Sean “Diddy” Combs is fingered as the main person behind Tupac Shakur’s 1996 shooting death in a new documentary.
Retired Los Angeles Police detective Greg Kading believes that he has solved Tupac’s murder, and gives his version of events in a new documentary called Murder Rap. Kading, who led a special task force that investigated the shooting over the course of three years, believes that Diddy hired Crips gang member Duane Keith “Keffe D” Davis to kill both Shakur and his manager at the time, Marion Hugh “Suge” Knight, paying Keffe D $1 million for the hit.
Kading, who spoke to Keffe D, further alleges that it was actually Keffe D’s nephew, Orlando “Baby Lane” Anderson, who pulled the trigger on Sept. 7, 1996, killing Shakur and missing Suge Knight, who walked away uninjured.
“If his intention was to just get away with it, so to speak. It would have been very easy for him to not include all the details that he did,” Kading told The Huffington Post about his conversation with Keffe D, standing behind his belief that the Crips member wasn’t lying about Diddy hiring him for the job.
Murder Rap also delves into the murder of Christopher “Biggie Smalls” Wallace in March 1997. Kading suggests in the documentary that Knight had hired Bloods gang member Wardell “Poochie” Fouse for $13,000 to kill the “Big Poppa” rapper.
Murder Rap is currently available on iTunes, and will make its debut on Netflix this spring.
Seibert speculated, “If struggle without context is baffling, heaven without struggle isn’t very interesting.”
The shooter was identified to be John R. Lyons, 24, of Westchester, Illinois.
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