The Takedown of Tupac

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The article discusses Tupac Shakur's rise to fame with Death Row Records and Suge Knight, but also the violence and legal issues that plagued the record label. It also explores Interscope Records' role in funding and distributing Death Row Records' albums.

Tupac Shakur was murdered while riding in a car driven by Suge Knight. Knight also faced legal issues for assault and ended up serving a nine-year prison sentence, taking him out of the picture at Death Row Records.

After Tupac Shakur's death, his estate sued Death Row Records for unpaid royalties and an accounting of money owed. Death Row also faced hundreds of millions in other lawsuits.

Reprinted from The New Yorker, 7 July 1997.

A REPORTER AT LARGE
THE TAKEDOWN OF TUPAC
Tupac Shakur was one of gangsta rap's biggest stars. But he got caught in a collision of
cultures when inner-city gangs met up with the multibillion-dollar record industry.

BY CONNIE BRUCK
When twenty-five-year-old Tupac Shakur was shot and killed in Las Vegas last fall, he was riding in the
passenger seat of B.M.W. 750 sedan driven by Marion (Suge) Knight, the head of Death Row Records.
Death Row, the leading purveyor of West Coast "gangsta rap," is a music-business phenomenon. The
company earned seventy-five million dollars in revenues last year. The first album Tupac made for
Death Row, "All Eyez on Me," which was released in early 1996, sold over five million units. Tupac had
made three earlier albums, but they had never reached the stratosphere of "quintuple platinm." Still,
the days preceding his murder were anything but halcyon for him. It had become increasingly clear that
there was a steep penalty to pay for having thrown in with Suge Knight.
Even for the rough-edged music industry, which has historically been prone to excess and to
connections with criminal elements, Death Row was a remarkable place. It was nothing for Knight to
hand over a stack of hundred-dollar bills to Tupac for a weekend's expenses. Knight's office in Los
Angeles was decorated in red, the color of the Bloods, one of the city's principal gangs. A guard holding
a metal detector stood at the front door of the Death Row studio. "I have not been to one other studio
to this day where you have to be searched before you get in," a veteran of the L.A. music business who
worked with Tupac told me. "The have a checlist of people who can go in with guns. So you have to
figure, These guys have guns, and it's a long run to the front door, and there's security at the front door
that may try to stop you, even if you get there....Some of these security guys....were gangsters just out
of the penitentiary. They would look at you, staring right through you. No words would have to be said."
Intimidation was Suge Knight's stock-in-trade. It is said that he forced a black music executive at a rival
company to strip in the men's room and then made him walk naked through the company's offices. A
mammoth, three-hundred-and-fifteen-pound man, Knight has a substantial criminal record, replete with
violent acts. Even when he was on his best behavior--say, dealing with a white executive at one of the
major entertainment companies--menace hung heavy in the air. One man told me about a negotiation
he had in the apparent safety of his own office. Knight was attended by a bodyguard, and when they
reached a difficult point in the deal, the bodyguard ostentatiously leaned forward and let his gun, which
was worn in a holster under his jacket, slip into full view.
For a time, the aura of violence served Knight well. It granted him enormous license in small things (like
keeping other executives waiting for hours, without a murmur of objection) and in larger ones. Music
and video producers who claimed that Death Row owed them money were too frightened to demand it,
or to sue. The potential for violence was also a powerful disincentive to anyone who might have
considered talking to law-enforcement authorities about questionable practices. Moreover, it did not
keep him from doing business with two of the entertainment industry's corporate giants. Death Row
has been funded since its inception by its distributor, Interscope, which for years was partially owned
by Time Warner, and which Universal has had a fifty-per-cent interest in since early last year.
After Tupac's murder, however, things began to unravel for Knight. In the summer of 1992, he had
pulled a gun on two rappers, George and Stanley Lynwood, for using a phone at the studio. After
beating one of them with the gun, he ordered them both down on their knees, threatened to kill them,
and forced them to take off their pants. He was convicted on assault charges and put on probation. But
four years later, just before Tupac was killed, Knight took part in the beating of a man in Las Vegas, and
this put him in violation of his probation. In February of this year he began serving a nine-year sentence
and is now in San Luis Obispo state prison. In addition, hundreds of millions of dollars' worth of suits
have now been filed against Death Row (the largest being that of Tupac's estate, charging that he was
defrauded of over fifty million dollars, and seeking damages of a hundred and fifty million). And there
may be more to come. A team of agencies, including the F.B.I., the D.E.A., and the I.R.S., are
investigating allegations of money laundering, links to street gangs, drug trafficking, and organized
crime at Death Row.
"I think, Tupac, you brought down one of the most evil empires of my time," one of his friends, who
grew up in the music business, says. He did not intend to romanticize Tupac; this friend, like many
others, acknowledges that Tupac was famously split between what he himself referred to as his "good"
and his "evil" sides, and that it was his darker side that seemed to have gained dominion during much
of his tenure at Death Row. Nonetheless, these friends insist, that was not the real Tupac. The real

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Tupac was gifted, sympathetic, intent on articulating the pain of young blacks in the inner cities. And
the real Tupac was to leave Death Row when he was killed.
UNFAIRLY or not, Tupac Shakur's name has become synonymous with violent rap lyrics and "thug life"
(a phrase Tupac had tattooed across his midriff). While he was alive, he was censured by politicians
and, like other rappers, was kept from performing in some concert arenas because promoters could not
insure the events against the threat of mayhem from the fans. At the same time, however, he was
suspected by many in his core ghetto audience of not being cold-blooded enough to measure up to his
status as the archetypal gangsta rapper.
These conflicting views of Tupac reflect, to a degree, racial and social chasms. Rap fans insist that
performers be authentic representatives of ghetto life: that they live the life they rap about; that life
conform to art, so to speak. Rap's critics, on the other hand, are terrified that life will conform to art,
that the behavior--the drug dealing and the violence--described by rappers will seep into the
mainstream culture. The majority of ardent fans and consumers of rap are, in fact, middle-class white
youths. (Seventy per cent of those who buy rap records are white.) It is the fear of a violent,
marginalized culture's influence on susceptible young people that fuels much of the political debate,
and this fear is exacerbated by the widespread adoption of hip-hop style.
Controversy, of course, has never hurt sales. To the contrary. Tupac understood this very well, as did
the record-company executives who stood to profit from his talents, and his notoriety. The more trouble
Tupac got into with the law, the more credibility he gained on the street--and the more viable a rap star
he became. The huge commercial success of gangsta rap created a peculiarly volatile nexus between
the worlds of inner-city gangs and the multibillion-dollar record industry. Tupac sometimes said that he
thought of his songs as parables, and now it is his own life--his journey into those two worlds, and his
immolation at the point at which they converged--that seems almost allegorical.
THE world of Suge Knight and South Central Los Angeles is at a far remove from the one in which Tupac
Shakur grew up, though each, in its own way, romanticized violence. Afeni Shakur, Tupac's mother, was
a member of the Black Panther Party. Early in 1971, while she was pregnant with Tupac, she was on trial
for conspiring to blow up several New York department stores. She and her codefendants--the Panther
21--were acquitted just a month before Tupac was born. He was named for "the last Inca chief to be
tortured, brutalized, and murdered by Spanish conquistadores...a warrior," Afeni says. His surname,
Shakur, is a kind of clan name taken by a loose group of black nationalists in New York.
The phrase "Black Power" had been "like a lullaby when I was a kid," Tupac recalled in a deposition he
gave in 1995 (in a civil suit in which it was charged that some of Tupac's lyrics had influenced a young
man who murdered a Texas state trooper). He remembered that when he was a teen-ager, living in
Baltimore, "we didn't have any lights. I used to sit outside by the street lights and read the
autobiography of Malcom X. And it made it so real to me, that I didn't have any lights on at home and I
was sitting outside on the benches reading this book. And it changed me, it moved me. And then of
course my mother had books by people like...Patrice Lumumba and Stokely Carmichael, 'Sieze the
Time' by Bobby Seale and 'Soledad Brother' by George Jackson. And she would tell these stories of
things that she did or she saw or she was involved with and it made me feel a part of something. She
always raised me to think I was the Black Prince of the revolution." Tupac had indeed become a Black
Prince by the time he was killed, but not along the lines laid out by the political activists of the sixties.
Afeni and here friends were involved in what they perceived as revolutionary activity for the good of
their community. Tupac and his fellow gangsta rappers sported diamond-encrusted gold jewelry, drove
Rolls-Royce Corniches, and vied with one another in displays of gargantuan excess. Nevertheless, Tupac
did not forget who his forebears were. "In my familar every black male with the last name of Shakur
that ever passed the age of fifteen has either been killed or put in jail," Tupac said in his deposition.
"There are no Shakurs, black male Shakurs, out right now, free, breathing, without bullet holes in them
or cuffs on his hands. None."
The leaders of the black nationalist movement to which the other Shakurs belonged had been virtually
eliminated, largely through the efforts of the F.B.I. In 1988, Tupac's stepfather, Dr. Mutulu Shakur, who
had received a degree in acupuncture in Canada and used his skills to develop drug-abuse-treatment
programs, was sentenced to sixty years in prison for conspiring to commit armed robbery and murder.
The crimes he was accused of included the attempted robbery of a Brink's armored car in 1981, in
which two police officers and a guard were killed (and for which the Weather Underground leader Kathy
Boudin was also convicted). Mutulu was also found guilty of conspiring to break Tupac's "aunt," Assata
Shakur (Joanne Chesimar), out of prison. She had been convicted in 1977 of murdering a New Jersey
state trooper, but escaped two years later and fled to Cuba. Tupac's godfather, Elmer (Geronimo) Pratt,
is a former Black Panther Party leader who was convicted of killing a schoolteacher during a robbery in
Santa Monica in 1968. He was imprisoned for twenty-seven years. His conviction was reversed a few
weeks ago on the ground that the government suppressed evidence favorable to him at his trial (most
significantly that the principal witness against him was a paid police informant).

