the ten-day war.
The expert said Southside Compton Crips and the mob Pyru Bloods basically controlled different parts of Compton and were always fighting.
Tupac Shakur died six days after he suffered several gunshot wounds.
When Tupac was killed in Las Vegas, that was a different type of magnitude for the rap world.
Sorry Baker, author of The History of Gangster Rap, has covered rap for thirty years.
It was shocking because a lot of people knew that there was an altercation at the MGM.
A lot of people knew that Tupac had gotten into all these altercations.
And he had been involved in shootouts before.
And it was just disbelief because we had the in particular high profile death of Scott La Rock back in the pause from Boogie Dow Productions, but that was before.
And guys, the other reason too why this was kind of shocking, as you guys know, Tupac had already been shot in New York City, right?
And he survived his his shooting there, and everyone thought, okay, he's gonna be resilient, he'll be fine, no big deal, etc.
Which that shooting in New York is what led to him with the having the beef with big.
But when he actually died, that obviously sent shockwaves throughout, you know, the entire world in the hip hop industry.
And the other thing too I want to let you guys know is that back in the 90s, and Moan Bills, I'd like you guys to touch on this as well, since you guys are actually involved in the music industry and are aware.
In the 90s, hip hop wasn't really considered music.
Okay, guys, it was considered filth, trash, crap.
Right, well, what is this?
These guys are talking about violence and killing each other.
It wasn't like it is now.
It wasn't a mainstream genre.
I mean, to put things in perspective for y'all, in the nineties, hip hop wasn't even a category in the Grammys, guys.
So it was not really acknowledged as a legitimate genre of music until way later.
The whole Grammys and hip hop being recognized um as a formal music genre, that's something that's recent within the last 10 or 15 years.
But I remember as a kid how hip hop wasn't considered real.
It was fake.
So um so guys like Tupac, guys like Snoop Dogg, guys like uh Dr. Dre, Biggie, Nas, Jay-Z, etc.
A lot of these guys were ahead of their time.
Um and were pioneers in the genre to bring it and put it, put it push it out there.
Um what do you what what's your guys' take on it?
Yeah, they kind of made it in mainstream.
Yeah.
Big Mo, what'd you think?
Myron X, he said everything, yeah.
Yeah, right.
Pretty much Ryan's completely right.
Um, Tupac and Biggie were definitely pioneers of getting hip hop to the front face of music.
Um definitely wasn't considered a genre if you're listening to rap.
It was also a big gangster rap era.
It was a lot of um a lot of expression about police brutality and a lot of um like NWA, and it was just it was just a political time overall.
Yeah, um, I think that's another reason too why they wouldn't acknowledge it.
Pac was the one that started that.
Exactly.
Yeah, I was saying NWA.
Because they're talking about you know, fuck the police.
I meant late 80s.
Yeah, I meant in the sense of like making it like uh very popular, yeah, yeah.
Like a state yeah, nationwide thing, yeah.
He was very vocal about police brutality, uh, Tupac.
He really he was.
And I think that I think that was another component as to why hip hop wasn't accepted by the mainstream media for so long, is because um back then it was super anti-establishment.
Yeah, if you guys watch the movie Straight Out Compton with uh I skewed the movie, actually.
Yeah, it shows the story of NWA, which reads um Anne's weird attitude.
I'm not gonna say the word.
Oh, Ninja's Webs.
Yeah, ninjas with attitude.
Yeah.
All right.
It's a pretty good movie in US to watch it.
That movie was a good movie.
To what Mara was saying about the shooting.
Um, if you guys remember from the last stream we did on Tupac, um he didn't he usually will wet wear like a vest, a protective vest.
Oh bulletproof.
A bulletproof vest.
And that day he didn't, even though um I think it was one of the security guards or somebody.
They said him you want to wear your bulletproof vest, and he said no.
He said, It was one of the rare times he didn't wear his vest.
No, it's pretty hot outside.
I don't want to wear it because I'll be I'll be hot.
Yeah.
And he didn't wear it.
And yeah, well, that vest probably will have saved his life.
Yeah.
If you wore that vest, he'd probably be here today.
Yeah.
Yo, that's crazy, actually, that he didn't wear his vest that one time.
That one time because he was excited, because after the fight, after they whooped his ass, yeah, he was in there bragging in the hotel about how like, yeah, we knocked him out like Mike Tyson, blah blah blah.
So I guess maybe he felt you know uh like he said he felt undestructible.
Yeah, and like he said, people are saying you're black, you can say yeah.
That's funny.
But like he said, um, he had been on a shooting before, he had been shot before, so after that he be like he became very precautious because yeah, of course he became after he got shot in New York, he got way more cautious.
Even like in morning gang activities and stuff, he started wearing that vest.
And that day, exactly that day, specifically, he didn't wear the vest because...
And everyone, even though they told him to wear the vest, he didn't wear it.
Yeah.
Yeah, because he looked at it like, oh, I'm good.
We're gonna just go to the club and chill.
Like he said he'd be cold and hot if you were it.
Yeah, yeah.
And he will like to wear he will like to go out with uh churless with like um this shirts that are like open.
Top like uh tank top yeah, tank tops and stuff like that.
Yeah, yeah.
So yeah, well, that that was the style black thing, and yes.
In the nineties, yeah, he did he did that often.
Um, let's go back to uh to it real fast.
But yeah, I forgot that little detail that he actually was supposed to wear his vest that night and he didn't.
Yeah.
That's crazy, man.
Or rap was so prominent and dominated in the media and on the billboard charts.
This is Tupac, he's at this point in 1996, he's a movie star, he's gone platinum, he's gone multi-platinum, he's got his with Dr. Dre now, he's working with Snoop Dogg.
He's got all this momentum, and he's a box office straw.
So matter of fact, yeah, he definitely would have survived because the gun they used to kill him was a Glock 40, 40 caliber.
Yeah.
That the the the uh most bulletproof vests can stop that.
Uh uh bullet uh uh he got shot in the chest, the tie and well, the tie it wasn't it wasn't like a killing one.
Yeah, yeah.
It was all his torso shot.
The torso is what killed him.
Yeah.
So that he would have been, man, damn.
That's crazy, bro.
All right, let's go back to it.
It was the driver that told him to wear the vest, the driver.
No, no, not the driver.
His security security.
The security told him to wear the vest and he didn't do it.
Yeah, yeah.
That was trailing behind them.
Yeah.
Yeah.
He was actually supposed to be in the car with them and he went.
And he told me no, go back.
Yeah, he said, yeah, exactly.
Yep.
Yeah.
Who because if that security was there, he could have returned fire.
And that might have that might have st uh uh fucked him up a bit where they um you know would miss some shots or they wouldn't have taken as many shots as they did if he was with there.
I mean, that's crazy when you really think about it.
Um Pag when it's shook to to drive.
Yeah.
Like have huge impact.
Not wearing your vest because of the temperature because it was hot, yeah.
Telling your your bodyguard saying, Hey, just jump in the car behind us, uh, follow us.
Uh, because I think Pac and Shook were like in a rush to get there.
Yeah.
Um that you have known better, to be honest, because if they just engage in this fight in the hotel, that c in that casino, they will have waited.
I mean, something will have told you that people if this guy can follow you, look for something, you know, like start a fight.
They fent uh they felt invincible, clearly.
Yeah.
For him to not wear his vest and not have his bodyguard.
Cause imagine if he had let his bodyguard be in the backseat of the car and he could have returned fire.
Yeah.
If he was able to return fire, even if Pac didn't have his vest, maybe they want to get off they weren't able to squeeze off the other two or three shots that killed Pac because they go bang bong.
He's like, oh bang bong back, and they're like, Oh shit, and then bam, they drive off, and that then they take less shots and he could have survived.
Like Tupac was a little bit hot hair too.
Yeah, he was a little bit.
You couldn't tell him shit back then.
Yeah, and he was a child too.
I mean, not a child.
He was a best-selling artist.
He was the main guy at death row.
He was Suge's main guy.
He was he had m at this point he had been successful movies.
Uh he would have been an established actor.
His music was going crazy.
Um they were winning the East Coast West Coast beef.
Like he had dropped uh hit him up, right?
One of the worst diss songs ever.
Um I will compare him to Bat Bunny right now.
Because Bad Bunny was his age when he died.
Right.
Oh, you're saying like his popularity is the equivalent to Bad Bunny in the lion community?
Yeah.
That's a fair equivalent.
Yeah, because Bad Buddy is John too, and and he he is like top one, invincible.
He will feel like he's yeah, right there.
And I will say Tupac is the same.
It was just taking like a that's the equivalent.
Yeah.
Yeah, that's an equivalent for sure.
Died at 27.
Yeah, 27.
27.
Okay, my bad.
I thought he was 44.
Yeah, my bad.
Okay.
Well, my bunny's 27 right now, I think.
Pretty sure.
Still wild.
Yeah.
Yeah.
So this is one of the biggest people in music and an emerging figure in overall entertainment world that it was just shocking.
After Tupac Shakur died.
Conspiracy theory spread that he was actually still alive.
That prompted prosecutors during the grand jury testimony to ask rapper Ed I mean how he learned that Tupac Shakur had died.
EDI means said Tupac's mother told everyone.
The prosecutor followed up by apologizing, saying he knew his next question and might sound silly.
But he asked whether E.D. I mean had to be a good idea.
Alright, so they had to ask this guy, right?
And this is the the transcript from the actual grand jury testimony.
You can keep it up, Bills.
Um the reason why they had to say this, guys, is because they have to disprove the theory that Tupac is alive.
For them to charge murder successfully, well, they have to prove Tupac actually was murdered and he's not in Cuba hiding out or a stunt double.
Like, bro, there were so many crazy conspiracy theories.
People were saying that uh a stunt double came in and actually died and cute and he uh Tupac ran to Cuba uh to hide out with his aunt.
Remember, guys, we talked about in the last episode on is actually still to this day, guys, wanted by the FBI for a murder back in the nineteen seventies where they killed New Jersey State Trooper.
Um They were saying that he ran out, he he's hiding.
He's uh he he wasn't really killed, blah, blah, blah, was a mirage, like all kinds of crazy conspiracy theories.
So for them to be able to establish that for them to charge murder successfully, they need to establish that Tupac is in fact not alive, which is why they had to ask.
This is kind of a silly question, and I apologize for it.
Since that day, have you ever heard from Mr. Shakura?
And the answer is I have not.
And this is one of Shakur's friends slash associates.
Okay, thank you.
So, in your statement, do you call recall seeing two people in the front, blah, blah, blah, blah.
But yes, they had to establish that element that he is in fact deceased, and the conspiracy theories are not true.
And for anybody that still believes in this Tupac conspiracy theories, I don't know what to tell you, bro.
More than likely.
You stupid.
Stupid.
Let's keep going.
Oh, guys, how about Tupac Core 45 when he died?
25.
25.
Okay.
All right.
My bunny is almost 30.
My bad.
Correcting myself.
All right, let's go.
Or since that day, EDI mean responded, I have not.
There were a lot of uh conspiracy theories.
There were people who believed that Tupac might still be alive.
There were people who believed maybe the cops were involved in killing him.
I mean, there was all this stuff flying around out there.
Why do you think that is?
I think the reason that so many conspiracy theories sprang to life and gained momentum and gained life and traction was that Tupac was a larger than life figure to so many people and they didn't want to deal with the reality that A, he was dead, and that B, that it could have been something as simple as gang violence.
And when you have the streets involved, that adds another layer of frustration because now you're dealing with gangs, you're dealing with one thing that I've noticed when it comes to hip hop and gang culture and uh rap gangster rap music.
People love gangster rap music until gangster rap music does what gangster rap music actually talks about, which is what?
Killing your opposition, right?
People love King Vaughn.
But as soon as he gets killed, yo, what the fuck?
Outrage.
But y'all know that was his life.
That's what he did.
I mean, we know for a fact at this point that King Vaughn killed people himself.
But people don't want to necessarily deal a lot of times with the consequences of their very music that they support that glorifies killing each other.
So, you know, for you have to have an artist that you listen to, you enjoy, you you know, you look at them as an entertainer, and you're like, yo, this shit is lit.
