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Tupac Shakur’s Sister Speaks on Her Brother’s Case — Could This Finally Be Justice?

12m 36s2,061 Wörter337 segmentsEnglish

VOLLSTÄNDIGE ABSCHRIFT

0:03

Tupac Shakur's sister speaks on her

0:05

brother's case for the first time since

0:07

an arrest was made

0:10

and her words carry weight that 27 years

0:12

of silence couldn't touch. [music] It's

0:14

a pivotal moment for me. Sakiwa set

0:17

Shakur said, "But she's not celebrating

0:19

yet."

0:21

Here's why this moment changes

0:23

everything and what justice actually

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means when it arrives three decades

0:27

late.

0:30

The silence that spoke volumes. For 27

0:34

years, the loudest thing about Tupac's

0:36

murder case was nothing at all. No

0:38

arrests, no courtroom. Think about that

0:40

timeline. If you were born the year

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Tupac died in 1996, you'd be old enough

0:45

to have a career, a mortgage, maybe kids

0:48

of your own. That's how long this case

0:50

sat frozen. Saki set Shakur, Tupac's

0:53

sister, didn't waste words when she

0:55

finally spoke. The silence of the past

0:57

27 years surrounding this case has

0:59

spoken loudly in our community. She

1:02

said, "Here's what made those decades so

1:04

frustrating. It wasn't a mystery without

1:06

clues. Theories circulated. Names

1:08

floated around. People knew things but

1:10

wouldn't say them. Witnesses refused to

1:12

cooperate. Critical leads went cold.

1:15

Investigators eventually admitted what

1:17

everyone already suspected. The case had

1:19

stalled [music] completely." Sergeant

1:20

Kevin Manning, who once led the

1:22

investigation, told reporters the murder

1:24

may never be solved. That silence had

1:27

consequences beyond just delayed

1:29

answers. It hardened narratives.

1:31

Speculation filled the gaps where facts

1:33

should have lived. Over time, the case

1:35

became something else entirely, a symbol

1:38

of unresolved loss rather than an active

1:40

pursuit of truth. Every year that passed

1:43

felt like confirmation that nobody in

1:45

power actually cared enough to push

1:47

through the walls of silence. But

1:48

Seeka's statement wasn't about the past

1:50

anymore. It was about what had just

1:52

changed. Because on September [music]

1:54

29th, 2023, something finally disrupted

1:58

nearly three decades of inactivity. And

2:00

when it happened, it sent shock waves

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through everyone who'd been waiting for

2:04

this moment.

2:06

The first arrest in 27 years.

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September 29th, 2023. That's when Dwayne

2:13

Keff D. Davis was arrested and charged

2:15

in Las Vegas with Tupac Shakur's murder,

2:18

first arrest in the case ever. A Nevada

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grand jury indicted him on one count of

2:23

murder with a deadly weapon with

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additional sentencing considerations

2:27

tied to gang affiliation. This is the

2:29

moment Siki responded to when she said,

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"It's a pivotal moment for me, not

2:34

because the story ended, but because it

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finally moved." And her response was

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deliberately measured. It's important to

2:40

me that the world, the country, the

2:42

justice system, and our people

2:44

acknowledge the gravity of the passing

2:45

of this man, my brother, my mother's

2:48

son, my father's son. Notice the framing

2:50

there. She's not talking about Tupac,

2:52

the icon, or Tupac, the symbol. She's

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talking about a person whose life and

2:56

death demand accountability. Clark

2:59

County Sheriff Kevin McMahill addressed

3:01

the arrest directly. For 27 years, the

3:04

family of Tupac Shakur has been waiting

3:06

for justice. While I know there's been

3:08

many people who did not believe that the

3:09

murder of Tupac Shakur was important to

3:12

this police department, I'm here to tell

3:14

you that is simply not the case. But

3:16

here's the critical part of Siki's

3:18

statement. She called it a victory, then

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immediately pulled back. Yes, today is a

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victory, she said. But I will reserve

3:25

judgment until all the facts and legal

3:27

proceedings are complete. She knows

3:29

something most people celebrating the

3:31

arrest might not fully understand yet.

3:33

Prosecutors say Davis was involved.

3:35

Davis himself has pleaded not guilty.

