Inland Valley Daily Bulletin

Trial winds down in shooting death of Nipsey Hussle

- By Andrew Dalton

LOS ANGELES » Both sides rested their cases Wednesday in the trial of a man charged with the killing of rapper Nipsey Hussle after a day’s delay because of an assault on the defendant by fellow jail inmates.

Closing arguments are set to begin today in the trial of Eric Ronald Holder Jr., who is charged with firstdegre­e murder in Hussle’s killing and attempted murder of two other men struck by gunfire.

Holder appeared in court with swollen eyes and staples closing a wound in the back of his head.

He was punched and cut with a razor by two inmates while waiting in a holding cell to come to court on Tuesday, his attorney Aaron

Jansen said.

The motive for the attack was unclear, and the issue was not discussed in the courtroom.

Holder did not take the stand during his trial.

Jansen called two witnesses for the defense, including a private investigat­or and gang expert who testified to the seriousnes­s of “snitching” allegation­s that the prosecutio­n says were the motive for the shooting.

“As you grow up in the neighborho­od, everybody knows the consequenc­es of what it means to be labeled a snitch,” the investigat­or, Robert Freeman, said.

Both Hussle and Holder grew up in the same South Los Angeles neighborho­od, and had ties to the same gang, the Rollin’ 60s.

Without naming Hussle, Jansen asked whether discussion­s of acting as an informant are especially serious if they come from a revered figure in the group.

“If they’re an OG or looked upon, whatever they say is almost gold in the streets,” Freeman answered.

Previous witnesses testified that on March 31, 2019, in a conversati­on outside the hip-hop star’s clothing store The Marathon, Hussle told Holder there were rumors of “paperwork” suggesting he’d been informing to authoritie­s, and that Holder needed to address it. Holder returned about 10 minutes later and shot Hussle, the witnesses and prosecutio­n said.

In his cross-examinatio­n of Freeman, Deputy District Attorney John McKinney got him to acknowledg­e that such conversati­ons are not unusual, and that while beatings over them are frequent, killings over them are very rare.

“That kind of admonition is common in the hood among homies, among friends, is that correct?” McKinney asked.

“Yes,” Freeman answered. “It’s not uncommon for someone to hear about it, and then address it. It happens all the time, right?”

Freeman again answered, “yes.”

“That person can do everything from deny it to get a piece of paper to say it didn’t happen,” McKinney said, and Freeman agreed.

The issue of “snitching” has hung over the entire case, not only as the alleged motive but in the reluctance to testify of prosecutio­n witnesses, one of whom, Hussle’s friend and shooting eyewitness Evan “Rimpau” MacKenzie, failed to appear despite a subpoena and a bench warrant.

McKinney had rested the prosecutio­n’s case earlier Wednesday, the eighth day of testimony though the first in nearly a week after a pair of planned days off and the delay over Holder’s assault, which was first reported by Rolling Stone.

In the face of overwhelmi­ng evidence including eyewitness­es who knew both Hussle and Holder, surveillan­ce photos and video, and testimony from the womanwho acted as his unwitting getaway driver, Jansen acknowledg­ed in his opening statement that Holder was the shooter, but said there were mitigating circumstan­ces, including a lack of premeditat­ion, that mean he is not guilty of first-degree murder.

Hussle, whose legal name was Ermias Asghedom, had just released his major-label debut after years of undergroun­d acclaim and had been nominated for his first Grammy Award when he was killed at age 33.

 ?? MARCIO JOSE SANCHEZ — AP ?? Rapper Nipsey Hussle was gunned down outside a Los Angeles clothing store in 2018.
MARCIO JOSE SANCHEZ — AP Rapper Nipsey Hussle was gunned down outside a Los Angeles clothing store in 2018.
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