Well, when the entertaining stops and it's real life, it's very difficult to swallow that pill.
And I know that I'm uh, you know, I would say the most recent example of this was absolutely King Vaughn.
And even me, I like his music.
But after he died, I was even my head, I was like, oh, what the fuck?
Like, what do you mean he's dead?
He got killed by some little dude named Lil' Tim, some no-name rapper.
Yeah, like what the fuck?
This is bullshit.
But then it hit me.
Oh, well, what do you expect?
When you when you are a guy that lives by the sword, more than likely you're gonna die by the sword.
And the thing that pissed people off so much about King Vaughn is he got killed by people that weren't even really his offset.
He talked about all the time.
It wasn't GDs that killed um King Vaughn, because you guys know O Block.
Uh they had issues with the clout boys, a KFBG ducks people, um, who were all GDs and the uh King Vaughn and them were BDs, uh, gangster disciples versus black disciples, etc., which I break this all down in my episode on Old Block, right?
But in general, um, he was killed by some dudes out of Savannah, Georgia in Atlanta.
So it was even more difficult for people to fathom.
But this is what happens when you live by the sword, you die by the sword, man.
So um, this is another example of that.
And the thing that pissed people off about Tupac was that Tupac wasn't intellectual.
He did make a lot of music that people um can relate to, and he was able to be a gangster rapper, but at the same time, he was also kind of a political activist.
Um and I would argue that Tupac is probably the only artist.
I want to get your take on this, Bills and Mo, because as I think about this, I'm about to say something here that might get people pissed off.
I think Tupac is probably the only gangster rapper that was able to put on the gang, you know, hat with dops and talking shit blah, blah, blah.
But also be taken seriously from a lyrical perspective and a political activist perspective, and as a genuine artist perspective as well, right?
Snoop Dogg can't do that.
Dr. Drake can't do that.
Um you look at any of the other West Coast legends, easy uh E40 can't do that, easy E can't do that.
They were known for being gangster rappers, but no one really um took them seriously as an artist After the fact, like Tupac.
Ice Cube, even no.
I mean, maybe that's a controversial take, etc.
But I think Tupac was the only person that was able to put on both hats where he was able to go ahead and have the gangster aura while simultaneously being looked at as a talented artist that can speak some truth that can actually impact change.
What do y'all think?
You're gonna say the closest comparison to his counterparts in the West Coast.
I don't think anyone comes close.
Ice Cube is the closest comparison.
I think Ice Cube.
Man, Ice Cube, fuck out of here.
I I I said closest comparison, but not quite.
Still not quite.
I I think uh NWA.
Yeah, but the whole time.
Yeah, but no.
Jay-Z no, especially not in the gangster rap standpoint, so that's still a no.
Yeah.
Um, he was only like respected as like a top lyricist, but gangster rap.
People are saying Nas, but Nas didn't have that commercial success back then, guys.
Nas didn't have that commercial success.
Keep in mind, Ilmatic was a sleeper um go album.
Like people people didn't people didn't acknowledge Ilmatic until later.
You know what I mean?
That was like kind of like a like a sleeper.
Ooh, hit 50 cents.
Somebody say Madina, something did.
Alright, Nipsey close is l is close.
Uh I would say to give a more modern version.
But I'm talking about back then in the 90s, guys.
Like, not after hip-hop had already been founded, like you know what I mean?
Nip Nipsey also didn't have that big success, not even close.
Especially Tupac?
Not even close.
Nah.
No, you're right.
He was he was very well respected in the hardcore fan standpoint, but he did not Nipsey did not have that success.
Yeah.
So I think yeah, I think I think, yeah.
I think Tupac was the only person that was able to put on both hats and be respected from from two different perspectives.
So um, alright.
Let's let's uh let's keep going.
People saying Snoop.
Nah, man, Snoop D. Not still not really, but it's another card to others.
But these artists, I don't consider any of them because hip-hop was it was already there was a there was a lane paved.
Yeah.
You get what I'm saying?
Like it was a it was a serious genre by the time Eminem and all these guys came in.
Yeah, yeah.
It was a it was considered a serious genre by then.
So uh, I mean, I know you guys are mentioning these uh these rappers in the tur early 2000s, all fantastic artists, but hip hop was already taken seriously at that point.
And and Ye wasn't a gangster rapper like that.
Yeah, no, not at all.
So I'm talking about before hip-hop was taken seriously, and uh, some of you young boys might not know.
But guys, in the 90s, hip hop was not no, no, they were they would look at it like well, what the fuck is this?
Some nigga music.
No, or hell no, never.
Grammys, no, fuck out of here.
I know someone ain't say Will Smith.
Man, bro.
Come on, man.
Like in the chat, they say.
Some of y'all got some really retarded takes.
Yeah, like that was after things were paved.
Niggas like you be out here saying, Oh, Mortal Technique is the best rapper, like dumb shit like that.
You know?
Like they try to they try to.
I'll be on some weirdo shit.
They they try to outthink the room.
Yeah, yeah, exactly.
I hate I hate people that like try to like be um what's the word?
Like kind of snobs.
They try to do that.
They try to be uh, god damn it.
They try to be um contrarians, yeah, but without like a real like they try to be contrarians and be like, well, I like this artist, even like to try to make themselves look like I'm alternative, I'm different, and that artist be fucking trash, like a mortal technique or some shit.
Like, nigga, nobody nobody trying to listen to somebody like that.
Like, got the fuck out of here with that, man.
You know what I mean?
There's always that contrarian that has some smart shit to say.
Well, actually, this artist is the pastor.
Actually, this artist does better.
No one knows about him or cares, man.
Fuck out of here, bro.
You know?
Like, some of y'all can be mentioned some artists like who gives a fuck, bro.
So someone said Joe Buddha.
Master P makeup say, uh, get the fuck out of here, bro.
Like, yo.
Like, yo, some of you are some weirdos with that shit, man.
Like, I mean, we could have arguments for days about artists and shit, but like, yo, like, come on, man.
So, oh, K R S one.
Man, nobody gives a fuck about KRS one, man.
Fuck out of here, bro.
Hey, I love Master Play.
These old niggas I love Master P. Like, yo, like KRS one and Rakim or whatever.
Look, man, I'm gonna acknowledge that they that they uh Eric B, all these guys.
I'm gonna acknowledge that they definitely um, you know, help with forging hip-hop and paving a way, but bro, they didn't solidify nothing, like that their shit was boring, the beats were weird, they suck, like 80s rap to me is like kind of like until it was the late 80s, right?
When NWA came in, like 80s rap kind of was trash, bro.
I don't care what y'all say, man.
Fuck out of here, man.
That shit was garbage.
So anyway.
If anything, I say.
I acknowledge that they helped paved the way, but that whole corny, I'm a microphone checker, because that's what MC stands for.
That shit was corny, bro.
Niggas out here break dancing and fucking Adidas tracksuits and shit like that.
Yo, that's the real hip-hop.
Alright, man.
Well, take your can go head.
Get the fuck out of here.
That shit was boring, nigga.
That shit was whack.
Spin on a fucking cardboard boxes.
With the bucket hats.
You you LL Cool J niggas, man.
Get the fuck out of here, bro.
With your big ass boom boxes, like, yo, that was a shit back in my deck.
Get the fuck out of here.
In my radio.
That shit corny, man.
Knock you out.
Yeah, man.
Get the fuck out of here.
You know what I'm saying?
What R. Kelly, bruh.
This that's that's RB, bro.
What?
R. Kelly?
Yeah.
Bro, that's not even hip hop.
That's RB.
Yeah, man.
Niggas out here talking about slick Rick and all this other shit, man.
Fuck out of here, bro.
I'm still dead with the Vanilla.
Yeah, like, oh yeah, you didn't.
Like this shit, man.
Come on, man.
Come on.
Bro, look, I acknowledge that they're pioneers of hip hop, but bro, you can't sit there and tell me, oh, I'm gonna go listen to some uh some run DMC over some like uh, you know, over some Illmatic.
Like, come on, man.
Like this the 80s hip hop shit was corny.
L L Cool J, right?
You know, like Mama said knock you out, flavor flavored shit and public enemy, like bro.
I respect y'all niggas for paving the way.
But y'all niggas suck, man.
Corny.
Corey.
The lyrics, trash, but wordplay bars, etc.
Trash.
Nah, man.
And I know people are gonna clip that and say, Nah, man, that shit was trash.
I think the best genre of hip hop is the 90s West Coast shit, right?
The 90s East Coast shit.
And uh obviously the early 2000s.
That's what I think is the best.
Because you get you got a perfect blend of gangster hip-hop, then with some lyricism.
Uh, you know, they actually made hip hop be taken seriously as a genre, right?
Niggas mentioning Chuck D. Get the fuck out of here, bro.
Like Chuck D. Get the fuck out of here.
Kumo D. Come on, man.
Come on, man.
They said fat Joe.
Fat Joe.
Come on, man.
You know, like uh y'all niggas, man.
Cause like, yo, you want to take uh like uh people want to say, oh, KRS one, yo, these old artists, blah, blah, blah.
Bro, you want to take them and compare them to like uh like a mob deep like Shook once?
Come on, man.
That's what I'm trying to say.
There's more iconic hip hop shit from the 90s and the early 2000s that's gonna stand the test of time over these old 80s niggas wearing Adidas tracks who's spinning on fucking cardboard boxes, man.
Come on, man.
Niggas popping like you know what I'm saying?
The pop block and all this weirdo shit.
Man, nobody gives a fuck about none of that.
That's not what's memorable.
Like the no one, you you know what?
Name one goddamn KR Wan song besides uh the the um the Bronx shit.
Uh Welcome to Fuck.
Name one.
None of y'all can.
Come on, man.
I think artists like Mob Deep, Jay-Z, Nas, etc., they did way more for the East Coast than an Eric B, a run DMC, a KRS one, etc.
A beastie boys.
Get the fuck out of here, bro.
Beastie boys, bro.
Come on, man.
Bro, what?
Well, how'd that that dumbass song go?
Uh to Brooklyn.
No.
Sleep.
So Brooklyn.
Yeah, yeah.
Yeah, I am asleep from listening to this Brooklyn song.
Get the fuck out of here, bro.
You know, like the the You can't compare, like, the 80s New York artists to the 90s New York artists and the early 2000s New York artists that that like really revolutionized hip-hop.
I would say, Jay, Nas, 50 Cent, who else?
The diplomats, um, G Unit in general.
Like, these guys had a way bigger impact on hip-hop than a KRS one, a Rockam or Run DMC, whatever it may be.
There's like, they're the people that blew hip-hop into the mainstream and made it uh uh made it a genre that can be listened to uh you know by everybody.
That's my take on it.
That's my opinion.
I know a lot of y'all in the chat might not agree with me, but I think these that's why these discussions are uh interesting.
Um, but uh yeah, Big L, another great artist.
You know what I'm saying?
That that's some shit right there.
Like Big L, that's someone who doesn't get their flowers.
You know?
You guys want to see something crazy.
Um, listen to his um what was it, the seven-minute freestyle if I'm not mistaken.
Uh yeah, I think so, right?
Yeah, I think that's a big one.
Who was on that?
Was that Jay on that one?
I think Jay was on it.
I honestly cannot remember what said cool G Rap, man.
Get the fuck up, bro.
All right.
Joe But Joe Button, no trash.
And everybody knows his trash.
Shout out to Drake for shitting on him.
Because Joe Buddons a fucking bum and everybody knows he's a bum.
Pop up it up.
The fuck out of here, man.
I looked up one of the beastie boys, bro.
Yeah, man.
Oh, really?
Not surprised!
I was I was like, I was automatically to the bottom of the tonal pole now.
Automatic.
Automatic.
All right, let's go.
Let's go.
Uh let's keep going.
Damn, bruh.
Yeah, Joe is a hater.
Bro, we just got the strikes off.
Black on black crime, and you're dealing with the disappointment of man, this came from within the community.
The grand jury also heard testimony about the East Coast West Coast feud between rappers, specifically between Should Knight's Death Row Records and Sean Puffy Combs' Bad Boy Records.
There was a big rivalry between Death Row Records and Bad Boy Entertainment.
