Was driving the car when 2Pac was shot and killed in Las Vegas on September 7, 1996. A new 10-part series documentary Netflix series – Unsolved, – has been released in the UK based on a major Los Angeles Police Department task force probe led by former detective Greg Kading. The investigation concluded Orlando ‘Baby Lane’ Anderson was the shooter after he had been attacked by Pac and his Death Row crew – including Knight – hours earlier in the MGM Grand immediately following a Mike Tyson fight. Kading and his team also came to the conclusion that Knight paid enforcer Darnell ‘Pouchie’ Bolton to kill Biggie Smalls in LA on March 9, 1997. GETTY FINAL PHOTO: The last known picture of Pac with Suge Knight driving before the shooting (Pic: GETTY) DAILY STAR (Pic: DAILY STAR) when facing a 25-year prison stretch that he was a front-seat passenger in the car when his relative blasted Tupac in Sin City.
Moreover Keefe D told how he looked straight at Knight who he had known since he was “seven or eight” when Anderson fired the fatal bullets. Keefe D and Knight grew up in the same Compton neighbourhood but were on opposing sides in the deadly gang warfare between Bloods (Knight) and Crips (Keefe D).
“Suge Knight is as responsible for Tupac’s murder not being solved as anybody, because as we now know Suge Knight looked directly at Keefe D and recognised him, knew him from childhood,” Kading told the Daily Star Online. “And all Suge Knight had to have done was be that one guy who said ‘yeah I saw these guys roll up, I know who they are, I looked right at him and that’s when they shot and killed my artist’. GREG KADING SUSPECTS: On the night of Tupac's murder, these men were allegedly in the car with Keefe D (Pic: GREG KADING) 'Suge Knight never provided that information. “Had he done that, then Orlando Anderson would have been prosecuted back at the time. “So we can all thank Suge Knight for Tupac’s case never being solved.” Knight stuck to the code of the streets – never snitch to police officers unless you have no other choice. Incredibly he then needed Anderson to testify on his behalf because he was facing jail for violating his probation after stomping on Lane in the MGM Grand.
Darnell Bolton Poochie
One of the bullets grazed Knight when Pac was killed. Kading said: “Once Tupac was dead, Suge Knight’s primary concern was staying out of prison himself. “So if he had to pay the Devil to provide testimony favourable for him (Anderson denying Suge assaulted him), that’s what he was going to do. “After Tupac dying, saving Death Row was the highest priority. “Suge knew he was not going to be able save Death Row from prison. “They did their best to keep it above water but as we all know it failed, it sunk.
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“So it was a very interesting position for Suge Knight to be in so he has to pay someone to perjure themselves on his behalf. “Even though that person was responsible for shooting Tupac and killing him, and shooting Suge himself.” Compton Police FAMILY: Keefe D and Orlando Anderson have been constantly linked with Tupac's murder (Pic: Compton Police) At the time, Los Angeles Superior Court judge J Stephen Czuleger noted Anderson was obviously lying and Knight was sent to prison. Death Row Records, which gave the world iconic hip hop albums such as Snoop’s Doggstyle, Dr Dre’s the Chronic and Tupac’s All Eyez on Me, went into permanent decline and filled for bankruptcy in 2006. Keefe D claimed Sean Puffy Combs, founder of Death Row’s rival Bad Boy Records, had offered $1 million dollars for him to assassinate Tupac and Suge Knight in the months before the shooting. Combs has always strenuously denied these claims, stating they were 'completely fictitious' and he wouldn't even 'entertain this nonsense'. The task force looked into Keefe D's claims but the LAPD did not feel the theory involving Combs was worth pursuing or investigating further.
Kading’s probe concluded Knight had hired Pouchie via his girlfriend Theresa Swann to kill Biggie in 1997 to avenge the death of Tupac. DS SUSPECT: Darnell 'Pouchie' Bolton was accused of shooting Biggie Smalls for Suge Knight (Pic: DS) Pouchie, who also used the alias Wardell Fouse, was killed in 2003 after being shot when riding his motorbike in Compton. Knight, now aged 53, is facing a murder trial after being involved in a hit and run in Compton three years ago. And Kading says it is unlikely anyone will be charged over either the Biggie.
He said: “Most of the witnesses are dead, the few remaining witnesses that would be able to bring testimony to court, you know they’re gang members and drug dealers and perjurers. “And their reliability would be brought into question in court. “So I don’t think any district attorney would be very confident moving forward charging Keefe D or Suge Knight as murderers.”. “Suge Knight has to pay someone to perjure themselves on his behalf.
Even though that person was responsible for shooting Tupac and killing him, and shooting Suge himself.” Greg Kading, former LAPD detective Former LAPD detective Russell Poole had an alternative theory to Kading. The decorated cop, who died from a heart attack just under three years ago, believed Biggie’s killers were alleged corrupt off-duty LAPD officers who provided security for Death Row Records. A new film starring Johnny Depp called City of Lies is based on Poole’s investigation, and the competing theory also features in Netflix’s Unsolved. Kading, now retired and who wrote Murder Rap on the case, is certain that Pouchie gunned down Biggie on Knight’s behalf.