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It was a haunting lineage, and Tupac would frequently invoke the names of Mutulu, Geronimo, and
other "political prisoners" in his lyrics. "It was like their words with my voice," he said. "I just coninued
where they left off. I tried to add spark to it, I tried to be the new breed, the new generation. I tried to
make them proud of me." But, at the same time, he did not want to be them. Their revolution, and in
most cases their lives, too, were ashes.
IN the Panther 21 trial, Tupac's mother defended herself with a withering cross-examination of a key
prosecution witness, who turned out to be an undercover government agent; after her acquittal, this
unschooled but intellectually powerful woman was lionized in liberal circles, invited to speak at Harvard
and Yale, and subsidized in an apartment on New York's Riverside Drive. Tupac and his sister Sekyiwa,
who was born in 1975, became small Panther celebrities on the radical-chic circuit. "Then everything
changed, the political tide changed over," Tupac said in his deposition. "We went on welfare, we lived in
the ghettoes of the Bronx, Harlem, Manhattan." He estimated that he'd lived in "like eighteen different
places" when he started junior high school.
In his deposition, Tupac says that by the time he was twelve or thirteen years old Afeni had developed
serious drug and alcohol problems. (Afeni disagrees. She says he was seventeen.) Tupac did not know
who his father was, but he was close to Mutulu, who was the father of Sekyiwa and lived with them for
a number of years. Then Mutulu, too, left him, going underground when Tupac was ten, after the Brink's
holdup. While their contact was not altogether broken ("When I would feel he needed me, I'd do
whatever I had to to get there, even if it was just so that he could see me--and he'd wave, so happy,"
Mutulu recalled), the connections came at some cost to Tupac. F.B.I. agents would approach Tupac at
school to ask if he had seen his stepfather. (Mutulu was on the F.B.I.'s "Ten Most Wanted" list until he
was captured, in 1986.)
The family moved to Baltimore, and when Tupac was fourteen he was admitted to a performing-arts
school there. "For a kid from the ghetto, the Baltimor School for the Arts is heaven," Tupac said in his
deposition. "I learned ballet, poetry, jazz, music, everything, Shakespeare, acting, everything as well as
academics." Asked by his attorney whether he'd been in any gangs at the time, Tupac responded,
"Shakespeare gangs. I was the mouse king in the Nutcracker....There was no gangs. I was an artist." He
had started writing poetry when he was in grammar school in New York, and it was only a short step
from writing poetry to rapping. He wrote his lyrics with great speed and ease, and was soon performing
at benefits for Geronimo Pratt and other prisoners.
Tupac spent two years at the Baltimore School for the Arts. When he first came in, Donald Hicken, a
former teacher, recalls, "he was a truly gifted actor, with a wonderful mimetic instinct and an ability to
transform a character....His work was always original, never imitative, never off the rack. Even in this
talented group of kids, he stood out." One of his schoolmates, Avra Warsofsky, told me that there was
no suggestion of the belligerent, confrontational side of Tupac that would later come to dominate his
public image. "He was a dear, sweet person," Warsofsky said. "There were inner-city kids at the school
who were tough, who stole--but he was not that, not one bit."
This idyll ended when Tupac's life at home became intolerable. As he described it in his deposition, he
had no money for food or clothes; for a time he stayed at the home of a wealthy classmate and wore
his clothes. That didn't last, though. "So I had to go back home....But my mother was pregnant, on
dope, dope crack. She had a boyfriend who was violent toward her. We weren't staying in our own spot,
we were staying in someone else's spot. We never could pay the rent. She always had to sweet-talk this
old white man that was the landlord into letting us [stay] for another month. And he was making passes
at my mom. So I didn't want to be there anymore. So I sacrificed my future at the School for the Arts to
get on a bus to go cross-country to California with no money." He was not quite seventeen.
Tupac stayed for a time with Linda Pratt, the wife of the incarcerated Geronimo Pratt, in Marin City, a
poor community north of San Francisco, and then with his mother, who also moved to California. But
school in California did not provide a haven for him. "I didn't fit in. I was the outsider....I dressed like a
hippie, they teased me all the time. I couldn't play basketball, I didn't know who basketball players
were....I was the target for....the street gangs. They used to jump me, things like that....I thought I was
weird because I was writing the poetry and I hated myself, I used to keep it a secret....I was really a
nerd."
TUPAC'S mother was at once a mythic figure to him and fallen, and his identification with his radical
heritage was profoundly ambivalent. "At times he resented being the nineties' voice of the Black
Panther Party," Karen Lee, one of his publicists, told me, "and at times, he wanted to be." Lee said that
he was furious that his mother's former comrades made no move to try to rescue her and her children
when she became addicted to drugs. Indeed, when he was living in Marin City--destitute, with no place
to stay (his mother and he had fought bitterly, and he accused her of lying to him about her drug use)--
it was mainly street people who tried to help him. Man Man (Charles Fuller), a friend who would later
become his road manager, provided him with a bed, and kept him from becoming a full-fledged drug
dealer.