And a lot of times it's labeled as East Coast West Coast feud, but in reality it was mainly those two entities, individuals of those two entities had arms with each other, and then it I think the media latched on to the idea of this East versus West thing when it was really a group of select individuals that didn't get along.
But there was a connection between KD's Southside Compton Crips and Bad Boy Records.
A witness testified that Keefy D and his nephew Orlando Anderson were in charge of the relationship between the Southside Compton Crips and Bad Boy Records.
And that Bad Boy Records feared Sug Knight.
Death Row was associated with the Bloods.
Another Bad Boy Records connection.
A witness testified that Eric Zip Martin gave Keefy D the gun the night that Tupac was shot.
Zip knew Sean Puffy Combs.
Shouldn't I's former head of security, Reggie Wright, testified that Shook Knight and Sean Puffy Combs were once on good terms.
But things changed in 1995.
Right said Should Knight believed that Combs was responsible for the death of one of his friends.
He then told the grand jury about how Tupac Shakur talked about having sex with a notorious VIG's wife in a song and rapped about killing members and hit him up.
Faith Evans, right?
Faith Evans.
Yeah, Faith Evans at 304.
Uh let's keep going.
Fuck Joe Bitch.
A member of Bad Boy Records, pointing a gun at Tupac Shakurt at an award show months before that shooting in Las Vegas.
Right side Keep D was at that award show with members of Bad Boy Records.
That coupled with the theft of the death row chain and then the MGM grand fight caused things to come to a head that night in September of 1996 in Las Vegas.
Prosecutors say it ended with the murder of Tupac Shakur.
Wayne Keefy D. Davis is expected to enter a plea to the murder charges when he appears in court next week.
For God and Crime.
Alright, uh, let's go back to the tabs.
Let's see uh what else we got here left.
Um, let's this is only a minute.
Let's play.
I didn't even see this, so let's go ahead and click this.
It says, KVD gives his last words on going to prison for Tupac's murder.
Tupac's murder.
So when it comes to the rumor that's been going around, man, that you might be getting arrested for the murder of Chupac.
Any last words?
I'm a man understand tall through it all, though.
Whatever the Lord got to offer me, come through.
You know what I'm saying?
I'm standing tall through it all, though.
They do come arrest me, what the fuck I'm gonna do.
You know what I'm saying?
Yeah.
I'm gonna stand through the Lord.
The law the Lord got me, yo.
God got me, yo.
That's why I'm still here and everything, dude.
This right before he got arrested.
The Lord got me.
Oh my god.
I'm not worried about that or no.
You probably got information that the grand jury was convening.
No, the police come arrested.
All I won't do is just uh try to do the best.
How to hire me some good attorneys and get up out, try to get up out shit.
You know what I'm saying?
They would have never found out everything.
Uh all that shit was a big cross.
You know what I'm saying?
Cross me.
All he did was he was in it for money gang, dude.
You know what I'm saying?
Well, nobody supposed to ever find out that bullshit and dude was in there for money game.
And I'm done with that.
Nigga said he got a sunglasses inside.
You know he don't give a fuck.
Um they keep calling him Chris.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yo, it is hard to understand him though.
Uh yeah, like I I how this guy was at ringleader, it's beyond me.
I didn't understand a word.
I I actually understood everything.
I ain't gonna lie, but I'm but I'm I'm from North Miami, so of course I understood exactly what he was saying.
Let's go back to um uh what's the next tab there?
So that was right before he got arrested.
So um oh, here is the footage, guys.
Let's go ahead and run this.
This is body cam footage of him getting arrested.
Oh I saw this.
Yeah.
It's nine minutes, but we won't play the whole thing.
So here's the police pulling up.
All right, you ready?
Yes, no part.
*Bell rings*
Hey Keith, Metro Police.
Come over here.
Hey Metro police, come over here.
Alright, thanks, buddy.
One over here.
Appreciate your cooperation, okay?
I know.
Hang on.
Put the put that down for a second, alright?
No, crazy.
He's old now.
He already knew what time it was though.
Like come out with vests like that.
He's like, yeah, okay.
You have anything on you, sir?
It's not the 97 anymore.
Yep.
Okay, yeah, let's get you a drink.
Hang on, alright.
Just want to make sure you got no weapons on you or anything, okay?
Thank you.
Nigga was going for a walk and they got him.
Put your bombs together like you're clapping.
I just want to make sure these cuts can be alright on you.
And pause.
More than likely, guys.
What ended up happening?
As they were getting ready to indict him, uh, or after they indicted him, they probably had him under surveillance and they were watching what his schedule was like, and they're like, alright, let's get him at the most opportune time.
They probably had a a body of work as far as like how his day goes, and they're like, alright, the most opportune time to get him in a safe situation is we're gonna get him when I was morning walk, etc.
So they probably had been watching him for a bit.
That's how they're able to, you know, do it.
So uh they make it look easy, but that's how they were doing it so smoothly.
They probably had already kind of known his schedule and his routine.
Uh let's keep going.
Is that his guard?
I don't think so.
No, that's probably their vehicle.
It's unmarked.
Yeah.
I'm good.
My parts are clear.
Come right here.
Yeah, you're prepared.
Got him.
Brian early in the morning, man.
That was okay.
And you guys can see water.
They arrested him about six days after the true bill of indictment.
So they had probably had him on surveillance for a few days.
You know what I'm saying?
You just going for a walk or why?
Yeah.
You do like a morning walk every day or do you shit?
Okay.
And this is in Henderson.
Yeah, Henderson, yeah.
Uh for those that are wondering, uh, Henderson is what?
10-20 miles outside of Vegas.
It's not far.
It's close by.
Yeah, it's a suburb of Vegas, guys.
Henderson.
Yep.
Let's walk over here, sir.
Okay.
Don't worry, your water's gonna go.
So he doesn't make any statements.
You double walking away?
Yep.
Okay.
That's good.
He probably knows what he's being arrested for at this point.
Yep, hold on, wait, but we gotta put some leg shackles on you.
It's just part of our policy.
Are you wearing double pants, sir?
You wearing double pants or these are boxes.
Alright, I'm gonna pull these all the way up.
It's awkward.
Blue front on the window.
I'm gonna talk to you down here real quick, my man.
And he was a drug dealer in the early uh the mid 90s.
Yeah.
yeah Cool.
Alright, so we're going uh have a seat right in here.
I'm gonna help you out.
Yep, just kind of put your butt up against there.
Kick that foot up.
You ready?
Oh, I'm gonna pro, dude.
Are you gonna go?
I'm a pro.
He's on the pro.
Dumb the monk old.
I ain't gonna lie, that was pretty funny, but yeah.
The first time I've been arrested, and then just the drill.
Oh my god.
Bruh, that that's gangster right there.
It ain't his first rodeo.
All right, let's keep going.
Thank you.
No, we're done.
Oh.
Alright, this is another uh angle.
I'm right here.
Oh here.
Okay.
This one is wearing shorts.
Yeah, it's hot in Vegas, man.
You have anything on you, sir?
No.
We're gonna put you in the car.
He's hot.
It's hot as well.
Yeah, Vegas be hot as hell, man.
You're just going for a walk away.
And this is at dry heat too.
Dry ass heat.
Yeah, man.
You do like a morning walk every day or like Vegas is like it at night it's it's cold, and then during the day it's hot as fuck.
As soon as we get you in the car.
Let's walk over here, sir.
You're watching some controls.
Okay, so this ain't the hood.
This Henderson.
Yeah, yeah.
This ain't the hood.
That's a suburbs, bro.
Yeah, hold on before we put it in.
What?
Yeah, I think uh North Vegas is the hood.
If I'm not mistaken.
Someone from Vegas correct down the chat if I'm wrong.
You win double fancy block.
That's why they're blurring their faces, because these guys might work in undercover on some of their details or their investigators.
That's why they're blurring the police faces, guys.
These guys aren't uniformed guys.
They're not uniformed guys.
Think of them as like kind of the marshals uh for this police department.
Which I wouldn't be surprised if they have an apprehensive team because a city like Vegas where you're gonna have a lot of people that aren't necessarily um from the city, you're gonna need a dedicated unit to go get your guys.
You know what I mean?
So I'm gonna be surprised if this isn't this is a team that probably travels out a lot to go get people in other states.
Oh, the jury.
I'm a pro.
He said I'm a pro the way you said him.
All right, so then you're just gonna see different angles.
Uh, but we've seen the arrest now from two different body cam angles.
Um, all right, let's go back to the tabs.
We've been covering a lot here, man.
Hope you guys are enjoying the show, man.
Yo, I see here that we got uh 1,600 of y'all watching on YouTube.
Can you guys give me a favor and go ahead and like the video, man?
Let's get 100% engagement on this bitch.
Uh 1.7k.
Um like the video, guys.
Let's hit 1.7k likes on YouTube, man.
So this could get pushed up in the algorithm because this is by far the best breakdown on this case on the internet right now.
Uh, what's up next?
Uh okay.
Let it let's go ahead.
This is now we're gonna get into the Diddy angle here, where he's saying that he was put up to this by a Diddy.
And this is one of the detectives that were involved in this investigation.
Um, I think he's from Compton, PD, if I'm not mistaken.
What does that say there, Bills?
You can remove me from the thing.
Retired Comp the PD officer.
Okay, bam.
Okay, so he's very aware of this gang war and the politics because he was um involved in the gang investigations.
So let's go ahead and hit play.
Well, I mean, let's face it, it's been 27 years, right?
They would have to have some sort of bank records or some old uh video tape that they videotaped him offering this bounty.
So, I mean I don't think there's any credibility to this P. Diddy story because I see it all over the social media right now.
And I just don't believe it.
I mean, just based on what I know about it, me investigating.
And just so you guys know, Diddy denied, well, obviously, he denied any type of link to this, and he said that it's ludicrous and obviously, you know, clout chaser, whatever it may be.
I'll give you guys my take here in a little bit, but let's continue on with the video Maybe the case and my experience.
I mean this is like gangs 101, you know, I mean they they snatched the chain and They beat him down at the MGM.
Let's go looking for him.
This is straight gang shit, man.
You know, I don't think P. Diddy has anything to do with anything.
And I yeah, I don't know for sure, maybe he did.
But how are they gonna prove it 27 years later?
It's almost impossible.
You know, he's not gonna admit to it, even if he did do it, right?
So hypothetically speaking, right?
What would Keefy D have to provide to the police to sh- And just so you guys know, it's not what you know, it's what you can prove.
That's what it is when it comes to criminal, uh, you know, criminal cases.
Let's keep going.
Show them that you know Diddy had a connection to Tupac murder.
Well, he would have to give him some concrete evidence.
You know, he's got he you just can't go out and I mean you could go out and interview him, but they're not gonna subpoena him, they're not gonna do anything in Keefey D unless they have a probable cause to do anything.
I mean, I said Keefe D, but I meant P. Diddy.
But because P. Diddy's big time.
You know what I'm saying?
He's one of the biggest stars around.
You know, the guy they're not gonna do anything to P. Diddy.
Right, right.
But the thing that's confusing me, man, is if they did, he's gonna have a legal team ready to go.
Like, I mean, I wouldn't be surprised.
As soon as this news broke out that um Diddy hired this guy, I I guarantee you he probably retained the lawyer immediately.
And uh, you know, he's prepared for anything that comes down.
Like I said before, guys, it's not what you know, it's what you can prove.
We know OJ killed his wife, you know, and um and gold uh and uh um what's his name?
God damn it, uh something gold.
Some goldman goldman, yeah.
We know he killed, you know, his wife um uh and um and Goldman.
We know that for a fact.
But they couldn't prove it, so what happens?
If the glove doesn't fit, you must acquit by the famous words of um uh Johnny Cochrane.
Johnny Cochran, right, who's not deceased.
So that's what it comes down to.
And guys, we're gonna rechats here in a little bit, so don't worry.
Uh, we'll play this video and then we'll keep going.
If you're going off of what Keefe D said in interviews and what he said in his book, then do you have to go off of what he's saying about Puffy?
Well, they have uh they have a crime that was committed.
They have a murder, they have a crime scene, they have uh my testimony that's gonna, you know, tell them what it's like to be a gang member in Compton, you know, and I saw all these players grow up and I could talk about, hey, this is what gang members do when you disrespect them.