“There’s absolutely no doubt in my mind regarding Biggie’s killer,” he said. “It’s very similar to the type of thing with Orlando and Tupac. 'It’s somebody who is willing to do that type of thing and was loyal to Suge Knight and was willing to do it for a certain amount of money. “And is already known in the neighbourhood as somebody who would not hesitate to pull a trigger. “So after getting the confession from Suge’s girlfriend and she pointed out who the trigger man was, it made perfect sense.
YOUTUBE POLICE: Ex-copper Greg Kading says his team identified Biggie and Tupac's killers (Pic: YOUTUBE) “And then as more time went on we became familiar with people who were direct friends, very close with that individual who was the shooter – Darnell Bolton, Pouchie. “And then they said ‘yeah he did it, we talked it about after it happened and he’s been dead for years’. “But we don’t want to go public because of people in our neighbourhood, and we don’t want the consequences of being associated with snitching. “So there’s no doubt in my mind whatsoever that both of the stories in Unsolved and Murder Rap are the absolute truths behind these murders.” Related articles.
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We may have finally discovered Biggie’s killer. According to retired LAPD detective Greg Kading, Wardell Fouse a.k.a Darnell Bolton a.k.a. “Poochie” was the triggerman who killed fifteen years ago today – his fee for carrying out the murder was $13,000. On March 9, 1997, Biggie was shot to death while sitting in a Chevy Suburban outside of a hip-hop industry party in Los Angeles. Biggie’s drive-by shooting occurred just six months after his friend turned foe, 25-year-old Tupac Shakur, suffered a similar fate after a boxing match in Las Vegas.
These killings remain the worst tragedies in hip-hop history. Sat down with Kading, the man who spent three years investigating the murder of Christopher Wallace, and revealed that the case will never be “solved”: “It comes down to how you define solved. Both law enforcement agencies—the Las Vegas Police Department and the L.A.P.D.—have drawn the conclusions that Tupac was killed by Orlando Anderson and Biggie Smalls was killed by Wardell ‘Poochie’ Fouse. Both shooters are dead. Orlando Anderson was killed outside a Compton record shop in May 1998.
Poochie died in July 2003 as a result of multiple gunshot wounds. He was shot in the back while riding his motorcycle in Compton.
He was supposedly killed as a result of in-fighting between the Mob Pirus—Suge’s Blood associates—and another Blood gang known as the Fruit Town Pirus. That’s all the justice that these cases will see.
The co-conspirators are never going to be prosecuted. Unfortunately, the cases are so complicated and convoluted. These will never see criminal prosecution.” According to Kading, there is no proactive investigation going on in Biggie’s murder case, even though the LAPD says the case is ongoing. On The David Mack & Amir Muhammad Theory, Kading says: “There was all this exaggeration of information, and a whole theory was built on it, which never had a basis but captured the popular imagination.
![Darnell Bolton Darnell Bolton](https://a3-images.myspacecdn.com/images03/35/ca8cf5c577be4a0482f18cc15f45d567/300x300.jpg)
Actually, the individual who brought that information to the L.A.P.D. Recanted and said, ‘I made it all up. It was all bullshit.’“The L.A.P.D. Always knew the problems with Russell Poole’s theory. They knew his jailhouse informants were discredited, they were unreliable, and they were lying.
Knew that there was no basis whatsoever to Poole’s theory. Even though the public picked up on it and author/journalist Randall Sullivan was running with it, with his book LAbyrinth, and Russell Poole had convinced himself that it was such, the L.A.P.D. Knew there was nothing behind it.” Today marks one of the worst days in hip-hop history and we finally have a glimpse into the man who shot and killed one of music’s greatest. Rest in Peace Biggie.
Christopher George Latore Wallace, best known as The Notorious B.I.G., was an American rapper and hip-hop artist. Wallace was born and raised in the Brooklyn neighborhood of Bedford-Stuyvesant. Wallace dropped out of high school at the age of 17 and started to deal drugs. Eventually, he was arrested and served nine months behind bars. Afterwards, Wallace produced some hip-hop tracks on his friend's tape recorder and these tracks were copied and played on a local radio station in New York.
Wallace's tracks were heard by rapper and producer Sean 'P. Diddy' Combs who was impressed by the young man's talents and signed him to a contract with his label, Bad Boy Records. Combs helped Wallace work on his first album, Ready to Die. This helped him become a central figure in the East Coast hip-hop scene. The album helped Wallace be named MC of the Year at the 1995 Billboard Music Awards. Posthumously, Ready to Die was certified diamond selling more than 10 million copies.
Wallace's work was unique as he rapped in a deep baritone voice about the usual gangster subjects and then unexpectedly changed to love and family responsibilities. Wallace actually was first recognized when he joined Mary J. Blige in performing her remix of Real Love and What's the 411?, under the pseudonym, The Notorious B.I.G.