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His fortunes began to brighten slightly in 1990 when he got a job with the rap group Digital
Underground, as a road manager and dancer. But his real break came the following year, when he was
picked up by Interscope--a small company that had just been founded by the record producer Jimmy
Iovine and the entertainment magnate Ted Field (an heir to the Marshal Field fortune) as a joint venture
with Time Warner. Tom Whalley, who signed Tupac at Interscope, had brought in a demo tape Tupac had
made, and Ted Field gave it to his teen-age daughter. She told her father how much she liked it.
Whalley recalls being struck as much by Tupac's looks and by his "presence" as by his talent. He
remembers saying to his assistant, "Have you ever seen eyes like that?"
Interscope had positioned itself as something of a maverick in the music business, producing mostly
"alternative" rock and gangsta rap, which drew on the culture of the gangs of South Central Los
Angeles for its material. Rap was originally an East Coast phenomenon, an element of the hip-hop
culture of the nineteen-seventies, which also included graffiti and break dancing. Although hip-hop
music broke into the mainstream in 1979 with the international hit "Rapper's Delight," it was not until
the late eighties, with the emergence of gangsta rap, that it showed signs of becoming hugely
commercial--especially when it gained a wide audience of white youths, much as blues, jazz, and early
rock and roll had. In 1991, Interscope released Tupac's first album, "2pacalypse Now," which was
replete with militant lyrics depicting violence between young black men and the police. This was the
album that Vice-President Dan Quayle said had "no place in our society."
IN the deposition Tupac gave in 1995, when he was asked to interpret several of the songs on
"2pacalypse Now," he explained that it was his practice to introduce a central character through whom
he could develop a narrative, because he believe that "before you can understand what I mean, you
have to know how I lived or how the people I'm talking to live....You don't have to agree with me, but
just to understand what I'm talking about. Compassion, to show compassion." He also said that he was
not advocating violence against the police but was simply telling stories that described reality for
young black men--and cautionary stories at that, in which violence against the police often leads to
death or imprisonemnt. On one track he says, "They claim that I'm violent just cuz I refuse to be silent."
The song on the album that proved to be the most popular was entitled, "Brenda's Got a Baby." Tupac
said he had written the song after reading a newspaper story about a twelve-year-old girl who became
impregnated by her cousin and threw her newborn baby down an incinerator. Asked by his lawyer
whether he considered the song a poliical statement, Tupac said, "Yes....When this song came out, no
male rappers at all anywhere were talking about problems that females were having, number one.
Number two, it talked about child molestation, it talked about families taking advantages of families, it
talked about the effects of poverty, it talked about how one person's problems can affect a whole
community of people. It talked about how the innocent are the ones that get hurt. It talked about drugs,
the abuse of drugs, broken families...how she couldn't leave the baby, you know, the bond that a
mother has with her baby and how...women need to be able to make a choice."
Rap music is notorious for having lyrics that are degrading to women, and--much as Tupac would
appear to be an advocate for women in "Brenda's Got a Baby," and also, even more, in a later song,
"Keep Ya Head Up"--he wrote lyrics that were misogynistic as well. In "Tha' Lunatic," another song on
"2pacalypse Now," he boasted, "This is the life, new bitch every night." In the deposition, when asked
how he could reconcile the conflicting sentiments, he says, "I wrote this when I was seventeen....It's
about a character, somewhat like myself, who just got into the rap business, went from having no girls
to now there's girls all the time and he's just getting so much sexual attention and he's in his mind, a
synamo. He's Rudolph Valentino and Frank Sinatra, he's everybody....He can get anybody he
wanted....I'm an actor and I was a poet. So I felt like...I have to tell the multifaceted nature of a human
being....A man can be sexist and compassionate at the same time. I was. Look at 'Tha' Lunatic' and look
at 'Brenda's Got a Baby.'"
TUPAC moved to Los Angeles early in 1992, and the stories he told in his music began to reflect more
specifically his fascination with gang life. "Each gang element wanted to claim him," his stepbrother,
Maurice Harding, a rapper known as Mopreme, says. "The cover of 'Strictly 4 My N.I.G.G.A.Z.'"--Tupac's
second solo album--"was red, so everybody thought at first he was a Blood." But though he hung out
with Bloods and, more often, their rival Crips, Tupac did not join either gang. He was at bottom an
observer and chronicler, profoundly utilitarian in his approach to experience and, some thought, people
as well. And South Central L.A.--which is almost like a foreign country within a city, so singular and
baroque are the gang customs, culture, and laws that govern it--was the richest territory he'd ever
seen.
"He coult be with this poet, this pimp, this thug--he could suck everything from each of them and that
would be part of him," said Man Man, the friend who moved with him from Northern California to L.A.,
and became his road manager. "He started hanging around thugs. He would suck it up out of them and
then use that, in his music and his acting. People would be saying, 'Fred just got killed'...next thing you

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know, it's in his song....He was saying, 'If you don't know what's going on in the ghetto, this is what's
going on.'"
Tupac was particularly vulnerable, however, to the charge that he had not paid his dues, that he not a
"real" gangster. For all the swaggering machismo that would come to dominate his public image as a
gangsta rapper, he was considered within that world to be a novitiate. When he moved to L.A., Tupac
said in his deposition, he "didn't have a slingshot, I didn't have a knife, I didn't even have sharp nails."
But soon he had bought a gun and was practicing shooting it on firing ranges. He muscled his slight,
lithe dancer's body with weight training and began to cover his torso with tattoos. Even so, his
countenance, when caught in repose--delicate, fey, androgynous, a face with long-lashed, limpid eyes--
tended to betray him. But he was adamantly tough. "It irked him when they said, 'Fake gangsta
rapper,'" Mopreme told me. "He was saying, 'I'm from the dirt! Y'all should be applauding me! I made it
through the ghetto. I made it through school with no lights. I'm real. We the same person!'"
By 1993, Tupac seemed to have become obsessed with gang life. He was spinning from one altercation
and arrest to the next. He got involved in a fight with a limo driver in Hollywood, tried to his a local
rapper with a baseball bat during a concert in Michigan, and collected criminal charges and civil suits.
According to Man Man and others, many of these incidents were a consequence of someone
challenging Tupac's right to rap hard lyrics. "People would test him," Man Man explains. "And Pac felt, I
have to prove that I'm hard. I would say to him, 'Most gangsters are people who wish they didn't have
to be hard.'"
At Tupac's instigation, he, Man Man, and another friend all got "50 NIGGAZ" tattoo (symbolizing a black
confederation among the fifty states). "Nigga," in Tupac's lexicon, stood for "Never Ignorant Getting
Goals Accomplished." In "Words of Risdom," he raps, "Niggas, what are we going to do? Walk blind into
a lie or fight. Fight and die if we must. Die like niggas." "I never could have had that word tattooed on
me before," Man Man told me. "But Pac said, 'We're going to take that word that they used and turn it
around on them...to make it positive.'"
When Tupac got his "thug life" tattoo, his manager, Watani Tyehimba, a former Black Panther who had
been close to Tupac since he was a small boy, was apoplectic. "I said, 'What have you done?'" Tyehimba
recalled. "We talked about it, and it became clear that he did it to make sure he never forgot the
dispossessed, never forgot where he came from. He was straddling two worlds. And he saw that we
never make it as black people unless we sell out. He was saying he never would." Tupac collaborated
with four other rappers on the album "Thug Life, Vol. 1" (which grew out of an earlier project called
"Underground Railroad"). The idea was that the album would enable gang members to escape street
life by becoming musicians. There were to be subsequent volumes of "Thug Life," with a new group of
gang-member rappers each time. Some of the songs that Tupac and his fellow-artists wanted to include
were rejected by Interscope. Tupac acknowledged that he "wouldn't play 'Thug Life' to kids. Not that it's
anything that would make them go crazy or anything, but I wouldn't." Still, he knew that it was the
harder lyrics that sold the best, and were perceived by the audience to most closely mirror life in the
ghetto.
"Pac became the spokesperson for the ghetto. He rapped out pain," Syke (Tyruss Himes), a West Coast
rapper who appeared on the "Thug Life" album, told me. "In the L.A. ghetto, four or five people get
killed every week. You don't hear about it. Only their families know." Through Syke and others, Tupac
was now experiencing that life directly. In several of his songs, Tupac says, "Remember Kato." "Big Kato
was like my brother," Syke said. "He got killed for my car. It had Dayton rims--they cost twenty-five
hundred dollars. They killed him for it." Mental Illness, another rapper with whom Tupac became
friendly through Syke, was also killed; and Syke's brother killed himself. ("I guess from the stress," Syke
said.)
"If you're rapping this hard stuff, you have to live it," Syke declared. "Otherwise people check your
résumé and say, 'You don't look like you're hard from your résumé, let's see if you are.' Pac always felt
he had to prove something to his homeboys." He points to the "rags," or bandannas, Tupac wore. "He
started wearing red around Crips, and blue around Bloods--so that when he was around Crips, Bloods
wouldn't think he was a Crip, and blue around Bloods, so Crips wouldn't think he was a Blood. His
behavior was not right; he was on the edge. But they just figured he was Tupac the Rapper."
Mopreme recalled an incident that was emblematic. "There was a fight at the Comedy Store, and some
gang members were after him. So he put on his [bullet-proof] vest and all his guns, and he went to
their place. He said, 'Y'all looking for me? Here I am!'" After that, Mopreme added, the gang, duly
impressed, didn't bother him. Legendary as such an exploit became, the reality was rather more
complicated. Watani Tyehimba told me that it was the "Rolling Sixties" set of the Crips that Tupac had
gotten in trouble with and that he and Mutulu Shakur each contacted their leadership. "I did it from the
street, Mutulu did it from prison, and together we got it under control. Then he went to the Crips' place.
After that they were under orders not to harm him." Regarding Tupac's dramatic gesture, Tyehimba
said, "It was machismo."

