Tupac’s family is allegedly considering filing a wrongful death lawsuit against Sean “Diddy” Combs, following claims Diddy paid to have Tupac killed in 1996.
A source told Page Six that people from Combs’ past are coming forward as Tupac’s family investigates whether Combs had Tupac murdered. The family has reportedly also hired attorneys as they investigate.
READ: Suspect Said Diddy Paid $1 Million to Have Tupac Murdered
Last month, Nevada prosecutors said in a 179-page court filing that Tupac’s accused killer, suspect Duane Davis, 61, “asserted that the conspiracy to commit the murder began in California between Defendant, Eric ‘Zip’ Martin, and Sean [‘Diddy’] Combs.” They alleged Davis mentioned Combs in interviews with the media and police.
Prosecutors mentioned Diddy 77 times in the court filing which addressed the infamous East Coast/West Coast rivalry between Combs’ Bad Boy Records and Marion “Suge” Knight’s Death Row Records. Knight is currently serving a 28-year sentence in California for a fatal hit-in-run that occurred during an altercation in 2018.
Knight was in the car with Tupac when he was mortally wounded in a drive-by shooting in Las Vegas. Tupac died from his injuries days later.
Davis claimed that Combs paid Martin $1 million to have Tupac killed. At some point, Davis allegedly went undercover with Los Angeles police during a trip to New York to obtain evidence showing that Combs and Martin were involved in Tupac’s shooting death.
Davis was arrested last September after a grand jury indicted him on charges of murder with the use of a deadly weapon with a gang enhancement. Davis, the uncle of Tupac’s suspected shooter Orlando Anderson, was arrested two months after cops searched his wife’s home in Henderson.
Anderson, who was a rival of Tupac’s, died in an unrelated shooting two years after Shakur was gunned down on the Las Vegas Strip in 1996. Davis said in a 2018 documentary “Unsolved: The Tupac and Biggie Murders” that he was in the car with the gunman.
In June, Clark County District Court Judge Carli Kierny ordered Davis’ team to identify the hip-hop figure who is posting Davis’ $112,500 bond. Though producer Cash “Wack 100” Jones said he is posting the bond, the judge has required proof that he is not acting as a middleman for someone else.
“They’re not only ugly on the outside but they ugly on the inside. They just used something in those boxes! They just used something in those boxes from 1996,” Davis said in court on Tuesday, referring to boxes of evidence from a retired Los Angeles police detective.
The judge also expressed reluctance to release Davis as he could financially profit from Tupac’s slaying. Davis’ attorney noted that there is no law in Nevada that bars that from happening.
Meanwhile, a source told Page Six that authorities are not investigating Combs in connection to Tupac’s murder.
“There is no open or pending investigation, nor is there any new information related to Mr. Combs and these claims,” they said.
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[Featured image: AP Photo/Kathy Willens, File]