Boom.
So he put he testified.
So they have they have more to go on and on this case than just his word.
Uh that, hey, yeah, he he offered to pay me a million dollars.
Well, okay.
What else you got?
You think they're actually gonna go after a guy like P. Diddy that on on his word?
You have to have more.
Yeah, you have to have more evidence.
Pause real quick.
Guys, the testimony of one crook is never enough to indict another crook.
You always need corroborating evidence, uh, besides the person snitching.
You know, if they say, Oh, such and such put me up to it, well, you better have some goddamn proof that he put you up to it.
Do you have text messages?
Do you have letters?
Do you have uh bank statements?
Do you have cash?
Do you have some type of proof that this under individual was involved?
Their testimony alone, guys, because remember, a criminal is a criminal, so they're already not gonna be considered as trustworthy or as um uh what's credible.
So you're gonna need more than just a crook testimony.
Now, with that said, let's say you don't have that concrete evidence, but you have three, four, five, ten different defendants saying the same thing, then that will add more credibility because the same people are saying the same thing because they're not necessarily aware of what the other persons are saying during their interviews.
So if three, four or five people corroborate the same information that are all co-defendants in the same case, well, that's a lot stronger.
Okay.
Um, let's keep him going with the clip.
Any way Keefe D can win this case?
Um, no, I don't think so.
I think I mean he could try to beat it in court.
I mean, you never know what jurors are gonna say, and I don't really know what his defense is gonna be.
Because uh, you know, he admitted it on several interviews.
He admitted it in his book.
So what's he gonna say?
I lied.
Well, you know.
Uh I don't I don't think that he's gonna get off on it myself.
But again, this case is twenty-seven years old, so you know, you never know what's gonna happen.
But hypothetically, right?
What if he offered the cops some unsarmed murders to happen in Compton back in the day if they let him off?
Can he do that?
Um, no.
No, because I don't think Las Vegas cares about what happened in Compton.
I mean, he got one of the biggest cases in history, really.
When you think about it, Tupac is like Elvis.
So they're not gonna he could tell him anything they want.
No, they're not gonna.
I don't think they're from any kind of he could try to take a deal, but I don't think he has any information that they would say, okay.
Well, if he tells he did this murder, we'll give you a lesser sentence.
Not now, because it's been so long, so they're gonna go after him, I believe.
He's 100% correct.
Uh Las Vegas Police Department is not gonna give a shit about crimes that went down in Compton.
That's not their jurisdiction, they have no need to care.
Um hell, it's not even their state.
So um unless he was able to provide some crazy information in Las Vegas, I doubt that they're going to uh take anything he says seriously.
Also keep in mind, guys, he's sixty years old now, probably hasn't been involved in significant criminal activity like that in his uh uh older years.
He might still be involved in some criminal activity, but probably not to a significant degree where he's entrenched in it so deep where he is able to provide information that's worthy of knocking some time off.
And then again, like I said before, um Las Vegas uh police department definitely has an incentive to uh prosecute this to the fullest extent of the law because of the no notoriety of the case and the caliber of the victim being you know an international superstar that's gonna go down in history.
So, like I told y'all before, this case, Tupac's murder, has been a black eye for the city of Las Vegas for decades.
So I'll be damned if they're gonna give him any type of uh mercy on this.
They're not.
They're probably gonna prosecute him to the fullest extent of the law and look for the um biggest penalty they can because that's a that's a feather in their cap, though the if they can get him a life sentence.
I don't think Nevada has the death penalty, if I'm not mistaken.
Mo, can you fact check that?
Or actually, Andrew, can you fact check that if Nevada has a death penalty?
But uh, but yeah.
Let's keep going.
Keep D knows, man, about stuff they went on to you.
Yeah.
I'm sure he solved quite a few crimes if he really wanted to.
No.
That's for sure.
Yeah.
All right.
Yeah, he does.
It it didn't Nevada does have the death penalty?
Okay, because I know for a period of time they didn't, but now they do.
It says in here, Nevada is one of the seven twenty-seven states that permate capital punishment.
Okay.
However, the state has no actually cut out an execution since April 26, 2006.
Oh, sentence of death is reserved for individuals convicted of murder involving aggravating circumstances.
Okay, so in this case, he's he uh I think the aggravating circ I think that's why they went ahead and hit him with the gang enhancement.
The gang and the gangster thing might make it um an aggravating circumstance.
And they might use that to justify death penalty.
That's what they're doing.
That's what they did with Melly in Florida.
They tried to get they're trying to get Melly a death penalty, or they try to get Melly a death penalty, uh, because the murder they're saying was done at the um uh a gang-related situation, and that's an enhancement that drives it up to um the death penalty.
Um that's why they spent so much time.
If you guys watched the death, uh and I covered this on on other episodes, but they spent a significant amount of time, damn near a week, interviewing a gang detective who wore a mask during some of his testimony, uh, just on the gang stuff, so they can rationalize or justify the death penalty for YW.
Melly.
Um, so let's go.
Um so I have an interview here, uh, very interesting with Vlad and Pierce Morgan.
Okay, as you guys know, Vlad, and I and I could pull it up real quick.
Pull up DJ Vlad interview.
I'm not gonna play it because Vlad uh is you know, and he definitely gonna copyright if uh, you know, if I uh play his stuff.
But go go go to YouTube real quick.
Um yeah, type in Keefi D. Yeah, yeah, you could do it right uh like duplicate one of the tabs or something like that.
Not the Pierce Morgan one, the other one that we already used.
Oh, this one right here.
Yeah, yeah, just hit search there, Kibi D and Vlad.
And Vlad?
Yeah, and it should come up, and I'll show you guys which interview.
You guys could watch it.
Yeah, hit enter.
Yep.
That interview right there, guys.
Um he posted it again three weeks later, which I give Vlad credit.
He definitely uh reposts interviews that he did before if it becomes relevant as you guys know when Tupac got arrested, he just reposted the full interview.
Um, but that is um basically uh the interview that he did with Keefe D, which, you know, where he made some statements and he didn't really want to talk about certain things.
He kept saying, refer to the book, refer to the book.
Um, But we're gonna go ahead and have uh Pierce Morgan interview Vlad about this interview.
Um let's hit play.
Are we doing a 1.5?
Yeah, we can do a 1.5.
Good call.
Oh yeah, we high definition now, boyos.
Thank you.
Welcome back to Facebook says it was a question that gripped the world.
Who killed Tupac Current, the 25-year-old rapper, considered one of the most influential artists of all time, is gunned down in Las Vegas in 1996.
Well, on Friday, Dwayne Keith D. Davis was indicted for one kind of murder with a deadly weapon in relation to the killing.
DJ Vlad, a major commentator in the hip-hop industry for years, making the police in Las Vegas asked him to help their investigation after he interviewed Keefe D for his own show.
And DJ Vladimir's been talking about it.
Just you guys know a lot of people don't like Vlad because Vlad, yeah, Vlad is I can see all in the chat already talking shit.
Um a lot of people don't like DJ Vlad because they look at him as a culture vulture.
They look at him as a guy that has gotten rappers um arrested and in trouble.
Um, because the police have absolutely used interviews in the uh from rappers uh against them in criminal cases.
Uh the most common one that I could think of right now off without the top of my head without re referring to Keefe D, because they definitely was Keefe D's interview against him, uh, is Casanova.
They definitely used a bunch of the um clips from the Casanova interview against him in his Rico case, um, you know, where he got arrested with the Gorilla Stone Bloods.
If you guys want uh the full breakdown of Casanova, I did a whole episode on Casanova.
I predicted that he was gonna get convicted and get a bunch of time.
I think he ended up getting uh fact checking Angie how much time Casnova got, he got 20 some years uh on a federal Rico case, got arrested by the FBI.
Um they used clips from that.
Uh DJ Vlad Casanova.
DJ Vlad, yeah.
No, no, no.
How much time he got just searched um how much time he got uh Casanova.
But um, I think he got 20 some because he didn't he didn't want to snitch, and I that's why I predicted that he wouldn't snitch and they would get he would get more time.
But that's why people don't like uh DJ Vlad.
He gets a lot of uh 1880.
Okay, that is how many years.
Hold on.
That's the feds always do it by by months.
Like 15 years or something like that?
15 years, okay.
15 years.
Um that's because he pled.
He was gonna get 20 plus.
Sorry, I he was gonna get 20 plus if he had taken it to trial, but since he pled, they gave him 15.
That's what it was.
But he didn't snitch either.
That was another thing.
Um and seven months.
Yeah, goddamn.
Um, but yeah, that is why people dislike uh Vlad, guys.
Uh he has kind of a love-hate relationship in the hip hop community.
Um my thing is he has a big platform, artists are gonna go in there for exposure, artists are gonna say stupid shit that might incriminate them down the road.
It's not really Vlad's fault if people say stupid shit that will incriminate them later.
The end of the day, you're responsible for every word that comes out your mouth, not necessarily Vlad.
Does Vlad ask prodding questions and try to get and try to get information out that people want to know?
Yes, but it's up to you how you answer.
So you know, it's it's uh, you know, you gotta take accountability for what you say, especially if you're involved in street life.
But a lot of artists want the clout, they want the notoriety, they want the fame that comes, they want the promotion that comes with going on a platform as big as Vlad's, right?
He's arguably probably one of the biggest um hip hop media outlets.
You know, you take, you know, I would say the the top three are definitely, you know, Vlad, DJ Academics, no jumper.
Those three probably are the biggest on YouTube uh when it comes to hip-hop.
So, yeah, that's what's gonna happen.
You you know, you're gonna put yourself out there like that.
Uh you want the promo, you want the notoriety, you want the clicks.
Well, if you uh admit to certain things that are legal, the police can absolutely use that against you later on, especially if they're able to take your statements and corroborate it through physical evidence that they gathered on their own.
That is the key, my friends.
All right, like the video.
Let's keep going.
Let's go see this Pierce Morgan interview with uh Vlad and he talks about the situation.
The rumble chat, bro.
They're going crazy.
I know they are.
I know for a fact they're going crazy in that chat.
Did you actually see it then?
Oh shit.
Once you got the reason, I got the talking.
So someone from your car.
That's what I'll start shooting.
I toopak and shook.
So Orlando Cross.
Okay, this is this footage, by the way, that they're playing, is from I think 2008, when Keefe D confessed to the police about his involvement in the murder, and he did it under the the presumption of immunity, by the way.
Okay.
And I think he was talking with LAPD.
I'm not sure which PD the which police department you talking to.
But um let's keep going.
That's where that clip is coming from.
And that's...
So they're intermingling Vlad's interview with footage from the interview that he did with the police.
They were throwing them outside, huh?
I would pop them.
I would have pawed them if it was on my Vlad joins me now.
Thank you very much for Dave for joining the show.
Absolutely, thank you for having me.
I know you've you've studied this case uh for so long.
And these interviews that you did uh with Keefe D. I know some of y'all in the chat are probably like, wait, what the fuck?
What?
Yes, I know.
That is DJ Vlad, guys.
What the fuck?
Some of y'all might be wondering what the hell's going on here.
Uh Vlad has an interview style, kind of say cheese does this as well.
And say cheese also is up there as well.
Uh I'll say the top four, DJ Vlad, academics, no jumper, say cheese.
These are all huge media outlets on YouTube uh that do interviews with rappers, uh, etc.
Um Vlad also likes Say Cheese interview style is you don't see them on camera, they just ask questions, um, and they have the interviewee in the shot the entire time.
They almost never show the interviewer.
Um so a lot of people don't even know what Vlad looks like.
And I think he does that by design for a couple different reasons.
But yes, um, that is DJ Vlad, guys, what he actually looks like.
Uh let's keep going.
I knew some of y'all trying like, what the fuck?
They've turned out to be extremely significant in this investigation, leading in fact to him being arrested and indicted.
When you heard that news, how did you feel?
Well, I mean, the goal wasn't really to get anyone arrested, it was really just to get the truth of the matter.
Uh, the story about Orlando Anderson killing Tupac I've known since around 2007.
So this is was essentially the worst kept secret in LA.