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OF all Tupac's much publicized, violent confrontations in the tempestuous year 1993, none better
illustrated the degree to which he had become the exemplar of the gangsta-rap mandate than his
arrest for shooting two off-duty police officers in Atlanta. The officers, he would later say, had been
harassing a black motorist. The charges were dropped when it emerged that the policemen had been
drinking and had initiated the incident, and when the prosecution's own witness testified that the gun
one of the officers threatened Tupac with had been seized in a drug bust and then stolen from an
evidence locker.
The shooting in Atlanta made Tupac a hero to some, a demon to others. "They were acting as bullies,
and they drew their guns first," Mutulu Shakur says of the officers. Tupac's response "sealed him as not
only a rapper but a person who was true to the game. That made him, to the people who were his
audience, real--and if not liked, respected." However, to the law-enforcement community and the
political conservatives who were rap's most vocal critics Tupac was not only propagating insurrectionist
rhetoric in his lyrics but acting it out as well. Gangsta rap had been provoking concern among law-
enforcement authorities in this country since at least 1989, when an F.B.I. public-affairs officer wrote a
letter to Ruthless/Priority Records, which distributed records by the group N.W.A. (Niggaz With Attitude).
The F.B.I. was concerned, specifically, with the song, "Fuck tha Police." "Advocating violence and
assault is wrong, and we in the law enforcement community take exception to such action," the F.B.I.
officer wrote. In 1992, police groups and their allies--most visibly Vice-President Quayle--denounced
Time Warner for having put out the song "Cop Killer," by Ice-T. The following year, Time Warner released
Ice-T from his contract, citing creative differences.
Officer Gregory White, of the L.A.P.D., who works in a special gang unit, explains that gangsta rap is a
legitimate concern of law-enforcement agencies because it often involves criminal activity. "Rap is a
way to launder dirty drug money," he says. Accordting to White, some record companies provide fronts
for the gangs. But he adds that it is rap music's virulently antipolice rhetoric that is considered
particularly pernicious.
Charles Ogletree, Jr., a black attorney who is a professor at Harvard Law School and who represented
Tupac on a number of cases in the last year of his life, notes that "people in law enforcement not only
disliked Tupac but despised him. This wasn't just a person talking, but someone who had generated a
following among those who had problems with the police, and who spoke to them. He was saying, 'I
understand your pain, I know the source of it, and I can tell you what to do about it.' Police officers
knew him by name, Bob Dole mentioned him by name."
Mutulu Shakur believes that his own relationship to Tupac was a source of continuing concern to law-
enforcement authorities. Mutulu, who wears long dreadlocks and is revered within the black-nationalist
community, had been a target of the F.B.I. and other police agencies for years before the Brink's
robbery. During his trial, the federal district court judge confirmed that "the rights of Dr. Shakur...were
violated by the COINTELPRO program." (COINTELPRO was initiated by the F.B.I. to neutralize black-
activist leaders as well as certain right-wing extremists.) Recently, in a development not unlike that in
the case of Geronimo Pratt, Mutulu was granted permission to file a motion for a new trial on the
ground that evidence was discovered indicating that the government withheld information that would
have been favorable to his defense.
In the spring of 1994, about six months after Tupac shot the police officers in Atlanta, Mutulu was
moved from the penitentiary in Lewisburg, Pennsylvania, to the super-maximum-security federal prison
in Marion, Illinois, and from there to the country's most maximum-security institution, in Florence,
Colorado. In a memorandum written in February, 1994, the warden of Lewsiburg argued that Mutulu
needed "the controls of Marion," in part because of his "outside contacts and influence over the
younger black element."
Mutulu is convinced that Tupac became a lightning rod after he shot the policemen in Atlanta. "These
disenfranchised--the young blacks who are poor and hopeless--have no leader," Mutulu said. "Their
heroes are cultural and sports heroes. No one--not Jesse Jackson, not Ben Chavis, not Louis Farrakhan--
has as much influence with this segment as rappers. So when Tupac stands up to a white cop, shoots it
out, wins the battle, gets cut free, and continues to say the things he's been saying--the decision to
destroy his credibility is clear."
WHETHER by happenstance or not, about two weeks after the Atlanta shooting something occurred
that could not have been better designed to remove Tupac from circulation--and that would ultimately
lead to his undoing. While in New York for the filming of the movie "Above the Rim," Tupac had been
socializing with a Haitian-born music promoter, Jacques Agnant. Tupac was playing the part of a
gangster named Birdie in the movie, and he told friends that spending time with Agnant helped him in
his portrayal of Birdie--much as hanging out with the gangs in South Central provided him with material
for his lyrics. "He said that he was studying Jacques--that Jacques was Birdie," Watani Tyehimba recalls.
But Tyehimba was alarmed by the relationship, and wanted Tupac to keep his distance. "I told Tupac the
first time I met him, Charles Fuller told Tupac, everyone told him he should stay away from Jacques."

