Now aged 60, the former leader of the South Side Compton Crips, a Los Angeles gang, has long admitted his involvement in the murder of Tupac Shakur, who was 25 years old at the time. He notably boasted of having been the “commander” of the operation aimed at taking down Tupac as well as the boss of the Death Row Records label, Marion Knight, known as “Suge”, in retaliation for an attack against his nephew.
But during his appearance Thursday in Las Vegas, Duane Davis pleaded “not guilty” to his indictment for murder. Under Nevada law, anyone who promotes and participates in a murder, even indirectly, can be charged with that crime.
Discussing the murder on television
Tupac Shakur, known for the hits “Dear Mama”, “California Love” and “Changes”, was a huge star in the rap world at the time of his death. He depended on Death Row Records, a label associated at the time with the Los Angeles gang Mob Piru, at war for a long time with Duane Davis’ South Side Compton Crips.
Prosecutors said last month that the prosecution had long suspected that “Keefe D” was involved in the murder, but did not have enough evidence to charge him. Things began to unravel when Davis, the last person still alive among the team in the Cadillac where the shots were fired, published an autobiography and spoke about the murder on television. .
2023-11-02 21:13:51
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