Uh, everyone knew about it, but there were no arrests, there was no convictions, there was no anything, there's no actual proof.
There's a lot of conspiracy theories around it.
So uh around 2008, uh, when I first heard the Keefe confession tapes that Great Cading got, um, you know, then I found out there was a book uh that was about to come out.
Uh I got a hold of Keefe D and his co-writer, and uh we scheduled an interview and we just went from there.
I mean it pause.
He appears to be committed himself in this interview.
So the last one just so you guys know, the book and the interviews all came out in 2019.
Okay.
Um the police said that they reinvigorated the case around 2018, but I think um the interviews in tandem with the book being released really solidified their investigation even further.
So they probably reopened the case in 2018 because there was talks about a book coming out and interviews and stuff like that.
But um by 2019, all the information was starting to get out there, early 2019, and uh, and that's definitely what got um them going again.
Let's keep going.
Did you believe he was doing that as you interviewed him?
Well, I think that he believed that he had a level of immunity when he did the proffer agreement.
Uh I also I think at the time he was saying that he had cancer, so maybe he didn't think he had uh much time to live.
Uh so he was just kind of letting it loose at that point.
But um, you know, it was it was a little bit crazy that he actually sat down and we did everything and when it happened about it.
Sometimes guys, a proffer, by the way, is when you provide information to law enforcement under the presumption that you are not going to be charged for the things that you talk about.
But there's a big big caveat to that.
You must be 100% honest with law enforcement when you do provide information in that proffer.
And if law enforcement finds out that you misled, lied, or concealed any material facts, they can absolutely throw that immunity out the window and come after you later for criminal charges.
So it's one of two things that went down here.
It's either A Um he lied during some portion of the interview or misrepresented or misled law enforcement to the degree to per uh protect himself or other individuals, or B, the people that gave him the proffer, the law enforcement agency that gave him the proffer, didn't necessarily have the authority to give him full immunity.
So for example, let's say he had done this proffer with Los Angeles Police Department, and they said we're not gonna prosecute you for any of these crimes, right?
Or or Compton Police Department in this case, but potentially we're not gonna prosecute you for any of these crimes if you come clean, etc.
Well, that's cool.
They're not gonna prosecute him and Compton under that jurisdiction for the crimes that were uh that went down there uh that went went on over there.
But that does not change the fact that Las Vegas and their district attorney's office might not come after you for um for the situation.
So I'm not sure which PD did this interview.
It might have been Vegas or Compton.
If it was Vegas, then that means that he probably lied to them or covered up some material fact and they were able to throw that immunity out the window and come after him for murder down the road.
Because that's a big um that's a big uh excuse me.
That's a big uh factor in whether you actually get immunity when you do a proper is you need to be honest.
And if they're able to prove that you lied, immunity out the window, they could come after you for those statements that you made.
So let's go back and continue on.
He would try to dodge certain questions, but ultimately I use the book as a blueprint.
So whenever a question wouldn't get answered, I said, Well, the book said X, Y, and Z. And then at that point, he kind of went along with the you know what was written in the book.
It's been reported that you have resisted ethics by the police to hand over now during the interview, and you guys could watch it, it's right around I think the one hour mark, okay, on that interview.
He asked them a question, right, about who shot blah blah blah, or yo, there was a mention in the book that Pac had a gun.
Keefe would basically like kind of be like, oh yeah, it's in a book.
Pen spend the $20, buy the book.
And what Vlad would do instead is he would read a passage from the book, and then Keefe would just agree with it.
And again, this is why so many people hate Vlad, because he does shit like that, right?
Where he asks extremely uncomfortable and prodding questions that could put people in a compromising situation.
But right, from a viewer standpoint, it's the questions that people want to know.
The answers to I respect his ability to be an aggressive journalist and pursue the truth regardless of uh of the backlash that he gets, because best believe he gets a lot of backlash.
But um, obviously uh, you know, that's what the people want.
And that's why he has the reputation that he has.
So it's a double-edged sword.
He gets the information, but he goes about it in an extremely prodding and an invasive way that pisses a lot of people off.
And then the fact that he's not black, let's just keep it a million.
The fact that he's not African American, they look at that as this dude is profiting off of hip hop, this dude is putting people in compromising situations, blah, blah, blah, and he's making a big buck off of it, right?
Because like if you look at someone like his counterpart, like a say cheese, right?
Sean Cotton, he asks prodding questions like that too, but he's not as bad at it as like Vlad.
And say cheese, he's black.
It's different.
So he knows kind of the realm to be in when he's asking questions that might get someone jammed up that's going through a criminal case, versus Vlad doesn't give a fuck.
So, you know, you it is what it is.
Yeah, you know, you pick who you want to watch, but that's why so many people will dislike V Vlad because of shit like that.
So he doesn't want to confirm or deny, he reads the passage from the book, looks at the guy, and he could kind of confirm it.
And and the police can use that against him, and they did.
So what's so funny, Mo.
They can hear you laughing.
Uh the chat laughing at the chat.
Yeah, I know that.
They're going crazy.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
I know.
If the rumble chat is going wild right now.
It's bad to YouTube as well.
Yeah.
So uh let's keep going.
All the unedited tapes.
Uh, is that true and decide why?
Yeah, it's true.
I mean, ultimately, people that we have on our show, uh, we we don't turn around and cooperate against those same people with the police.
Uh for me, just in terms of business wise and my ethics and so forth, I just feel like something wrong.
Uh so when Las Vegas police reached out to me multiple times, I just never responded.
Uh, I think what they did ultimately want was the raw footage.
That was an email that they sent after a couple of phone calls went unanswered.
Um ultimately, if you know the style uh of our footage, everything that we film gets released.
So I think there's a little bit of a barking at the wrong tree situation.
Uh, but maybe they thought there was like a gotcha on there in the footage that was unreleased, which I'm not aware of it since everything did get released, but ultimately we don't cooperate with the police.
And you know, we've had situations where police have tried to get footage from us and we've had our lawyers step in and actually block it.
You can say, you know, I've done many interviews.
And uh just so you guys know, if I was an investigator, right, and I wanted footage from DJ Vlad, I would just grand jury subpoena his ass, and he's got to give it to me.
That's done.
Hey, give me give me the goddamn stuff.
Oh, I'm not cooperating, I'm not gonna respond.
Okay, I'm gonna serve you a grand jury subpoena.
If you don't give me this footage, you're gonna go to prison.
And that's how you go about it with people like that that don't want to cooperate.
That's how that's um, especially at the federal level.
You would you would get a federal grand jury subpoena, and they have to give you give you that stuff.
Or worse yet, you could if you really want to go hard, you can go ahead and get a search warrant um for it, and then uh if you if you have reason to believe that there's evidence of a crime in his footage, you can go ahead and get a search warrant and go that route.
That's a bit more invasive.
You probably don't need to go that step, but you can absolutely serve him with the grand jury subpoena and lawyer can't do shit about that.
Um let's keep going.
Move your mic, Mo.
They can't do it.
There's always a certain element of concern as an interview when you stray into that kind of territory about repercussions from people involved.
I mean, given there's not been an indictment here.
Are you worried about repercussions against you?
I don't worry about doing my job.
I've been doing uh Vlad TV for 15 years now.
We've covered a lot of very serious issues.
We've interviewed like mass murderers like Sammy the Bull and so forth.
Uh so I don't really worry when it comes to doing my job.
My job supersedes any level of concern or fear or anything else like that.
And ultimately, you know, if I ever feel there is a situation where there might be some danger, I always move with armed security.
You would you famously a very big fan of Tupac, as of course millions of people were, and it remained one of the great mysteries about this.
If it turns out that your interviews have helped lead to solving this mystery.
You feel a sense of uh closure for Tupac and his family?
Well, I mean, for me, the closure came four years ago when I did the interview.
Uh there was a lot of conspiracy theories when it comes to Tupac.
There was that, you know, Suge had him set up, there was the government did it, there was the first responder, had a body that he switched.
The Tupac is living in Cuba somewhere.
There's there's a lot of crazy theories out there.
So for me, when I did the interview four years ago, and we went through the entire story, you know, really Keefy D's entire life story, but really leading up to what happened from Orlando getting jumped at the mall to you know the next few steps to them going to Vegas to what happened, you know, during the fight to what happened afterwards.
Uh that essentially told the story.
I've been saying for years that I saw this.
I saw the Tupac murder.
Uh, you know, when it comes to the family, I've had various family members uh reach out to people to say they're very happy about it.
But the thing about it is um, you know, I I know people that were very close to Tupac's mother, uh Phoenix Cor, and they all told me that while she was alive, she did not care about the police solving this case.
Uh the Shakura family had a very, you know, you know, bad relationship with the police.
We've run out of time.
I'm pregnant.
I'm really sorry.
I'd love to have done more of this.
Thank you very much for Grange V. I've been following you for a long time.
Hey one, you're gonna do that.
I congratulate you on the cuts people off all the time and shit.
It's so rude, man.
Um but that's what happens when you're as much as Pierre Stratus says, he tries to say he's not mainstream media, he really is mainstream media, bro.
Uh so anyway, um, guys, with that said, um, let's go ahead and uh go.
We got something special for y'all, actually.
Um go to um the tabs real quick.
Okay.
Uh we got the New York article, but we don't need that because we already kind of covered a bunch of that stuff.
Um, what do we got here?
Okay, guys, so this is a book.
Come to Street Legend, okay, okay, notorious Keefe D's street level accounts of Tupac and Biggie Murders, etc.
Death row origins.
So I went ahead, guys, and got the audible version of the book for y'all.
That's why it's so late.
Because I couldn't remember my goddamn audible password and shit.
Uh because I have it on my phone logged in at all times, but then I had to go on the computer and be like, oh my god, I gotta remember this crap.
And then, you know, but you know how it is when you forget your passwords a pain and ask.
I forgot you were supposed to ask me because I know I actually knew it.
You actually knew what?
You're out of uh your Amazon again.
Ah, yeah, it's fine.
Don't worry about it.
Um, but yeah, so that's what the delay was, and I apologize for that.
But I promise it's worth it, guys.
So we're gonna read, uh not read.
We're gonna actually play in his own words, the audible from his book, guys.
Um, and it's uh chapter nine, if I'm not mistaken, the main event.
Yes.
Okay.
And uh we're gonna go ahead and play the audio, stop it as needed.
And this is in those own words, guys.
Self-snitching at its finest.
Okay.
So um, let's go ahead and play it real quick.
I got a piss.
So go go ahead, uh throw the camera on Mo or some shit, or Angie, I don't know, or Bill's one of y'all, while I uh do this.
We're gonna play it.
Um there's what, 15, 18 chapters in this thing, if I'm not mistaken?
About you're gonna play just a strat of it?
Yeah, we're gonna play a portion of it that talks about this murder in particular.
We're we're we're gonna start the start it, guys, from when uh the jump uh when Orlando leading like the again gets jumped, his nephew Orlando gets jumped, and then how they retaliated.
That's where this is gonna pick up.
17 chapters.
All right.
So this is chapter nine, the mid the middle of the book.
Um go ahead, let's run it, and uh, I'll be right back.
What's up?
We were both major players in the same game.
Suge had the music industry.
I had the streets.
We both had the same boss.
If Sug and them niggas had a beef with something Southside had done, Suge could have said something to me when he saw me that night.
Instead, Suge and his boys committed the ultimate disrespect when they kicked and beat down my nephew, baby Lane, in a video broadcast or news station scene around the world.
So that was his nephew.
In case my diplomatic approach to resolving the situation didn't work, we had three vehicles.
Three to four people in each, ready to burn their asses up.
My crew was do or die.
All my young homies had already been shot at least once.
So their street experience turned them into some stone cold killers.
They had the mentality of it's either them or me.
And it ain't gonna be me.
With solemn faces, we waited in complete silence in the back parking lot of clubs 662 for more than an hour.
Inside our vehicles, nobody took a drink.
There was no weed, no music, not a pee.
We were as grave as a heart attack.
The only thing audible was niggas breathing and tense, throbbing, heartbeats.
There was no need for words.
Pause.
We all understood why we were...
So, again, I don't think there's anything better than just listening to it from him himself, which is why we're going to play this.