- 6 -
Tupac ignored the warnings. "Jacques had all this gold and diamond jewelry," Man Man says. "He had
money. He had a nice B.M.W. He could get you in any club. Pac was just starting to be known then, and
he couldn't get in all the clubs. Jacques spent about four or five thousand dollars on Tupac in the
beginning--he just overwhelmed him." According to someone else who knew Agnant, Madonna (with
whom Tupac would become close) was one of Agnant's celebrity friends.
On November 14, 1993, Jacques Agnant and Tupac went to Nell's, the downtown New York club. A
friend of Agnant's, identified only as "Tim," introduced Tupac to a nineteen-year-old woman named
Ayanna Jackson. She expressed her interest in him; they danced together; and she performed oral sex
in a corner of the dance floor. They went to his hotel, where they had intercourse. The next day, she
called and left many messages on his voice mail, saying, among other things, how much she'd enjoyed
his prowess. Four days later, on November 18th, she returned to his hotel suite. There, she found
Tupac, Man Man, Agnant, and an unidentified friend of Agnant's. They all watched television in the
living room, and then she and Tupac went into the bedroom together. What ensued is disputed; Jackson
claims that she was forced to perform oral sex on Tupac while Agnant partly undressed her and
grabbed her from behind, and that they then made her perform oral sex on Agnant's friend while Tupac
held her. (Man Man, she acknowledged, did not touch her.) Tupac claimed that he left the room when
the other men entered and did not witness whatever happened. In any case, Jackson testified that she
left the suite in tears and that Agnant told her to calm down, saying that he "would hate to see what
happened to Mike [Tyson] happen to Tupac": that is, a woman charging him with sexual assault, which
is what Jackson promptly did. She summoned the hotel's security officers, who called the police. Tupac,
Man Man, and Agnant were arrested. (Agnant's friend left.)
Indictments were handed down on sex-abuse, sodomy, and also weapons charges (two guns were
found in the hotel room), and Agnant's lawyer, Paul Brenner, who had represented the Patrolmen's
Benevolent Assocation for many years, moved that his client's case be severed from the two
codefendants', on the ground that only Tupac and Man Man had been charged with the weapons
offenses, and that therefore the indictment was improperly joined. The prosecutor did not oppose the
motion--something that Tupac's lawyers say is highly unusual--and the judge granted it.
It was apparently after Agnant's case was severed that Tupac became convinced that Agnant was a
government informer and had set him up. Tupac's suspicions were, inevitably, shaped by the
experience of his extended family; "Jacques didn't smell right to me," says Watani Tyehimba, who
considers himself particularly attuned to the presence of undercover agents because of his long history
with the Panthers and what he learned from COINTELPRO files obtained through the Freedom of
Information Act.
One night in November 1994, during the trial of Tupac and Man Man, Tupac was at a club with the actor
Mickey Rourke and a friend of Rourke's, A.J. Benza, a reporter for the Daily News. Tupac told Benza that
he believed that Agnant had set him up. A couple days later Benza wrote an account of the
conversation, recalling that Tupac had told him that Mike Tyson had called him up from prison to warn
him that Agnant was "bad news." On the night of November 30th, while the jury was deliberating,
Tupac went to a Times Square music studio to rap for an artist, Little Shawn, who, according to Man
Man, had ties to Agnant. When Tupac and his entourage entered the lobby of the studio, three black
men followed them, drew guns, and ordered them to lie down. Tupac reached for his own gun, which he
usually wore in his waistband, cocked. The men then shot Tupac five times, grabbed his gold jewelry,
and fled.
Convinced that the shooting had also been a setup, and that the shooters would return to finish the job,
Tupac checked himself out of the hospital a few hours after surgery, and moved secretly to the house of
the actress Jasmine Guy to recuperate. When he returned to the courtroom, bandaged and in a
wheelchair, he was acquitted of the three sodomy counts and the weapons charge, but in an apparent
compromise verdict, convicted of two counts of sexual abuse--specifically, forcibly touching Ayanna
Jackson's buttocks. Bail was set at three million dollars, and Tupac turned himself in and was
incarcerated. On February 7, 1995, he was sentenced to not less than one and a half to not more than
four and a half years in prison.
A few months after Tupac was sentenced, Jacques Agnant's indictment was dismissed, and he pleaded
guilty to two misdemeanors. When I asked Melissa Mourges, the assistant district attorney who had
tried the case against Tupac, why Agnant had been dealt with in such a favorable way, she said that
Ayanna Jackson was "reluctant to go through the case again." Jackson had, however, brought a civil suit
against Tupac following the trial. (The suit was subsequently settled.)
Agnant's lawyer, Paul Brenner, believes that Tupac should never have been convicted. "It was a very
weak case," ge says. "A lot went on" at Nell's. Brenner suspects that the police planted the gun they
found in the hotel room. "I worked for the P.B.A. for ten years, I know the police....The police are firneds
of mine," he says. "But Tupac had no friends in the police. I couldn't find a policeman who had a good
word to say about Tupac."

- 7 -
Tupac's conviction that Agnant had set him up seemed only to deepen with time. He went public with it
on his last album, "The Don Killuminati":
I hope my true mutha-fuckas know
This be the realest shit I ever wrote....
Listen while I take you back
and lay this rap
A real live tale
About a snitch named Haitian Jack
Knew he was working for the feds....
Set me up
Wet me up
Nigga stuck me up.
Agnant has files a suit for libel against Tupac's estate, Death Row, Interscope, the producer and the
engineer of the song, and the publishing company. Ayanna Jackson has always maintained that she was
not involved in any setup.
What role Agnant, the police, or any other governmental entity may have played in the sexual-assault
case against Tupac is conjectural. But this much is plain: once the gears of the criminal-justice system
were set in motion, Tupac was penalized more for who he was--a charismatic gangsta rapper with a
political background--than for what he had done. Melissa Mourges seemed to share the animus many
police officers felt for Tupac; Charles Ogletree argued in his appeal that her conduct was so prejudicial
(she railed against Tupac as a "thug," among other things) that a new trial was warranted on that
ground alone. The setting of bail at three million dollars, Ogletree commented, was "inhumane," and
the sentence was "out of line with the conviction." Tupac was sent to the Clinton Correctional Facility in
Dannemora, New York, a maximum-security prison. "The entire case," Ogletree said, "reeked of
impropriety."
IN the very beginning, prison granted Tupac a sort of grace, extricating him from the manic,
overcharged existence he had created for himself. Outside, he drank heavily and smoked marijuana
constantly. Now his mind was clear. And in Dannemora he was liberated from the demands of his music.
His gangsta-rapping had been a pose, he said. He had been required to maintain the post and he did
not regret doing so, but it was a pose nonetheless, and one he was abdicating. He had laid down the
tracks of a new album, "Me Against the World," before he was incarcerated and, having finished that,
he told Vibe magazine, "I can be free. When you do rap albums, you got to train yourself. You got to
constantly be in character. You used to see rappers talking all that hard shit, and then you see them in
suits and shit at the American Music Awards. I didn't want to be that type of nigga. I wanted to keep it
real, and that's what I thought I was doing. But...let somebody else represent it. I represented it too
much. I was thug life."
With the opportunity to reflect, sober, on the events that led to his incarceration, he said he realized
that, "even though I'm innocent of the charge they gave me, I'm not innocent in terms of the way I was
acting....I'm just as guilty for not doing nothing as I am for doing things." He accepted blame for not
having intervened on behalf of Ayanna Jackson. "I know I feel ashamed--because I wanted to be
accepted and because I didn't want no harm done to me, I didn't say nothing."
In April of 1995, while he was still in prison, he married Keisha Morris, whom he'd been dating for about
six months before he was put in jail. Eminently responsible and levelheaded, she was going to school
and holding down a job; she didn't smoke marijuana; and she didn't immediately have sex with him.
Morris told me that on their first date they saw a movie, and then Tupac prevailed on her to stay in his
hotel room. When she insisted on going to bed fully dressed, he protested only that "you could take off
your sneakers." In the deposition he gave in the civil case brought against him by the family of the
young man who had murdered the Texas state trooper, Tupac described his new wife: "She's twenty-
two, she's a Scorpio, she...just graduated from John Jay College with a degree in criminal science, and
she's taken a year off, she's going to go to law school...she's nice, she's quiet, she's a square, she's a
good girl. She's my first and only girlfriend I ever had in my entire life and now she's my wife."
Tupac and Morris talked about moving to Arizona, and what they would name their kids. He started to
organize his finances, and attempted to settle the numerous lawsuits pending against him across the
country. But in the forbidding, almost feudal backdrop of the Clinton Correctional Facility, his efforts
seemed increasingly irrelevant. His lawyers were filing appeals in his case, and under those
circumstances he could have been allowed to post bail, but the district attorney's office was fighting his
right to do so, and the proceedings dragged on, month after month. What he had spoken of initially
when he was at Rikers Island as prison's "gift"--of respite and introspection--now had been
overshadowed by the nightmare of incarceration.
"Dannemora was a hellhole--he had a one-to-four year sentence, and they put him in a maximum-
security prison!" one of his lawyers, Stewart Levy, says. Levy recalls that while he was visiting Tupac

