Tupac Shakur’s murder: Why it took so long for the cops to arrest Keffe D.
SlateOn a chilly night in December 2019, I settled into the musty couch of my basement Airbnb apartment in Brooklyn and made a call to the man who was still telling everyone that he’d been part of the crew that murdered Tupac Shakur. He’d recount his role that night: He was in the front passenger seat of the white Cadillac that pulled up alongside Shakur and Death Row Records CEO Marion “Suge” Knight at a red light near the Las Vegas Strip. “While I know there have been many people who did not believe that the murder of Tupac Shakur was important to this police department,” Las Vegas Metropolitan Police Department Sheriff Kevin McMahill said during a press conference last week, “I’m here to tell you that was simply not the case. “I’ll never understand why Tupac would want to take on Orlando Anderson.” Cooperating with investigators put Davis in a very public jam for a big-time gangster: Kading retired from law enforcement in 2010 and wrote about Davis’ confession in his 2011 book Murder Rap. “I’m the only one alive who can really tell you the story about the Tupac killing,” Davis said on camera, also revealing that he had cancer.