But again, guys, y'all ain't gonna get sauce like this on any other true crime channel.
So I need you guys to like the video.
Okay, subscribe to the channel.
Fed Reacts on YouTube, Fed Reacts on Rumble.
Whether it would no matter where you're watching, if you're watching it on Rumble, just open up another tab, like the video on YouTube because it's really important for the algorithm.
You don't gotta donate a dollar to the show.
Matter of fact, hold on.
We should hit the chats real fast.
And follow Fed React on Instagram, guys.
Yes, Fed Reacts on Instagram.
So comment for the algo as well, guys.
Um, and I'll read these chats real quick and we'll keep going into the self-snitching thing.
Cause this is gonna be crazy.
Myron, what's the best workout plan for a three-day split and how nope, got that one from before?
That's from Taco Flavor Kisses.
Um Philly Sat goes, Master Myron, I love your socks and slides.
Please show your socks for a pick and screenshot of your socks and say how your unwashed socks you're wearing now, please, Master.
Wait, what?
Weirdo as hell.
That is a little strange, my friend.
Uh, what else we got here?
And reading 20 and up.
Um, shout out FNF Myron.
Do you train boxing?
I heard you talking to Sneeko in the gym about it.
If you do, bro, try Moy Thai, then you can kick an elbow fat fuck uh Abba.
Um, Abba will barely get into a won't even do a boxing match with me, let alone uh Moy Thai.
So um, you know, we'll see what happens.
But yeah, I mean, like I said before, I began the ring, bro.
Let's do it, man.
But you're a coward, and I probably I know you probably won't.
But if you do actually make the mistake and get in the ring with me, I'm gonna beat the shit out of you, bro.
That's uh that's a fucking fact at this point.
Um, so anyway, let's keep going.
Gotcha.
One second.
But he ain't gonna get in the ring.
He's gonna just deflect it to his partner preach.
That's what he's gonna do.
Which if I gotta fight priests to get you, that's fine.
But I mean, I don't really have a beef with Preach.
I don't even I don't fucking know him.
I've never met him in my life.
Like honestly, I think he's kind of slow.
I think he's a window-licking retard.
But again, uh my issue is where ABBA, I don't give a fuck about preach.
Uh Punisher goes, I got a question, a very serious question, and it's to Angie.
Now, Angie, I see you have a courage, the cowardly dog decal on your laptop.
What is your favorite episode?
And also they done they edis.
Where are you from?
I'm from Venezuela.
I keep forgetting you're here, like you know.
My my favorite, uh I think my favorite episode is this most scary one for me, and I think it is the exorcism of um Miss Muriel.
It's kind of scary.
And also the demon in the um, I don't know what you guys call it, the demon in the in the field that is just yells like return the slur.
Yeah, I want to see.
Speaking of cursing cowardly dog, y'all should have seen Angie at fucking the horror nights, bro.
She was Angie the Cowardly Woman, bro.
She was running all over the place, man.
Wait, wait, wait, wait.
All the girls there were cowards.
Go ahead.
You have something that is true.
You want to defend yourself?
That is true.
I'm not gonna defend myself.
That is actually the round very coward.
I that's there's a reason why I have uh caress the coral everywhere.
I even have a like a fluffy friend of him.
Um but I I also have to say, guys, Myron is hilarious.
You guys too haven't seen him, like he's mad as hell there.
He was like, oh, yeah, he's he's I call him Mr. Grumpy or his royal grumpiness because he's always grumpy.
There is a reason for that.
He was very grumpy that day.
He has his reasons, but you guys who have seen him making fun of the guy lady, because the guy lady was like very talkative.
What guy lady?
The guy lady, the guy.
Oh, he died.
Yeah, Yeah, yeah, yeah.
She she loved her job a little too much.
Yeah.
She was a great guy, though.
She was all energetic and like, and these guys are like they were all like, you know, you're just like in their own world.
So Myrra was like, every time this lady talks, I just hear one.
Yeah, bro.
Because like before every so we did like 10 haunted houses, right?
And before every haunted house, each haunted house had like a fucking theme, right?
So she would like go into like explaining in intricate detail each theme, the story behind the theme, how they came up with it.
I mean, that was the thing.
The people there, what were like, she's giving like the whole like lore, you know what I mean?
To like really get you in it.
And in my head, I'm just like, bro, like the whole time, I'm just like, in my head, I could just think of Charlie like I was like, oh my god.
I'm just like in my head, I'm just like, any, I mean, this I'll keep it a thousand children.
Anytime women really talk, uh, outside of like Angie or some other shit, uh, or uh outside of Angie in the show.
Anytime women really talk, I'd be like, like, bro, I don't really give a fuck what any of these chicks be saying, bro.
Real talk, man.
I listen to women only a few times a day.
During the show, if Angie tells me something, uh, and that's pretty much it.
And that's the right.
And then I see, like, my staff, my team.
If they say something, cool, I'm listening, because it's typically work stuff, improving the studio.
I mean, Icy's in here right now working, man.
Shout out to Icy Um and Melissa.
I'll listen to them.
But outside of that, or the show, I'm wam and wam wam wam wam.
It doesn't matter!
Bro, I'm dead ass.
I've been hearing that shit.
Yeah, so then he was very like energetic and stuff.
And he also, like the other the old the other thing that also made me laugh a lot.
We went to a scary house that was like theme as Shucky.
And Mara, you know, Myron is tall as fuck.
So Myron is very tall.
So in all the houses, like all the guys dressed up like monsters and shit, wearing us as tall as Myron.
So Myron would just look at them like this.
And also the Chucky theme one, the most scary thing for said to say that.
It was like a guy dressed as Chucky with a big head of Chucky with a chainsaw.
So this guy just came out of nowhere to scare us.
And Myron was just like Yeah, it was at him.
I was dying.
It was annoyed because Angie was behind me the whole time grabbing me.
So I'm like walking through the haunted house, right?
Like this.
Literally with his hand in his pocket.
Yeah, I'm just like walking through, man.
I'm like mad as hell.
Yeah, he was so mad.
This is me at the at the fucking horror thing.
Wait, wait, wait.
I gotta do, I gotta do the thing too.
I was behind him.
I was behind him like this.
You know, I don't stand like this, you like it.
Yeah, oh yeah, I had my hands in uh pretend this hands in my pocket, but I got in the mic.
Yeah, he's gonna go there.
So I was right behind him and I would grab him like this.
And whenever I wanted to come come out of this way, I would just go this way.
Yeah, bro.
I'm like going like this the whole time.
Like she's just grabbing me.
Like around us, I would just go around my legs like running, bro, literally running around, and I'm just like and I'm just like walking like this.
I'm like, oh my god, I got a real estate deal tomorrow.
I gotta fucking come back to the building and like let the workers in.
I gotta wire 130,000 tomorrow, fuck.
And I'm just like, oh, and she's like around, ah, shaking me like this, and I'm over here thinking like, god damn, I gotta buy this house.
Fuck, man.
I gotta do this.
You know what I'm saying?
Like, I'm thinking about real shit.
Oh, we gotta show.
Damn it.
Fuck.
You know, I need to think of better questions for after hours.
I'm just she's just running around.
Ah, and all other girls, Icy Ah, no, Icy cursing out, bro.
She might be Jaquani all right, fucking bro, these chicks are running.
They see a fucking nigga come out, ah, running and shit.
Yeah.
She was grabbing a Moon Mo st around.
I'm like, what the fuck, man?
There was a time where, like, she had like makeup all over my fucking hoodie, bro.
Guys, listen.
There was a time where Chris said, okay, let the old women go front, and all the guys stay back.
That was the worst thing ever because we all the girls were up front, and these motherfuckers.
That was entertaining though.
That's when Mario started laughing because we were like in the I think that was the last of us house, and I was like up front, like I was on the front of the line.
So all the monsters were coming at me, and I was like saying on the floor like this, and fucking Chris was pushing me, like Angie, come on, came walking up.
Is that why we got stuck at one of the houses?
Yeah.
I was wondering.
The line stopped for a bit.
I was like, what the fuck?
Because I was like, I was scared as fuck and I would just go like this.
And fucking Chris and Fresh were like laughing behind me and folks were like, Angie, come on, you're walking.
I would, I would.
That's why women can't leave nothing, bro.
I would always look back to see Myron's face just end out, and I would just see Myron just starting smiling.
Myron loves.
After like the first house, I was like, alright, I need to be in the back because it's entertainment watching the girls crying.
I see Angie and uh Fresh's girl that he brought, like, they were all cowards, bro.
Like they were literally like, like the monster will come.
This would be hilarious.
Cause nigga, you would see the monster like attack the first crowd of people.
And it's like, all right, I know it's coming, right?
Yeah.
And the nigga comes and does.
He does, he goes, yeah, and the girls in the front, oh right?
And then you see it.
You see it, right?
And I'm like, alright, the girls can't go crazy.
Like, you just saw the nigga come out.
No, well, wait.
He goes again.
Ah!
Guys, wait, so hold on.
That would be you because you're tall.
But there were some times that we're smoking.
I'm fucking all the way.
What do you mean?
I'm not told.
The houses will be dark as fuck and you wouldn't even see them.
That was the scary thing because they will put smoke and shit.
And the sound effects.
I used to say the sound effects.
Sound effect out as fucking I see you so like, what the fuck?
I said, calling your mama live on BJ Myron.
I see cried after one of the houses, man.
Oh yeah, she cried.
Yeah, I made my stomach turn.
Nice excuse.
And then and then I think Fresh's girl cried and then Angie is running.
No, I watch you sc screaming and screaming and running.
Do you guys get imagined an anime?
And and my Myron is just like one anime, right?
Like one character, and I'm behind him just running around him like this.
Literally like this.
Like around him.
And then Myron's just laughing his ass off, bro.
At the same time, I'm like, mad, because I'm like, damn, man, I gotta get back to Miami.
Like, what the fuck?
And then I got Angie, like I'm like walking around the house like this.
I'm literally going like this, like she's just grabbing me, and I'm just like, oh my god, bro.
Like, what the fuck, man?
Myron is Myron's just dying.
Martin dying laughing.
Like, bro, these are paid actors, bro.
Yeah.
Like, yo, this one I realized, uh, misogyny moment coming up.
That's when I realized, like, damn, bro, women are cowards.
Like, niggas are going to a universal theme park.
Y'all know there's about to be niggas wearing makeup, running out in costumes, and y'all are still scared.
Yeah, still wearing.
What the fuck?
Like, you know.
Yes, we were.
And then they're still going crazy, like running.
Like, at one time, I saw Angie like pull a full sprint.
I was like, what the fuck is going on, bro?
Oh, when you're like running for real, like fast.
Moving your arms and shit.
I was like, yo, she's really sprinting.
But I mean, well, I do gotta say those houses were high production houses, guys.
Like the makeup and shit was amazing.
The stories behind them were amazing.
It's like I that was my first time going, so I was like amazed at how the production uh the production of the whole thing.
Like the money invested and everything.
It's incredible.
Um and the guys noticed that too, because Myron was like, oh, um, I can't imagine this muscles, like, but it were whatever.
This must be led by uh them boys, blah blah blah.
You know?
Oh, it is.
So we we did the research.
After I paid five bucks for that Coke Zero, I did some research and I was like, yo, you like, yo, Mo.
Yeah, I was like, yup.
You're like, yo, uh, look, look up the owner.
Uh I'm like, alright, cool, cool.
And I all I saw was um like no own my car.
Okay, who owns that?
I'm like, okay.
And I see uh Goldberg Molstein uh wasn't it was Roberts.
I uh yeah, it was one of these Roberts.
You know what I mean?
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
No, and the worst thing is that Myron, we go to a hotel, Myron had the nerve to tell me, um, oh Angie, you're a weak as hell.
You're a coward, you you need more protection and shit.
You you cannot defend yourself.
I'll be like, do you need it?
No monster.
I was running it already.
Yo, yo, you're running.
Yeah, you're running from dudes dressed up as clowns.
He didn't do shit protect you!
Protect you!
Oh, what am I gonna do?
Oh, hey, bro, uh, look, man.
Don't jump out and and do what you're supposed to do.
Chill, man.
Don't jump out.