- 8 -
one day, "Tupac had a rectal search when he came in"--to the visiting area. "Then we spent six hours
there in full view of the guards. Then the guards started saying 'Tupac! Tupac!' in this falsetto voice,
putting up their fingers with these plastic gloves, waving them--'It's time! It's time!' Why a second
rectal search, when he'd been sitting there in plain view with his lawyer, why, except to humiliate him?"
Yaasmyn Fula, who had known him since he was a baby, and who visited him often in prison, recalls, "It
was a terrible experience for him--to be captive, in a horrific situation, with guards threatening to kill
him, inmates threatening to kill him....He said, 'I have never had people demean me and disgrace me
as they have in this jail.'"
Other factors weighing on Tupac contributed to his anxiety about being in prison. He was the
breadwinner for a large extended family--his mother, his sister, her baby, his aunt and her family, and
more. Iris Crews, one of his attorneys in the sex-abuse case--who had been leery of representing Tupac
but became beguiled and devoted ("Had he been this foulmouthed, woman-hating kid, I wouldn't have
done it")--recalled that one day as he sat in court with a bunch of young children climbing all over him
during a recess he had remarked to her, "If I don't work, these kids don't eat." "He'd been deprived of
his childhood, and then, at twenty, he had twenty people to support," she said. Beyond that, he had
enormous legal fees for cases all over the country. After nearly six months in prison, despite the money
being advanced by Interscope, Tupac's funds were depleted.
DEATH ROW RECORDS offered to solve all of Tupac's financial problems. Death Row had been started
by Suge Knight and the rap producer Dr. Dre in 1992. Knight was a former University of Nevada football
star who had grown up in Comption in South Central L.A. In the late eighties, he had worked as a
bodyguard in the burgeoning L.A. rap scene, eventually developing a friendship with Dre, who was then
a member of the group N.W.A. Knight persuaded Dre that he was getting cheated by his record
company and that he should leave. Knight is alleged to have threatened Dre's producer with baseball
bats and pipes in order to break his contract.
The release of Dre's album "The Chronic" shortly after Death Row was formed helped establish the
company as a major force. By the summer of 1995, it was one of the top record companies in the rap-
music world. "Suge and Dre really were a magical combination," a black entertainment executive who
was then at one of the big music companies told me. They were trusted on the streets. "White or black
executives, no matter what their thinking, were not going to be trusted. We were square to them." And
Knight was a formidable manager. "He never really seemed to sleep. He had an instinct with people
about what he thought their marketability could be. He could motivate Dre to finish what he started.
And he didn't take no for an answer. Dre had essentially all the ideas, and Suge had the management
musicle to get it done."
Death Row owed its start to Interscope. Jimmy Iovine and Ted Field had decided to fund Death Row and
distribute its products in 1992, when other companies shied away. One executive at a major studio who
had turned down the prospective Death Row venture told me that he and his colleagues felt that "life is
too short" to assume the risk that they believe an association with Knight might pose. "Jimmy is
comfortable with gangsters, he can deal with them, it doesn't bother him," the executive said. "He's a
street guy himself."
Iovine--the son of a Brooklyn longshoreman, who, many say, aspired to be the next David Geffen--
wanted to make his mark fast, and he was impatient with the progress of his new business at first. So
he gambled, and reaped the payoff: gangsta rap turned out to be a gold mine.
But the disadvantage of being involved with Death Row was continuing repraoches from social critics
and incensed shareholders. Time Warner had succumbed to pressure of that nature when it disengaged
itself from Ice-T in 1993. By early 1995, however, the profitibility of gangsta rap seemed to be tipping
the scales of greed and fear. When Time Earner was discussing raising its stake in Interscope from
twenty-five per cent to fifty per cent, they sought assurances that the relationship with Death Row
would continue. Then, in the late spring of 1995, Time Earner again came under attack for its
involvement in gangsta rap, this time by the joined forces of William Bennett and C. DeLores Tucker,
the chairwoman on the National Political Congress of Black Women. Tucker, pointing to Tupac, Snoop
Doggy Dogg, and Dr. Dre (the latter two at Death Row), all of whom had problems with the law,
declared that "Interscope is a company Time Warner needs to get out of business with immediately."
Tupac was too promising an artist for Interscope to consider jettisoning; but there was a compromise
solution that might make it appear that Interscope was insulated from him, and the solution apparently
made sense to everyone involved--except Tupac.
Suge Knight had wanted Tupac at Death Row for some time, although he had not been a Tupac
supporter at first. "He was not into the Tupac-artist thing," a producer who knows Suge says. "But then
came his thug notoriety--being called a rapist, getting in brawls....With his problems, he became more
attractive to Suge." Knight had been making overtures to Tupac with Interscope's blessing. A music
executive who worked with Interscope recalls Iovine saying to Knight, "Take this kid, take him please.
He's out of control. You can control him. Take him." Watani Tyehimba remembers a meeting a meeting

- 9 -
in 1993 attended by Tupac, Knight, Iovine, and himself, at which Iovine, saying it made sense for Tupac
to work with Dr. Dre, argued strongly that he should sign with Death Row. Tyehimba was surprised, but
Iovine explained that Interscope and Death Row had a "unique relationship"--suggesting that Death
Row's gain of Tupac would not mean Interscope's significant loss.
The exact nature of that "unique relationship" may be of more than academic interest to federal
authorities investigating possible criminal activities at Death Row. Suge Knight has always been at
pains to portray himself as an independent operator. For example, he boasted that Death Row, unlike
other small companies, owns its master (the original recordings of the albums). Since the long-term
value of rap recordings is only speculative at this point, the ownership of the masters is a matter of ego
more than economics, a music executive explained to me, and in the case of Death Row "it was
important for the image to say they were black-owned." But in fact Death Row's masters are heavily
mortgaged, and have been used as security against loans and advances from Interscope. Indeed,
Death Row has been financially dependent on Interscope from the beginning.
While Knight clearly had a great deal of autonomy, he and Iovine worked together closely. "It was
Jimmy and Suge, Jimmy and Suge," someone who knew them both well told me. Since no one wanted
to tell Knight anything that "set his fuse," he said, it was Iovine who dealt with Knight. The relationship
was very hands-on. Promotions and marketing for Death Row were handled by an Interscope employee.
If a production company was making a video for Death Row, its contract might well be with Interscope.
The closeness between the two companies was underscored by their physical proximity. Until last year
they were located just across the hall from each other in an office building in Westwood.
ON a business flowchart, it may have meant just shifting Tupac from one box to another, but for Tupac
to go from Interscope to Death Row, only a hallway apart, was to enter a different, and far more
sinister, world. It was widely believed that one of the major investors in Death Row was a drug dealer
named Michael (Harry-O) Harris, who was serving time for attempted murder as well as drug
convictions. He was said to have provided the seed money for Death Row. Knight, and Harris's lawyer,
David Kenner, who had also become the lawyer for Death Row, were supposed to be guarding Harris's
interests. There were even rumors that the company was being used to launder drug money on a
continuing basis. Moreover, it was said that there were contracts out on Knight, and that Harris was
unhappy with Knight's business practices. How many of these stories had reached Iovine is not clear.
He did, of course, know of Knight's criminal record and propensity for brutality when he first made the
deal with Death Row, and as time went on he became aware of the continuing climate of violence that
enveloped the company. A lawsuit against Death Row and Interscope was filed on behalf of a man
stomped to death at a Death Row party in early 1995.
As for Michael Harris's bankrolling of Death Row, Iovine told federal investigators that he heard a rumor
about it in 1994 or 1995, but it was not until December, 1995, when Harris threatened to sue the
company, claiming that he owned half of it, that Iovine took the rumor seriously. If this was true, then
Iovine was strangely insulated, for in L.A. music circles Harris's role was widely gossiped about. Indeed,
in the summer of 1995, months before Harris wrote to Iovine about his intentions to sue, the head of
the Time Warner music division, Michael Fuchs, made an overture to arrange a prison meeting with
Harris. He was trying to decide whether the company should yield to the political pressure about
gangsta rap and sell its interest in Interscope, and he believed that it might well be Harris, not Knight,
who could speak with authority to Time Warner about the future direction of Death Row. The meeting
never took place, because Time Warner executives and the board of directors quickly decided that the
company should shed its troublesome investment by selling its fifty-per-cent stake back to Interscope.
Interscope was able to exploit that rebuff by turning around and selling the fifty-per-cent stake to MCA
Music Entertainment (now known as Universal), for a profit of roughly a hundred million dollars.
TEMPTING as Knight's offers were (Death Row was the premier rap label, putting out one multi-platinum
record after another), Tupac had consistently declined to leave Interscope. But in the summer of 1995,
when it seemed as though his incarceration might continue indefinitely--for years even, if he was not
allowed to post bail--he was more desperate than he'd ever been. It was in this bleak moment that
Knight--and, apparently, Iovine as well--saw the oppotunity to arrange things the way they wanted to. It
had become not only attractive but vital to Death Row that Tupac join the label. One of the company's
biggest stars, Snoop Doggy Dogg, was facing a murder trial, and it was rumored on the street that Dr.
Dre was leaving. (Dre would indeed leave by early 1996.) Death Row could not afford to lose both
artists. And Knight surely knew that Tupac would be more popular than ever after his prison term, more
"real" to his audience than he had been before.
Even though Interscope advanced Tupac six hundred thousand dollars during the nine months he was
in prison, he was broke and frustrated. To Tyehimba, there seemed to be an unmistakable synchrony at
work. Interscope would not or could not provide enough funds for Tupac. And as Knight became a more
and more importunate suitor, Interscope "was squeezing us to get us to go to Death Row," Tyehimba
says. Knight--accompanied by Death Row's lawyer, David Kenner, who had come to play a major role in