Soon after, Wallace met and became good friends with a talented West Coast rapper, Tupac Shakur. Tupac supported Wallace and was often giving him advice. However, their friendship would not last as it soon turned into the most violent era of hip-hop music on November 30th, 1994. While Biggie and Sean Puffy Combs were at a recording session at Quad Recording in Manhattan, New York, Tupac went there to record with another rapper for his third solo album, Me Against The World at the same time. As Tupac entered the lobby of the recording studio, he was held at gunpoint and robbed of $40,000 worth of jewelry.
In the events that transpired, Tupac was shot five times. Wallace rushed to the lobby to see what went down just in time to see Tupac being loaded into an ambulance. As he was loaded in the ambulance, Tupac, extend his middle finger blaming Wallace for the shooting and said that he. Knew about it and failed to warn him. This sparked the East Coast West Coast war. Miraculously, Tupac recovered from his injuries. Wallace never responded to any of Tupac's disses.
Tupac attacked Wallace in every way he could, even starting strong rumors that there was a love affair between Tupac and Wallace's wife, singer Faith Evans. Wallace produced two albums, Right to Die and Life After Death. The song 'Hypnotize ' was a Grammy-nominated hip-hop song on the Life After Death album that was fifth song to hit #1 posthumously for a credited artist. In March 1997, Wallace was in California to promote his second album in addition trying to promote peace between the East Coast and West Coast factions. On the night of March 8, 1997, Wallace attended the 11th Annual Soul Train Music Award and was presenting an award to Toni Braxton; however, when on stage, he got booed by the Californian crowd (a response to the Shakur murder, the previous year) and an embarrassed Wallace left the stage. He then proceeded to attend an after party. Approximately around 12:30 am on March 9, 1997, Wallace left the after party and proceeded with his entourage back to his hotel.
Wallace and his entourage were in two GMC Suburban vehicles accompanied by his record label's director of security. As Wallace's vehicle was at a red light, a b lack Chevrolet Impala SS pulled up alongside Wallace's vehicle and the driver of the Impala, an African American male dressed in a blue suit and bow tie, rolled down his window, drew a 9 mm blue-steel pistol and fired at the GMC Suburban, with four bullets hitting Wallace. Wallace's entourage rushed him to Cedars-Sinai Medical Center, where doctors were unsuccessful in saving him Wallace was pronounced dead at 1:15 AM. According to the autopsy report, Wallace died as a result of a 'gunshot wound to the abdomen-chest.' Three of the four bullets were non-fatal shots.
Wallace's murder has remained unsolved; however, at the time of his murder, the Los Angeles Police Department participated in the investigation. Lead Detective Russell Poole, head up the investigation. In 2002, Randall Sullivan released LAbyrinth, a book compiling information regarding the murders of Wallace and Shakur based on evidence provided Poole.
Sullivan accused Marion 'Suge' Knight, co-founder of Death Row Records and an alleged Bloods affiliate, of conspiring with David Mack, an LAPD officer and alleged Death Row security employee, to kill Wallace and make Shakur and his death appear the result of East and West Coast rap rivalry. Sullivan believed that one of Mack's associates, Amir Muhammad, Aka Harry Billups, was the alleged hit-man based on evidence provided by an informant, and due to his close resemblance to police sketch created based on witness descriptions. An article published in Rolling Stone by Sullivan in December 2005 accused the LAPD of not fully investigating links with Death Row Records based on evidence from Poole.
Sullivan claimed that Sean Combs 'failed to fully cooperate with the investigation' and according to Poole, encouraged Bad Boy staff to do the same. In January 2011, the case was reinvigorated as a result of new information reported by Anderson Cooper's AC360 'Cold Case' show that it was being re-investigated by a law enforcement task force composed of the LAPD, the L.A. County District Attorney's Office, and the FBI. In April, the FBI released redacted documents about their investigation into the shooting, revealing that the bullets were rare 9mm Gecko ammunition manufactured in Germany. Ableton live 10 suite mac download crack. The documents reported that LAPD officers monitoring the party Wallace was attending were also employed as security personnel for Knight; the documents also speculated that the Genovese crime family was withholding evidence about Wallace's death.
Retired LAPD detective Greg Kading, who worked on the Wallace murder case for three years, alleges that the rapper was shot by Darnell Bolton, an associate of Suge Knight who was killed in July 2003 after being shot in the back while riding his motorcycle. Kading believes Knight hired Bolton via his girlfriend to kill Wallace to avenge the death of Tupac whom Kading alleges was killed under the orders of Sean Combs. Christopher Wallace's body was cremated and the ashes placed in two separate urns. The ashes were then given to family members.
![Darnell Darnell](/uploads/1/2/3/9/123945261/725126463.jpg)
The official cause of his death was listed as Gunshot Wound - Abdomen/Chest.