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Tupac Murder Suspect Gives First Interview Since 2023 Arrest: ‘I'm Innocent'
Tupac Murder Suspect Gives First Interview Since 2023 Arrest: ‘I'm Innocent'

Yahoo

time06-03-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Yahoo

Tupac Murder Suspect Gives First Interview Since 2023 Arrest: ‘I'm Innocent'

Nearly two years after he was arrested in Las Vegas on suspicion of ordering the 1996 drive-by shooting of rapper Tupac Shakur, Duane 'Keffe D' Davis has given his side of the story. In a jailhouse interview conducted by ABC News out Thursday, Davis insisted that he is innocent of any wrongdoing involved in Shakur's long-unsolved death. 'I'm innocent,' he plainly told the outlet. 'I did not do it.' Shakur, an acclaimed rapper, activist, poet and actor (his film credits include roles in John Singleton's 'Poetic Justice' and Ernest Dickerson's 'Juice'), was sitting in a car driven by Death Row Records founder Suge Knight on the Las Vegas Strip on Sept. 7, 1996, when a white Cadillac pulled up alongside them. A shooter in the Cadillac's backseat opened fire, spraying the other car with bullets. Shakur was hit four times and died six days later from his gunshot wounds. He was only 25. The crime, which shook the hip-hop world, went unsolved until Las Vegas police arrested Davis in Sept. 2023 and a Nevada grand jury indicted him on one count of murder with a deadly weapon. At the time, Clark County Chief Deputy District Attorney Marc DiGiacomo said that authorities believed Davis is the man who 'ordered the death' of Shakur. Davis, who has pleaded not guilty to the murder charge against him, told ABC News he is a 'good man' who has moved on from his days as a gangster in Compton, California. 'I did everything they asked me to do. Get new friends. Stop selling drugs. I stopped all that,' he said. 'I'm supposed to be out there enjoying my twilight at one of my f—king grandson's football games and basketball games; enjoying life with my kids.' Vegas authorities' case against Davis is largely built on his own comments about Shakur's killing, compiled from multiple interviews he gave over the years, as well as remarks made in his 2019 memoir titled 'Compton Street Legend,' which Davis is credited as a co-author of alongside Yusuf Jah. Davis now not only claims that he did not co-write the book, but that he hasn't even read it. 'I just gave him details of my life,' Davis said of Jah. 'And he went and did his little investigation and wrote the book on his own.' He has walked back some of his past claims, including that he was sitting in the Cadillac that pulled up alongside Shakur and Knight's car. Davis now says that he was 'in Los Angeles' the night of the drive-by shooting and that he has 'about 20 or 30 people going to come' to his trial to corroborate his whereabouts. 'They don't have nothing. And they know they don't have nothing,' Davis said of those prosecuting him. 'They can't even place me out here. They don't have no gun, no car, no Keffe D, no nothing.' He further alleged that he was 'paid' to play up his involvement in Shakur's murder in his past media appearances and memoir and argues that any confessions he gave to the police are connected to a 'proffer agreement' he made with a Los Angeles task force in 2008 that granted him immunity in return for information. Claiming that he only told the police what they wanted to hear so they would 'let me go,' Davis added, 'I'm not even supposed to be in jail. A deal is a deal.' In his interview with ABC News, the he additionally accused Reggie Wright Jr., a former cop responsible for partly running Knight and Shakur's security operations the night of the shooting, of being the actual 'lead suspect' in the murder. Wright Jr. testified before the grand jury that indicted Davis and has said that he spent a large part of that infamous 1996 night in a club that Knight and Shakur were planning on visiting before the shooting. Wright has denied any involvement in the shooting that killed Shakur. Davis, for his part, insists that he will survive and come out the other side of his trial a free man. 'God got my back, and God will see me through this,' he told ABC News. 'He had my back with cancer, I survived the streets and the FBI. That's a big accomplishment for a man from Compton.' His trial is currently set for Feb. 9, 2026. Davis' comments come just a week after a male escort filed a lawsuit against disgraced music mogul Sean 'Diddy' Combs accusing him of sexual assault in 2012. The escort claims in his suit that Diddy subsequently threatened to have him killed the same way he managed to 'get Pac hit.' The post Tupac Murder Suspect Gives First Interview Since 2023 Arrest: 'I'm Innocent' | Video appeared first on TheWrap.

Tupac Murder Suspect Duane ‘Keffe D' Davis Insists He's Innocent in First TV Interview Since Arrest
Tupac Murder Suspect Duane ‘Keffe D' Davis Insists He's Innocent in First TV Interview Since Arrest

Yahoo

time06-03-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Yahoo

Tupac Murder Suspect Duane ‘Keffe D' Davis Insists He's Innocent in First TV Interview Since Arrest

Duane 'Keffe D' Davis is speaking out from behind bars as he faces a murder charge for the 1996 shooting death of Tupac Shakur. Davis, who pleaded not guilty, has remained at Clark County Detention Center in Las Vegas since his September 2023 arrest, and he has now given ABC News his first-ever interview since being arrested. More from Billboard Duane 'Keffe D' Davis Murder Charge for 1996 Death of 2Pac Upheld in Court Diplo's Run Club Expanding to Six New Cities Hear Calvin Harris Tease a New Country-Oriented Song Featuring His Own Vocals 'I'm innocent,' he said in the sit-down, which aired Thursday (March 6) on Good Morning America. 'I did everything they asked me to do. Get new friends. Stop selling drugs. I stopped all that. I'm supposed to be out there enjoying my twilight at one of my f—ing grandson's football games and basketball games. Enjoying life with my kids.' 2Pac's murder remained a cold case until Davis' 2023 arrest nearly 27 years after the legendary Death Row rapper was gunned down in Las Vegas. Still, the former Crips gang member, who prosecutors believe was the 'shot caller' to orchestrate the hit on Pac, is confident he'll be found not guilty. 'I did not do it,' he insisted during the interview. 'They don't have nothing. And they know they don't have nothing. They can't even place me out here. They don't have no gun, no car, no Keffe D, no nothing.' Davis claims he was hundreds of miles away when the 2Pac shooting took place, and said he'll have about '20 or 30 people' coming to court to corroborate his alibi. He spoken about his alleged involvement in Pac's murder in the past, as he's given his account in numerous interviews as well as his 2019 Compton Street Legend memoir. However, back in 2008, Davis allegedly agreed to a proffer agreement with authorities connected to an L.A. task force, which would have granted him immunity from being prosecuted in the case. Per ABC News, he once again admitted his alleged role in Pac's murder a year later to detectives in Las Vegas, but they were not required to honor any previous agreements. A Clark County District Court judge ruled in January that Davis had not shown proof of any immunity deals. He's repeatedly been denied bail. Shakur was shot on Sept. 7, 1996, in a drive-by shooting in Las Vegas. Authorities believe Davis orchestrated the hit with others in the car following a brawl at the MGM Grand casino. Davis was arrested in September 2023 and has been charged with first degree murder. He will head to trial in February 2026. Watch Davis' interview with ABC News above. Best of Billboard Chart Rewind: In 1989, New Kids on the Block Were 'Hangin' Tough' at No. 1 Janet Jackson's Biggest Billboard Hot 100 Hits H.E.R. & Chris Brown 'Come Through' to No. 1 on Adult R&B Airplay Chart

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