- 10 -
the company, far exceeding specific legal tasks--made repeated trips to Dannemora to visit Tupac.
Knight promised to solve Tupac's most intractable problems. According to several people close to
Tupac, Knight claimed that Kenner could cure the legal logjam and win permission to post bail. Knight
further promised that he would put up some portion of the bail and, more important, make Death Row
the corporate guarantor for the entirety. Knight swore he would make Tupac a superstar, much bigger
than he'd been with Interscope. And he would solve Tupac's financial worries. He would even buy Afeni
a house.
It was a dazzling hand. What was probably Knight's trump card, however, was the thing that he, and he
alone, could offer Tupac--the aura of gangster power. Even though Tupac had claimed that he had
outgrown the gangster pose, his stay in Dannemora had made him feel more vulnerable than ever
before. "He wanted to get out of jail, and he needed a label that could back him," a friend who visited
him in prison that summer says. "The street shit had to be dealt with, and Suge had the power on the
street." Tupac brooded about being shot in the Times Square studio and about what he believed was
the setup by Jacques Agnant. He also suspected people who were there in the studio that night: Andre
Harrell, now the head of Motown; Bad Boy Entertainment C.E.O. Sean (Puffy) Combs; the rapper
Christopher Wallace, known both as Biggie Smalls and as the Notorious B.I.G.; and others. (They all
denied any involvement.) At first, Man Man said, Tupac did not believe that Biggie, who had been a
good friend of his, and who had come to visit him when he was recuperating from his wounds, had
been involved in any way. "But when Tupac was in jail he was getting letters from people saying Biggie
had something to do with it, he started thinking about it, it got so out of hand, it grew--and once it got
that big, publicly, you had to go with it."
Watani Tyehimba, Stewart Levy, and Charles Ogletree all say they argued vigorously with Tupac about
his decision to go to Death Row. "Tupac told us, 'The trouble with all of you is, you're too nice,'" Levy
recalls. Tyehimba told me that at his last meeting with Tupac at the prison, Tupac hugged him, wept,
and said, "I know I'm selling my soul to the devil." Kenner drafted a handwritten, three-page agreement
for Tupac to sign. Within a week, in a stunning coincidence, the New York Court of Appeals granted him
leave to post bail. (The money was provided by Interscope and a division of Time Warner, althought
Tupac always gave Suge full credit.)
Knight and Kenner arrived in a private plan and white stretch limousine to pick Tupac up. Underscoring
the degree of porousness between Interscope and Death Row, Tupac was, according to someone
familiar with the negotiation, given a "verbal release" from his Interscope contract. As for Kenner's
handwritten document, Ogletree, who not see it until much later, says, "It wasn't a legal contract....It
was absurd that anyone with an opportunity to reflect would agree to those terms. It was only because
he was in prison that he signed it. Tupac was saying, 'My freedom is everything. If you can get me my
freedom, you can have access to my artistic product.'"
IN ways large and small, in both art and life, Tupac Shakur instinctively pushed past customary
boundaries, and when he came out of prison and joined Death Row that impulse was heightened. He
would work the longest hours (nineteen-hour stretches, despite the consumption of enormous amounts
of alcohol and marijuana), he would become the biggest star, he would become a "superpower" within
the Death Row-dominated world of gangsta rap. Just nine months earlier, he had said, "Thug life to me
is dead." Now he embraced it. "Pac was like a chameleon," Syke says, echoing a common view among
Tupac's friends. "Whatever he was around, that's what he turned into. And when he got around Death
Row, he tried to be that."
While Tupac had transgressed many social limits, he had also drawn to him people who tried, with
varying degrees of success, to moderate his behavior. But when he set out for the province of Death
Row, he left behind virtually all of these putative guardians--among them, Watani Tyehimba, Karen Lee,
Man Man, even his wife, Keisha. (Their marriage was later annulled.) Yaasmyn Fula, who was one of the
few old friends who remained close to Tupac, says that he was "out of his element. It was a completely
different soldier mentality. He was fascinated by it because of the absence of a male figure who could
say, 'Leave it alone.'"
"He was always looking for a father," Watani Tyehimba says, "in me some, in Mutulu some. But what he
missed was one father with the good and the bad, not a composite." By the time Tupac met the man
who said he was his father (a former Black Panther named Billy Garland, who materialized at Tupac's
hospital bedside in New York after Tupac was shot in the Times Square lobby), the encounter failed to
satisfy him. It was in Suge Knight, many thought, especially when they saw the two together--the
slender, lithe youth shadowed by the other's massive bulk, the one all animation, the other exuding
authority--that he found that connection. Tupac and Knight seemed almost inseperable in the months
after Tupac's release from prison; they worked together long hours in the studio, and socialized when
they were through. One of Tupac's friends remembers watching them sing a song from the soundtrack
of "Gridlock'd": "You Ain't Never Had a Friend Like Me."