Like, can you walk in like a soldier like that?
Protect, bro.
Protect you.
They're paid actors.
Paid actors.
Let me tell the slight the chucky outfit.
Hey man, you want to tone it back a little bit?
You know what I'm saying?
You telling Mari to protect you from them doing their job?
Hey, you know what?
Turn the scary music down a little bit.
Y'all need to chill, man.
No, but you didn't even grab me or anything.
You were just like walking like a soldier.
Ah.
Man.
You need more protection.
Dude, you didn't do anything.
They're paid actors.
He's not supposed to.
He's gonna get he'll get like arrested or banned if he actually does.
Could you imagine it, bro?
I try to Mike Tyson, a nigga dressed up as a clown.
Hey, what are you doing to my girl?
Bung!
Man, I'd be in jail right now with this nigga Keith.
And then he's gonna be in jail now.
He can't protect you from actual danger.
Come on, man.
Congratulations.
Congratulations, you played yourself.
We talk about women, man.
Tell you this though, that's the fastest I seen Angie walk.
I mean run.
Bro, for some of you guys that are wondering, she's like four, eleven, five foot, whatever.
No, no, no.
She's literally meant it.
Every time I walk over her, bro, she's always way behind.
I'm like, hurry up, Angie.
Come on.
That's the fastest I ever seen her.
Wait, wait, wait.
I have a theory for this.
Wait, hold on.
Myron is.
She walk.
She walked.
No, don't you?
No, no, wait, wait, wait.
Myron.
Oh, okay.
953.
Myron is like this.
So whenever he walks, he just walks like that.
Okay, I don't know.
That's a lot of work to put your foot off that high.
You walk like this.
You walk with your feet like that, and you walk like this.
That's that Myron is four of mine.
So I actually have to walk like this behind him.
Because he'd be walking like Bro, you gotta, bro.
You got you gotta you gotta you gotta get when you walk with Myron, you gotta get you gotta get go at well, because Bill's has Bill's has that complaint too.
Well, I don't know.
I've been walking fast up to all.
This is news to me.
I walk that fast.
Well normal people walk with their feet off, bro.
You walk out.
Yeah, you always complain about how fast I walk, but you're you're a woman.
Who cares what you think?
For real though?
Um well only Bills complain about me.
I'm I'm always right, I'm always right next to Myra.
I'll be like, I'll be like, nigga, I'm like, bro, I'm down, I'm like, I'm down a hundred pounds, bro.
This ain't I'm like this.
Like that.
I mean, I'd be like right next to Mari, keeping up.
I say, yo, Bills, hurry your ass up, bro.
I actually brother told me because my brother will be complaining about how I walk too.
So he'd be like, um, you gotta walk fast, whatever.
You gotta walk fast.
Oh god.
Like if you're doing like a walking race, and the do you have to do walking race?
It's an actual thing.
She walk like this.
When they pop walking shit like that, she said that's an actual thing.
Looks like a tri truss line.
Alright, we'll hold on.
Let's get back to the goddamn show.
Niggas forgot that we were doing a fed reaction two box killer.
But we were talking about killer clowns.
It was excuses anyway, bro.
I always keep up with my own guard.
Yeah, man.
Shout out to y'all, man.
I didn't realize that it's that bad.
It ain't that bad.
It ain't that bad at all.
It ain't that bad.
I be I be liking it, bro.
Cause I because they, you know, because I'd be I'd be like, yeah, the power.
Look at me, bro.
Yours is four of mine.
Yeah.
Four.
Bro, because I because I because that makes me walk like I got a business, then I got the tape hoodie on, bro.
So I'm like, I'm like, yeah, what's up?
Top G's up in here.
This the hood, ain't it?
No, this ain't the hood.
It's Brick OEM.
That is British.
Oh, shit.
This ain't the hood.
Hey, you gotta walk with purpose as a man.
So I agree.
Uh, where we at here?
Any more chats?
Absolutely.
Okay.
Uh, okay, I don't have social media like Instagram if that's what you're referring to.
Can I send an email?
Uh I think that's a guy earlier that said the um yeah, man.
That that's the um send an email to Fresh and Fit Partnerships uh Gmail.com.
Yeah, send it now so Angie can actually look at it.
Diddy's fruit damn should be investigating more for his involvement in this Tupac show.
It's also crazy to think Easy E would have taken Sugar out if not for Jerry Heller, the 90s this the hood, ain't it?
Yep.
Um Jeremy920 goes, Myron, did you know YouTube is still running ads on your videos?
Seems unfair.
They're still making money off y'all.
W Fed Reacts.
Yes, they are running ads.
And though I know some of you uh that that sounds really sucky, I'm not mad about it, and I'll tell y'all why.
Um, well, number one, I've said it before, this isn't just for the money, right?
I've said that before.
Um, right.
Obviously, money is a component, it's obviously very important, but it is not the main component as what we do.
I'm more concerned with the message getting out there.
Number two, um, that's fine because at least it still pushes in the algorithm.
It used to be when you got demonetized, you don't get pushed in the YouTube algorithm like that because they can't run ads on yourself, but now that they run the ads everywhere, um, it still gets pushed in the outgo, so it's fine.
Um, what else?
We got here.
Why is Jada so hung up on Pac?
I don't know, man.
She had 304.
Uh fuck that bitch on site.
Okay.
No, no, no.
He's saying um bitch, you know.
Because he's saying F ABBA and Preach, but you know, he's saying Oh, oh, oh, he used a different okay, okay, okay.
Yeah.
Uh, yo, Meyer, no one likes a snitch, but when it AF.
Okay.
No, he corrects it later right here.
Oh, correction on my part.
No one likes a snitch until it affects them.
That's when they want someone to snitch.
There's no way to please a nigga.
Oh, got you.
Um, and then we got here three diglits.
I remember when I was little, my brother showed me a video of one of Pac's songs played backwards, and in a certain part, he said, Yes, I'm alive and missing you.
Shit was scary.
Didn't sleep for a week.
Yeah.
But Tupac is gone, guys.
Trust me.
They're auctioning the series seven series uh uh BMW Pac was shot for for 1.7 million.
God damn.
Really?
Damn.
All right.
That's crazy.
Uh she wanted Meyer to pull the blicky out.
Yo, I brought my gun with me to Orlando, but I couldn't bring it to our universal.
They run security there, man.
Could you imagine you fucking shoot an actor for scary accidents on accident?
Bro, that is a L if you were to do that.
And here's the thing, bro.
They just like go, ah, they don't touch or anything like that.
So it's like, you know, it is what it is.
Yeah.
All right, let's go back to um this nigga self-snitching on himself.
Guys, again, we're gonna play this thing.
I'll pause it momentarily for things here and there.
For some of you guys that are just joining the podcast.
We are playing the audible from the actual book that Keith wrote, okay.
Um, and this is chapter nine that details the Tupac shooting, and it picks up where Orlando had just gotten jumped by Tupac in his entourage, aka Death Row uh in Vegas and how they retaliate.
So now they're waiting.
If I'm not mistaken, correct me if I'm wrong, guys.
They are waiting outside of the club that did that uh Suge and them are at, correct?
Is that what that's where we're at in the story?
Yes.
Okay, let's go back and play the audible.
And this is from his own words, guys.
Y'all about to see self-snitching on another level, man.
And this book came out in 2019.
We waited for an hour and a half, which felt more like four hours.
I decided for us to get the fuck out of there.
I called the homies on their phones.
They're taking too damn long.
Let's get fucked up.
Move out.
One by one, the drivers started their engines and slowly crept out of the back parking lot.
Lucky for them, they never showed up.
Because it would have been like Al Capone's Valentine's Day massacre if they had.
Self mention.
One thing about our crew.
When it was time to handle business, we handled it with the best.
Just so you guys know, the fact that he said that they waited there for an hour and a half.
What does that tell you?
Premeditation, my friends.
So he's saying things here that the police can absolutely use against him to make the charges more egregious.
Let's keep going.
Best of them.
And when it was time to have fun, we did that too.
It's not that we were over what had happened to Baby Lane.
It's just we couldn't control when them niggas were going to show up.
Waiting so long was stopping us from doing what we had gone to Vegas to do in the first place.
Have a good time.
Our next destination was the carriage house.
A Las Vegas hotel where we had rented a few rooms as a kickback spot.
On the way to the carriage house, we stopped by the liquor barn to buy some bottles of Don Perrion, Don Perrion Rose, and Christy.
As we were driving to the liquor barn, it became evident that the guys in the van with me were worried that Suge would get some of his police hitmen to come back and try to kill us if we went after them.
Pause.
The police do hits for that.
There was there was um speculation, and I think this actually ended up getting proven that there were people in the LAPD that were friends and associates of Suge that assisted him with certain things.
As far as like, you know, hitman or whatever, I don't know if it was that deep, but Suge definitely did have people in the Los Angeles Police Department at the time.
It was a very powerful man back then in the 90s, guys.
Everybody was terrified of Suge, man.
So uh, you know, I'm I'm not surprised that that was a rumor.
Um, let's keep running with it.
And by the way, we got 5,000 plus of y'all over on Rumble, man.
Shout out to Rumble.
Rumble.com slash Fed Reacts, guys.
If you guys want to watch us over there, high quality.
Um, but also, if you're watching on Rumble, do me a favor, guys, please open up a tab or watch us on YouTube as well.
Rumble is home base.
Don't forget that.
But to get discovered, YouTube is the main way.
So open up another tab, like the video on YouTube, but watch it on Rumble and uh just kind of mute it and let it play in the background.
That would really mean a lot for me if you guys could do that.
You're watching this on Rumble right now, open up a tab on YouTube.
Uh Fed Reacts on YouTube as well.
Same links.
And uh like the video over on YouTube.
And then if you can't, comment below for the algo so content like this can go ahead and get discovered because this is by far the best breakdown of um the Tupac murder on the internet right now.
Let's keep going with uh this self-snitching.
Nigga, one of them said.
I remember thinking to myself, y'all shouldn't have jumped, y'all punk asses in here if you're scared.
Y'all know what we came here to do.
C-Ray was one of my top salesmen, and later became the first one to start snitching on niggas, was in the van with me, along with his cousin Trey and BMS Big Meach out of Detroit.
Oh shit.
As we were loading up to leave the liquor barn, I took advantage of the chance to get away from them scary niggas in the van.
I jumped in the front passenger seat of the Cadillac because I knew the niggas in the caddy wasn't with that bullshit.
I pulled out the Glock that Zip gave me and tossed it in the back seat.
Bubble Up did the driving.
Baby Lane and Freaky were riding in the back.
After our pit stop at the liquor barn, we continued towards the carriage house.
As we were driving, the two vehicles that were with us got caught at the traffic light.
We kept rolling.
A few blocks down, we were sitting at the light, and who the fuck did we see?
The death row caravan hit the corner with Tupac hanging out of the window of a black luxury BMW waving to his fans.
People on the streets were screaming, Tupac, Tupac, we love you, Tupac.
In unison, all of our heads turned.
Shit.
Dad them motherfuckers go right there.
If Pac had not been hanging out of the window, we would have never seen him.
Buster you, busted you.
Bubble up, busted a U-turn, and hit the gutter lane on their asses.
As they sat in traffic, we slowly rolled past the long line of luxury cars they had in their caravan.
We were on a mission looking into each one until we pulled up to the front vehicle and found who we were seeking.
Damn.
Like two Rams locking horns.
Suge and I looked each other dead in the eye.
Our eyes locked.
The terrified expression on Suge's face red.
Damn.
Some pause.
No words exchange.
Oh shit!
Oh shit!
He already know what time it is now at this point.
You know, and again, they're both gang members, high ranking in their own accord.
They knew each other, as you guys heard earlier.
Uh, this could have been potentially squashed from you know a conversation, but that didn't happen.
Let's keep going.
The time for talking had passed.
The shit was about to go down.
The next few seconds all happened so quickly.
The shit was on.
Tupac made an erratic move and began to reach down beneath his seat.
It was the first and only time in my life that I could relate to the police command.
Keep your hands where I can see them.
Instead, Pac pulled out a strap, and that's when the fireworks started.
One of my guys from the back seat grabbed the Glock and started busting back.
