*Keffe D, the former Compton gang member whose Las Vegas home was raided over the summer in connection with Tupac Shakur’s unsolved murder, claims he was in the Cadillac with the person who opened fire on Pac and Suge Knight.
We reported previously that Keffe D (real name Duane Davis) claims he provided the weapon to his nephew, who fatally shot the rapper. As RadarOnline reports, Keffe D noted in his 2019 self-published book “COMPTON STREET LEGEND” that he thought he could avoid charges for his link to the killing.
Keefe D, 60, admitted he was an accomplice to the1996 murder of Tupac in Las Vegas. He apparently told the LAPD in 2009 that his nephew, Orlando “Baby Lane” Anderson, was the triggerman. You can read the full breakdown of his confession here.
Davis claims he witnessed Anderson allegedly shoot and kill Tupac in Las Vegas in 1996. Anderson was reportedly beaten by Pac and former Death Row Records boss Suge Knight in the lobby of MGM Grand on the night Shakur was killed.
Watch the Vlad TV interview with Keffe D about his tell-all book below.
Per Radar, here’s a book synopsis in which Keffe D boasted: “The infamous Suge Knight, former Death Row Records CEO, and I are the only living eyewitnesses to the deadly confrontation on the Las Vegas strip between the occupants of our two vehicles. A violent confrontation that led to the deaths of two of Hip-Hop’s biggest stars (Tupac Shakur & Christopher ‘Notorious B.I.G.’ Wallace) and changed Hip-Hop history forever. There’s a strict code on the streets. One that real street players live, kill, and die by.”
“COMPTON STREET LEGEND reveals the street-level code violations and the explosive consequences when the powerful worlds of the streets, entertainment, and corrupt law enforcement collide,” he added.
“More than twenty years after the premature deaths of Tupac and Biggie there have been numerous TV specials, documentaries, books, magazine and newspaper, and social media dedicated to the subject. But at the end of the day, none of the private investigators, retired police officers, informants, Hip-Hop heads, actors, or academics that have weighed in on the topic truly know what happened and the reasons behind it, because none of them were there.”
A source told RadarOnline.com: “Keefe wrote COMPTON STREET LEGEND believing he could tell his story without facing charges for being in the car where the gunman unloaded on Tupac. Otherwise, why would he do it? He made little money off the book. It was not worth his while, at all.”
READ MORE: Tupac Murder Confession Prompted Police Raid of Gang Member’s Home
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