East Bay Times

Last living suspect in murder of Shakur indicted

- By Rio Yamat and Ken Ritter

A man who prosecutor­s say ordered the 1996 killing of rapper Tupac Shakur was arrested and charged with murder Friday in a long-awaited breakthrou­gh in one of hiphop's most enduring mysteries.

Duane “Keffe D” Davis has long been known to investigat­ors as one of four suspects identified early in the investigat­ion. He isn't the accused gunman but was described as the group's ringleader by authoritie­s Friday at a news conference and in court. In Nevada you can be charged with a crime, including murder, if you help someone commit the crime.

“Duane Davis was the shot caller for this group of individual­s that committed this crime,” said Las Vegas police homicide Lt. Jason Johansson, “and he orchestrat­ed the plan that was carried out.”

Davis himself has admitted in interviews and in his 2019 tell-all memoir, “Compton Street Legend,” that he provided the gun used in the drive-by shooting.

Authoritie­s said Friday that Davis' own public comments revived the investigat­ion.

Davis, now 60, was arrested early Friday while on a walk near his home on the outskirts of Las Vegas, hours before prosecutor­s announced in court that a Nevada grand jury had indicted the self-described “gangster” on one count of murder with a deadly weapon. He is due in court next week.

The grand jury also voted to add a sentencing enhancemen­t to the murder charge for gang activity that could add up to 20 additional years if he's convicted.

Hundreds of pages of transcript­s released Friday provide a view into the first month of grand jury proceeding­s, which began in late July with testimony from former associates of Davis, friends of Shakur and a slate of retired police officers involved in the case early on. Their testimony painted a picture for the jurors of a deep, escalating rift between Shakur's music label Death Row Records and Bad Boy Records, which had ties to Davis and represente­d Shakur's rap rival, Biggie Smalls.

“It started the whole West Coast/East Coast” rivalry that primarily defined the hip-hop scene during the mid-1990s, one of Davis' former associates testified.

The first-ever arrest in the case came after Las Vegas police in mid-July raided Davis' home in the nearby city of Henderson for items they described at the time as “concerning the murder of Tupac Shakur.”

Davis denied an interview request Friday from jail, and court records don't list an attorney who can comment on his behalf. Phone and text messages to Davis and his wife on Friday weren't returned.

In a statement Friday, Sekyiwa “Set” Shakur, the rapper's sister, described the arrest as a victory.

“This is no doubt a pivotal moment. The silence of the past 27 years surroundin­g this case has spoken loudly in our community,” she said. “It's important to me that the world, the country, the justice system, and our people acknowledg­e the gravity of the passing of this man, my brother, my mother's son, my father's son.”

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