First shot skinned Suge in his head.
I thought the motherfucker was dead.
I heard stories that Suge supposedly used Tupac as a shield when the bullet started flying.
But that's some bullshit.
Suge was already wounded.
He was the first one that got touched.
As the rounds continued flying, I dug down so that I wouldn't get hit.
When the shooting stopped, we boned out, and a white Chrysler C-ring full of young ladies was following us.
Their window quickly got shot out, so they stopped.
The interesting thing to me was, with all them rough ass niggas they were supposed to have with them, none of them did a damn thing and tried to come after us.
There were a lot of shots let off in both directions.
I don't know why the Vegas police didn't check Tupac's hands for powder burns to see if he was shooting, because the car we were in was shot the fuck up.
I don't understand why people act like Tupac was an angel.
So people forget that Tupac's entourage did return fire, but not fast enough.
Um I think there was um another car where the firing came from, not Tupac's vehicle.
Uh, let's keep going.
Shit.
The nigga had busted on some off-duty cops in Atlanta a few years earlier.
So he wasn't scared to bust.
On top of that, by the time we rolled up, he had to know the person they jumped on in the casino was a Southside Crip.
So they had to be on high alert.
When the shot settled, a couple of people in our car had fragments and glass in the hair, but none of us had been hit.
The strip was in an uproar as police cars and ambulances raced to the scene.
Somehow, Suge, instead of driving straight to Memorial Hospital, he did some studio gangster shit.
He made a U-turn back onto the Las Vegas strip.
Confident that the death row crew and the police would be looking for the car that we were driving.
We abandoned the car and got away from it quickly.
And some shit you see on the Twilight Zone, we scurried to get to the other side of Las Vegas Boulevard.
When we got to the middle divider, the light changed to red, and we had to wait on the median.
As we were standing on the median, waiting to cross Las Vegas Boulevard, two ambulances passed by right in front of where we were standing with their sirens blaring.
The first ambulance passed by with Tupac in it, and the medics working frantically to provide medical attention.
A second one, not too far behind, had Suge in it.
There we were, looking right into the ambulances, transporting Tupac and Suge to Memorial Hospital.
Everyone knows the rest of the story.
As six days later, Tupac died as a result of his injury.
It's a ruthless way of life.
One that I've lived for the majority of my life.
Some gangster rappers have glamorized and glorified the life like it's cool and something to strive for.
They have a lot of people's minds twisted.
The truth of the matter is, gang banging and acting like a thug ain't no joke.
These street wars taking place in urban communities around the country are as real as the wars that U.S. troops are engaged in around the world.
In some cases, the streets body counts are even higher.
For us, Vegas was another day at the office.
It may sound cold hearted, but from a street perspective, the killings of Tupac Shakur and Biggie Smalls would be considered nothing more than collateral damage.
As a result, the hip hop world has lost two of its most talented and revered musical artists and icons.
At this point in my life, I can say that I have a deep sense of remorse for what happened to Tupac.
He was a talented artist with tons of potential to impact the world.
I hate that Tupac's family, friends, and fans, especially his mother, a Finny Shakur, had to go through the pain of losing her son.
It's terrible losing people like that.
I know that pain too well.
However, I stand firm on the point that Tupac, Suge Knight, and the rest of those niggas didn't have any business putting their hands on my beloved nephew, Baby Lane.
Period.
Them jumping on my nephew gave us the ultimate green light to do something to their ass.
Tupac chose the wrong game to play and the wrong niggas to play with.
Sug and them should have done a better job of protecting that dude because they knew who the fuck we were and the kind of shit we were capable of.
Tupac may not have known, but Suge and his peeps definitely knew.
Tupac was a guppy that got swallowed up by some ferocious sharks.
He shouldn't have ever got involved in that bullshit of trying to be a thug.
Southside Crips earned some stripes on the collar from street niggas due to the Tupac shooting.
But it generated too much attention And put us under a microscope by law enforcement that would not cease and eventually brought us down.
It was a big time loss for everybody involved.
Bam.
And yeah.
Nicely timed.
Guys, there you have it in his own words.
I mean, he literally described the murder uh from the onset from the jumping, because that's what stimulated everything up until the actual shooting.
How he put the gun, etc.
You could see that he had possession of the gun at one point before he tossed it back seat to give it to the other guys to actually execute the shooting.
I mean, they got him all day for uh murder one on this.
Um obviously it was premeditated.
It was a retaliatory type shooting, and it was gang related.
You know, no doubt about it, man.
So that right there, guys, is it the and I don't think anyone has actually played that on YouTube.
So that is the the murder, guys, in his own words, and y'all can see why an indictment would come 27 years after the fact because the physical evidence did line up with what he described, man.
So that pretty much does it, man.
Uh guys, I'll get your guys' final thoughts and then we'll close this thing out.
Um Bills, you want to kick it off first?
What's your thoughts on everything?
Oh, shout out to y'all ninjas on Rumble, man.
Shout out to Rumble the Home Base.
Rumble.com slash Fred Reacts Rumble.com slash fresh and fit man.
Check us out over there, guys.
Rumble, shout out Rumble.
And uh front base.
Yeah, I see, I see, yeah.
Shout out to Rumble, man.
We're on the front page Rumble.
Fuck fuck yeah.
All right.
Uh go ahead, uh, Bills.
So honestly.
What are your thoughts, bro?
I think that well, definitely an L for all of for everyone involved.
Definitely.
I agree.
That was killing probably the number one rap artist of the time, and if not one of the biggest celebrities as well, especially with the uh East Coast West Coast beef going on.
That was so so popular.
It's just it's a huge L on everyone, and this guy is self-snitching.
Bro, that's another L, bro.
How you self-snitch like that in that manner on audio, bro?
Like, come on.
Stupid.
Yeah, come Big Mo, give him another one.
That was the L, bro.
You stupid.
Yeah, one job.
Um, but definitely a W Fed Reacts.
You guys could go ahead and follow me on Instagram at J Bills, J B I L L Z. I appreciate all the love, all the ones, everyone comment W blitz in the comments.
And yeah, shout out to Big Mo Donald C Leno, uh Cena Lola out now everywhere.
All right.
Uh what about uh yeah, I know Mo.
Because just so you guys know, nobody had heard this confession or anything else like that.
I kind of wanted to keep this a secret to get everyone's reaction.
Uh what are your thoughts, Mo?
Go ahead.
One of the worst self-stitches you've seen.
That you know, because I remember when uh when Myron was like, yo, this is just the worst self snitching I've ever seen.
And I was like, yeah, but it ain't better, it ain't like worse than the no way it's gonna be worse than the O Block Um self-snitching, right?
I'm like, it ain't and then you like alright, cool.
Like, yeah, maybe I don't know.
I'm like, bro, cause I'm like, I remember watching that old block episode.
I'm like, nah, nah, nah, nah.
That is the worst self-snitch.
But that's at least I thought, at least I thought that was the worst self-snitching right up until five minutes ago, bro.
That was the worst goddamn self-snitching I've ever seen in my life.
Wait until we do ARAB, bro.
Uh that one's gonna be crazy.
Wait till we do ARAB.
I I I do have a small little I do have a small little theory though.
Yeah.
Um something tells me that he knew he was gonna uh get caught.
Yeah.
I think this is kind of like his closing, like, you know, he just coming clean about life.
Maybe he has a a whole like maybe a change of heart and trying to like maybe leave this world with a cleaner heart.
That's why he's making all of this.
And he was just like, alright, now I've put this out.
Now it's only a matter of time till they arrest me.
And you know what?
They're gonna arrest me, and it is what it is.
I he I think he feels like at peace and like ready to move on.
Okay.
So um, but that's so that's just my thought on.
But other than that, yes, you know out everywhere.
But you guys can also follow me at Big Mo underscore B-I-T-W.
That is B I G M-O underscore B-I-T-W.
Don't forget the memo to believe in big mo because that's the MO.
Andrew, what are your thoughts?
Um, yeah, this guy is just retarded.
He is like you can understand what he says, like it's um it's just crazy that he caught they caught him like 27 years later.
It's just insane.
And he's the only one left or like a from the gun that um.
If they were all alive, they'd all be in prison right now.
They would have arrested all four of them.
They want to round them up.
Uh the Orlando Anderson guy.
Yeah.
Especially him.
Because he was the main guy.
But yeah.
I hope you guys uh are satisfied with this um stream.
Yeah, we went down.
We went in detail.
We are delivering.
So yes, we went deep in detail.
Myron actually studied deeply this whole thing.
Yeah.
And bought the book and everything.
Like, it's insane.
So yeah, guys, keep um keep uh interacting in the Instagram so we get your uh future cases.
Um, I think I'm gonna make a live later this week.
Maybe if we go to Vegas or whatever, I'm gonna make a live and take your request live so you guys can see what I'm like writing down.
Okay, so I have you see what I have in the list.
And yeah.
Cool.
Follow Fed React on Instagram.
Yes.
Don't follow me on Instagram.
Follow Fed Reacts, yeah.
Uh, guys, and um guys, don't forget to like the video, like I said before, man.
We got 1.
Uh 3k likes here.
Let's get 1.5k.
We got 1.5k watching on YouTube, and then another couple, what, four, three to four, what, five thousand on rumble, something like that?
5.7.
5.7 on Rumble.
Um, but yeah, guys, um, yeah, crazy stuff, man.
Um, we're gonna definitely put the timestamps in here for y'all, man.
We broke this thing down from A to Z from the press release to the um what led up to the fight, surveillance footage, um, Tupac's impact on hip hop, um, so many different things.
We even played the audible version where you guys hear it yourselves, the um, you know, the self-incriminating statements.
Uh, but yeah, dude.
I mean, yeah, wild stuff, man.
But now we know what actually went down on that night.
Um, Red Math emailed you, Angie.
Thank you.
WFNF and Fed Reacts and L to self-snitching for attention slash co.
Yeah, okay.
Uh can you pull it up?
Yeah.
Um, and then what else do we got here?
One more.
Uh, last one here.
Can you get extra data from Canada if you commit a crime in Vegas?
Um, it's possible.
It it definitely is.
Um, if you get it, because keep in mind, guys, that American law enforcement does have access to Canadian law enforcement and vice versa.
I remember when I was an agent, I was able to run um Canadian databases to get criminal records on Canadians.
So um it is possible.
Um would they travel up to Canada to get you?
That's a different question.
But uh, but my my biggest thing is uh what I would say is just don't guys if you go to Vegas Don't do stupid shit and get arrested, bro, because it can absolutely mess you up and they will come after you.
That's one city that doesn't play with that stuff.
Um you're reading uh 2012 and oops.
Uh yeah, those that came in from okay, cool.
I think we are caught up on all the chats, guys.
Thank you guys so much for supporting the show, man.
Like the video, man.
Subscribe to the channel, Fed Reacts.
Also, follow me on Rumble as well at Fed Reacts.
Uh support Rumble Man, free speech.
Um, Fed Reacts on Instagram.
Mo and uh Bill's Instagrams are below as well.
Check them out.
Um, and we'll be back tomorrow with bigger pockets, guys.
We're gonna talk about real estate 101, it's gonna be probably one of the most informative episodes that we do.
We're gonna talk about how to get an acquire, how to acquire and control real estate from A to Z, step by step, whether you have some money, little money, no money, and we'll figure out teach you guys how to do it.
Um peep the narrator, it's not him, but it's if it's his book, L. Yeah, I know.
It is what it is, bro.
It is his book.
Um, he wrote it with another guy.
Uh hope you guys enjoyed that one, man.
This is the best two-box breakdown on the internet.
We'll catch you guys tomorrow at 6 p.m. or 6 30 for Money Monday.
Love y'all, peace.
I'm special agent with homeland screw investigations, okay, guys.
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Oh, here's what 6ix9ine actually got.
This attack shifted the whole US government.
This guy got arrested.
Espionage.
Okay, trading secrets with the Russians.
John Wayne Gacy, aka the killer clown, okay.
One of the most prolific serial killers of all time, killed 33 people.
Zodiac killer is a pseudonym of an unidentified serial who operated Northern California.
Serial killers guy.
They really get off on getting attention from the media.
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It was OJ working together to get Nicole killed.
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