With prosecutors continue searching for the truth in the case of Tupac murder suspect Duane “Keefe D” Davis, sources imply that top-secret papers from the Notorious B.I.G.’s murder investigation are being used to strengthen evidence against Davis.
These records might possibly incriminate some of the most prominent figures from the 1990s hip-hop movement.
Keefe D was arrested about a year ago, more than 25 years after Tupac Shakur was shot and died in Las Vegas in 1996, and has pled not guilty. He has since sought bail, which a court has refused.
As the case against him continues, more light is thrown on the iconic East vs. West Coast rap feuds of the time. It has also uncovered some outrageous accusations, such as assertions that Sean “Diddy” Combs, then known as Puff Daddy, offered Keefe D $1 million to assassinate Tupac.
According to recent reports, investigators from the LAPD and the previous Compton police department have turned over hundreds of papers from different investigations into Biggie’s 1997 murder to help the prosecution’s case against Keefe D. These documents may contain more charges against other famous people from the 1990s music industry.
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According to sources, there is a significant quantity of paperwork involved. “The DA’s team are sitting on the biggest ever evidence file relating to Tupac’s murder, including paperwork which may never become public,” they informed us. “These include accusations against some of the biggest names in music from the 1990s.”
Sources further reported that Los Angeles police had “decades of intel” exposing Keefe D and his criminal ties, notably among the Crips gang and their enemies, the Mob Piru.
The trial against Keefe D represents the first time that important police from both California and Nevada have worked together to gather a massive quantity of evidence for the case, including a large number of witnesses.
“The witness list for the trial is being prepared by the DA,” a source stated. “It will feature former officers from Los Angeles’s police and specialist divisions explaining their insight into Keefe’s criminal past, which he boasted about in interviews and his memoir; and now that he is charged with murder, he suddenly denies.”
As the case progresses, the public will be waiting to see if these fresh pieces of evidence can bring Tupac Shakur and the many others who have been touched by the deadly war between East and West Coast rap groups to justice.
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