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What The COPS Found In Tupac's Garage After His Death SHOCKED Everyone

12m 11s2,099 単語335 segmentsEnglish

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News now. Investigators of Valley Homes

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searched in connection to the Tupac

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Shakur murder investigation nearly 27

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years after his death.

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>> The cops weren't ready for what they

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found in Tupac's garage. When

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investigators finally forced open that

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locked door in February 1997,

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5 months after his murder, they expected

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to find expensive cars and maybe some

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recording equipment. What they actually

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discovered sitting in that sealed garage

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would completely change how the world

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understood Tupac Shakur. And more

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importantly, it revealed plans he'd been

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hiding from everyone, including the

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people closest to him. Metro police

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confirming they searched a home as part

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of their ongoing work to solve who

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killed the rapper and hiphop icon. The

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garage had been off limits since

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September 1996, trapped in legal limbo,

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while death row records, his family, and

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various attorneys fought over who

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controlled what. A judge finally ordered

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it open for inventory purposes. And when

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Detective Marcus Hendrickx walked in

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with his team, he immediately knew

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something was different. This wasn't a

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storage space for a flashy celebrity

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lifestyle. The walls had soundproofing.

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Heavyduty shelving covered both sides

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and everything was organized with labels

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and dates like someone running a serious

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operation. And what sat on that main

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[music] workbench would blow apart

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everything people thought they knew

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about Tupac's final months. Sources

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telling Bay investigators this search

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involves Dwayne Davis, also known as

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Keefe D. Davis speaking publicly about

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the night Tupac died in videos on

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YouTube and in a book. Three thick black

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binders dominated the workspace, each

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one stuffed with hundreds of pages. The

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first binder contained movie scripts,

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but not scripts Tupac was hired to act

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in. These were films he planned to

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direct himself. Detailed production

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schedules, budget breakdowns, casting

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notes written in his own handwriting.

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All of it showed he'd been studying the

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film industry like he was preparing for

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a completely different career. One

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script called Thug Angels told [music] a

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story about gang intervention programs.

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And attached to it were actual proposals

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for partnering with real nonprofits and

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holding community screenings where

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ticket money would go straight back to

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youth programs in rough neighborhoods.

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>> 25-year-old Tupac Shakur shot four times

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inside this BMW in this intersection

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near the Las Vegas strip in September

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1996. He would die from his injuries 6

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days later.

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>> The second binder hit even harder. Page

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after page of financial records showed

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where Tupac's money was really going,

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and it wasn't on jewelry and parties

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like everyone assumed. Bank statements

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revealed monthly payments to bail funds

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for young people locked up on minor

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charges. Receipts showed he'd covered

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legal fees for families who couldn't

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afford lawyers. Wire transfer

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confirmations proved he donated to

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literacy programs, mentorship

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organizations, and community centers all

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across California. And none of it was

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public. No press [music] releases, no

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interviews where he bragged about it,

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just quiet help for people who needed

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it. One check for $50,000 went to a

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Watts literacy program just 3 days

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before he flew to Las Vegas. But the

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third binder contained evidence of

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something that would have completely

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changed hip hop history if Tupac [music]

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had lived long enough to pull it off.

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>> Vanessa Murphy speaking exclusively with

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paramedics in 2016. [music]

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>> We brought the gurnie up over

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>> just pulled them out.

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>> Mhm. Pulled him out. Um, and that's

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when, you know, that's when I, everybody

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was yelling, um, Tupac.

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>> Legal paperwork showed Tupac was

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building his own record label, totally

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separate from Death Row. Corporate

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documents dated August 1996, proved he'd

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already registered the name Macaveli

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Records, filed for trademark protection,

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and started talks with distributors who

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could move his albums without Sug Knight

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being involved at all. business plans

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laid out how he wanted to sign young

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artists and mentor them, build a full

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production house with his own engineers

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and video directors, and create

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something that would last [music] beyond

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just his own music. The evidence was

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clear. Tupac was planning his exit from

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Death Row, and he was setting up

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everything he needed to do it on his own

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terms.

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>> But he's happy it's happening, and he

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says he hopes it'll bring some more

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closure to the case. and I didn't think

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there'd ever be uh any more steps taken

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in this case.

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>> The cops kept digging through the garage

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and that's when they found the lock box.

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It sat behind the filing cabinets, steel

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and code locked. And after Apheni

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Shakur's lawyer gave them the

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combination, they opened it to find a

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stack of many DV tapes. Each tape had a

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date written on it in marker ranging

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from July to early September 1996.

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When detectives played them back at the

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police station, [music] they saw Tupac

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sitting alone talking directly into a

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camera like he was keeping a video

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diary. And what he said on those tapes

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would haunt everyone who watched them

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because Tupac knew something bad was

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coming.

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>> It's [music] 27 years old. I I can tell

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you exactly why it happened. It's

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happened because of Keith ED running his

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mouth.

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>> The video entry showed a completely

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different person than the aggressive

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figure in music videos. Tupac talked

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about being exhausted, feeling trapped

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by his own image, and knowing that the

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life he was living couldn't continue

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much longer. He discussed wanting to

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move to Ghana and make films about black

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history without Hollywood's filters. He

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mentioned plans to write a book about

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political change and activism, something

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young people could actually use. In one

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video from September 3rd, just 4 days

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before he got shot, Tupac said he felt

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like he was living on borrowed time. Not

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because of enemies or beef with other

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rappers, but because everything was

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moving too fast and he was losing

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control. Those tapes proved Tupac was

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trying to figure out how to escape the

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persona he'd created. He'd built this

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image of the fearless thug who didn't

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care about consequences, but privately

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he was mapping out a future that looked

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nothing like that. The contrast was

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shocking, and investigators realized

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they were watching someone who

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desperately wanted out, but hadn't

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figured out how to leave without

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destroying everything he'd worked for.

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Then they saw the [music] BMW sitting on

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the hydraulic lift in the back, and

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everything suddenly made terrifying

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sense.

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>> Probably didn't really know it was going

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to have any historical significance. At

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that point, it was fixed and then sold

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to the general public, probably at an

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auction, something like that.

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>> The car was a black BMW 750il.

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the exact same model Tupac had been

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riding in when he got shot in Las Vegas.

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But this one was pristine, never driven,

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and registration [music]

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documents showed he'd bought it three

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weeks before his death. The keys were in

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the workbench drawer with a handwritten

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note that said, "Exit plan, New York or

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Ghana. Decide by October."

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Investigators opened the trunk and found

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two large duffel bags packed with items

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that made their blood run cold. Inside

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those bags were passports, one real and

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one that looked fake with a different

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name on it. 80,000 in cash vacuum sealed

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in plastic bags. International phone

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cards. A handwritten list of contacts in

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Jamaica, Cuba, and several African

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