Monday, March 17, 2008

Who Shot Ya? LA Times Says It Was Big n Puff. Puff Says LA Times Is Full Of Shit

NEW YORK -- Cameras flashed as paramedics carried the victim into the glare of Times Square on a stretcher. Blood seeped through bandages from five gunshot wounds.

Tupac Shakur had been beaten, shot and left for dead at the Quad Recording Studios on New York's 7th Avenue. As he was borne to a waiting ambulance through a swarm of paparazzi on Nov. 30, 1994, the rap star thrust his middle finger into the air.
It was a portentous moment in hip-hop -- the start of a bicoastal war that would culminate years later in the killings of Shakur and rap's other leading star, Christopher Wallace, better known as the Notorious B.I.G.

The ambush at the Quad remains a source of fascination and frustration to music fans and law enforcement officials alike. No one has ever been charged in the attack.

Now, newly discovered information, including interviews with people who were at the studio that night, lends credence to Shakur's insistence that associates of rap impresario Sean "Diddy" Combs were behind the assault. Their alleged motives: to punish Shakur for disrespecting them and rejecting their business overtures and, not incidentally, to curry favor with Combs.
LATimes

3 comments:

Anonymous said...

I believe the LA Times.

RJEsq

Denmark Vesey said...

That can mean many different things Dear Robyn.

Are you saying you believe Tupac was set up and shot by Jimmy Henchmen and Haitian Jack, or are you saying you believe Tupac was set up and shot by Jimmy Henchmen and Haitian Jack with the full knowledge of Puff and Big?

There's a big difference.

It's also counterintuitive that Big and Puff would hang around the scene of an impending murder.

Come on now counselor - be specific about that which you 'believe'.

Anonymous said...

Alright, alright.

That's fair.

I believe Tupac was set up and shot by Jimmy Henchmen and Haitian Jack with a problematic level of knowledge by Puff and Big and a whole lotta other folks.

BTW, Big was apparently a cousin of mine. His pops is my dad's uncle. Word in my family is that after Ms. Wallace found God, it was easier to be the mother of a son with a "no-good daddy" than to be a woman who got pregnant by man she knew to be married. Two sides to a story I guess.