3:38

His trial has been delayed multiple

3:40

times and is now scheduled for February

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2026. Investigators have said they don't

3:45

believe Davis pulled the trigger, but

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they argue there's sufficient proof he

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played a direct role. And Sakiwa made

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one thing crystal clear. There have been

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multiple hands involved. That phrase,

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multiple hands, becomes crucial when you

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understand why this arrest took 27 years

4:01

to happen in the first place. Because

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the investigation didn't just stall. It

4:05

actively failed in ways that reveal how

4:07

fragile justice can be when the system

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doesn't prioritize the case.

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When the investigation collapsed,

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the case didn't stall because there were

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no leads. It stalled because the

4:20

investigation itself had critical

4:22

failures from the very beginning.

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[music] In 2002, the Los Angeles Times

4:26

published a detailed investigation

4:29

exposing how Las Vegas police mismanaged

4:31

the entire probe. Here's what went

4:33

wrong. First, police discounted the

4:35

fight at the MGM Grand that happened

4:37

just hours before the shooting, even

4:39

though it was captured on surveillance

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video and clearly established a motive.

4:43

Tupac and Death Row Associates had

4:46

beaten Orlando Anderson, a member of the

4:48

Southside Compton Crips, in the casino

4:50

lobby after a boxing match. That

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confrontation set everything in motion.

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Police knew about it. They had footage.

4:56

They minimized it anyway. Second, they

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failed to follow up with witnesses who

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said they could identify the shooters.

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Frank Alexander, Tupac's bodyguard, and

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Edy I mean from Outlaws both claimed

5:08

they saw the men in the car that night.

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Police didn't show them the photo

5:11

lineups until months later. By then,

5:13

memories had faded. Yaki Kaddafi, who

5:16

was riding directly behind Tupac during

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the shooting, refused to cooperate with

5:20

police [music] initially. Before

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investigators could follow up properly,

5:24

Kaddafi was shot and killed in New

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Jersey 2 months later. That led died

5:28

with him. Third, they didn't pursue tips

5:31

about the white Cadillac spotted near

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the scene. Witnesses reported seeing the

5:35

vehicle. Police never followed through.

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Sergeant Kevin Manning admitted that

5:39

early momentum faded as new information

5:42

stopped coming in. The case hit a

5:44

standstill. Witnesses clammed up. Nobody

5:46

talked. Edamin [music]

5:48

said it plainly years later. This is

5:50

America. We found Bin Laden. The

5:52

implication was clear. If they wanted to

5:54

solve this, they could have. So, if the

5:56

investigation [music] collapsed this

5:58

completely, if leads went cold and

6:00

witnesses disappeared, what changed?

6:02

What finally broke the case open after

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nearly three decades of nothing? The

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answer is something nobody expected, and

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it completely reframes everything about

6:11

why this arrest happened. Now, the man

6:14

who told on himself,

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here's where this gets weird. The arrest

6:18

didn't come from a surprise witness

6:20

stepping forward. It didn't come from

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new forensic technology or a deathbed

6:25

confession. It came from something far

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stranger. Dwayne Keff D. Davis told on

6:30

himself publicly, repeatedly, for years.

6:33

In 2019, Davis published a memoir called

6:36

Compton Street Legend. In it, he

6:39

admitted to being present the night

6:40

Tupac was shot. He admitted to providing

6:42

the firearm used in the drive-by

6:44

shooting. He placed himself in the front

6:46

passenger seat of the white Cadillac. He

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described the events leading up to the

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shooting in explicit detail. Then he did

6:52

interviews on camera [music] for

6:54

documentaries for news outlets and said

6:56

the same things over and over again. In

6:59

a 2018 documentary called Unsolved,

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Davis claimed he was in the car with

7:04

Tupac's murderer when the shots were

7:06

fired. He declined to name the shooter,

7:08

citing street code, but he confirmed the

7:11

car was driven by Terrence T. Brown, and

7:13

that Orlando Anderson and DeAndre Dre

7:16

Smith were in the back seat. All three

7:18

are now deceased. Davis stated the

7:20

shooter was sitting in the back seat. He

7:22

put all of this on the record. For

7:24

context, this is like if someone wrote a

7:26

book saying, "I was the getaway driver

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