- 11 -
The combination of Tupac and Knight seems to have been combustible, with each activating the most
explosive elements in the other. Someone who has known Knight well for years points out that it was
after Tupac arrived at Death Row that its signature excess became even more pronounced--fancy
clothes, gold and diamond jewelry (especially heavy medallions, laden with diamonds and rubies,
bearing the Death Row symbol of a hooded figure in an electric chair), Rolls-Royces (four were
purchased to celebrate Snoop Doggy Dogg's acquittal on murder charges), and lots of women. Before
Tupac, a knowledgeable insider pointed out, "Death Row had not had a real star. They had Snoop and
Dre--they're entertainers. Snoop could be sitting quietly over there in a corner"--he gestured to one end
of the restaurant we were sitting in--"but if Tupac were here he would create such a ruckus. People
would be saying, 'That's Tupac!' He had star aura. Suge saw that, and he liked that. All of a sudden,
there were all these pictures of Suge, together with Tupac, feeding off each other."
ONCE Tupac came out of prison and joined Death Row, he probably did more to stoke the flames of a
much publicized feud between East and West Coast rappers than anyone. For all the posturing and the
displays of bravado and the aspersions cast on everyone's integrity, this was primarily a feud about
money. Rap had originated in the East, but, starting in the late eighties, the gangsta rappers from Los
Angeles were more successful. Then Puffy Combs's Bad Boy Records, which was based in New York,
began putting out its own version of gangsta rap--which the West insisted was merely derivative.
Watani Tyehimba told me that much of Tupac's anger at Biggie Smalls, Puffy's most successful rapper,
was based on professional jealousy: Tupac was in jail, and Biggie's single "One More Chance" was No. 1
on the charts. In an interview in The Source in March, 1996, Tupac claimed he'd been sleeping with
Biggie's wife, the singer Faith Evans, and he went so far as to taunt Biggie about it in a song: "I fucked
your bitch, you fat motherfucker."
Some of those close to Tupac were appalled at the Faith Evans imbroglio. (She denies that such an
encounter with Tupac ever took place.) "The trouble with what Pac was doing, with this East Coast-West
Coast thing, was that it was just something got out of hand, a publicity thing, but brothers in the street
think something is really going on, and they're gonna die for it," Syke contended. "Pac was like a person
starting a fire, and it got out of control."
When the East Coast-West Coast war was simply verbal, it was useful for its marketing possibilities. But
it may also have played into a real, not hyped, desire for vengeance on Knight's part, since he is said to
have blamed Puffy for a close friend's murder. The feud moved to a new plane at a Christmas bash in
1995, hosted by Death Row at the Château Le Blanc mansion, in Hollywood Hills. A record promoter
from New York, Mark Anthony Bell, who is an associate of Puffy Combs, is said to have been lured
upstairs to a room where Knight, Tupac, and their entourage had been drinking. Bell was allegedly tied
to a chair, interrogated about the killing of Suge's friend, and hounded for the address of Puffy and
Puffy's mother. He is said to have been beaten with broken champagne bottles, and Knight is said to
have urinated into a jar and told Bell to drink from it.
Bell received an estimated six-hundred-thousand-dollar settlement from Death Row, and he declined to
press charges. But a friend of Bell's told me that he had reached him in Jamaica about a month after
the incident, and Bell had said to him, "I'm here till I heal. They busted me up bad!" People who were
with Tupac the last year of his life are not surprised that he would be involved in something like this.
"When Tupac was with Suge," one friend says, "Suge would get him all stirred up, and he'd try to
behave like a gangster." He recalled another incident, in the spring of 1996, when a producer said that
he wanted to leave Death Row with Dr. Dre. "He came out all bloodied up," Tupac's friend said. "And
Tupac was a part of that. He had to show Suge what he was made of."
"TUPAC always wanted to be a leader, not a follower," Preston Holmes, the president of Def Pictures,
who had worked with Tupac in the movies "Juice" and "Gridlock'd," says. "And in order to be on top in
that world, he had to act a certain way--screwing the most women, stomping the most guys, talking the
most shit. But I had conversations with him in this period, when he would say, 'Gangsta rap is dead.' I
think he was trying to extricate himself."
In February, Tupac had decided to start his own production company, called Euphanasia, and he asked
his old friend Yaasmyn Fula to come to L.A. to run it. Fula began trying to organize Tupac's business
affairs. "We weren't getting copies of the financial accountings," she said. "We'd ask for them, and
they'd send a present"--like a car. "I felt like there was this dark cloud over us. I knew so much was
wrong--but Pac would say, 'Yas, you can't keep telling me things, I know what I am doing.'" Fula felt that
Afeni, from whom she was becoming estranged, had been influenced by Knight's attentions and
largesse. Tupac's signing with Death Row had transformed the lived of his extended family, even more
than his contract with Interscope had. "They had lived lives of scarcity, worrying about the next meal,
worrying about how to pay the rent," Fula says, but now they stayed at the elegant Westwood Marquis
hotel for several months, racking up and "astronomical" bill. "Pac felt he was cursed with this
dysfunctional family," Fula says, "although he loved them. And as his success grew, especially in the
last year, this presence grew. They were always there."

- 12 -
Afeni Shakur says that "Death Row in the beginning treated us much better than Interscope had." But
she suggests that she was not oblivious of the dark side of Knight and Death Row. She told me that
Tupac had not allowed either Syke or Tupac's young cousins--the Outlawz, who travelled with him and
whome he supported (and one of whom, Yafeu Fula, Yaasmyn's son, was shot and killed two months
after Tupac's murder)--to sign with Death Row, because he "didn't want any of them to live in
bondage." She also told me that when Tupac encouraged her to go out socially with Knight's mother,
she believed that he was doing that in order to protect her. "Suge's mother was very nice," Afeni said,
"but I never gave her my phone number. We both understood it was the rules of war."
The document that Kenner had drafted and Tupac had signed in prison stipulated not only that he
would become an artist for Death Row but also that Knight would become his manager and Kenner his
lawyer. For Kennery, Death Row's lawyer, also to represent Tupac was at best bad judgement and at
worst a clear case of conflict of interest. And if Kenner possessed an ownership interest in Death Row
as well, something which has long been rumored in Los Angeles music-industry circles but which
Kenner has consistently denied, the conflict would be even more patent. It also might explain how he--a
white criminal-defense lawyer who in the eighties handled some of L.A.'s most high-profile drug,
racketeering, and murder cases but had virtually no experience in entertainment law--could have
emerged at the top of one of the hottest black-music record labels.
Kenner's entrée, it now seems plain, came through Michael Harris. Paul Palladino, a private investigator
who has worked closely with Kenner for years, told me that back in 1991 or so "David was representing
Michael Harris on his appeal, and Harris introduced him to Suge." In his unfiled complaint against Death
Row and Interscope, Harris alleged that he had had a prison meeting in September, 1991, with Kenner
and Knight, to discuss the terms of his investment in what would become Death Row. Harris and Knight
were to be equal partners, he alleged, and Kenner was to set up the corporation and help Knight
manage it. (Knight and Kenner deny this.) In its first couple of years, other lawyers who were retained
by Death Row told me, Kenner was doing its criminal-defense work, and he did not appear to have a
broader role. But by 1995 he was, some thought, the proverbial power behind the throne. To many of
Tupac's friends, the relationship between Knight and Kenner fit a familiar pattern: a black gangster who
has access to the streets works in consort with a white player who is connected to levers of power in
the world at large. Knight might wear a ring with the initials "M.O.B."--"Member of Bloods"--but in their
eyes Kenner was the real thing.
DAVID KENNER began to represent Tupac as his entertainment lawyer for civil and criminal cases in
California, but Tupac asked Charles Ogletree to continue to represent him as well. Ogletree told me that
he repeatedly wrote letters to Death Row, asking to see the contract Tupac had signed with Death Row
in prison and to negotiate a formal contract under more conscionable circumstances; but all his efforts,
he said, were "met with silence, diversions, and outright misrepresentations."
Ogletree was also handicapped in his efforts to carry out Tupac's instructions to settle some of his
numerous civil lawsuits. "Tupac came out of jail with no money. He would say, 'I want to take care of
this case.' I would negotiate a settlement; he would say, 'Good, Death Row has my money, tell them to
send the check.'" When the check didn't come, Ogletree continued, "I would call Kenner. He would say,
'It's in the mail.' Then, when it never arrived, he would say he was sending it FedEx. Then, when it
didn't arrive, he would say he'd wire it." Ogletree added, "We should have been able to close the deal,
but it was never possible. We had to go through the record company. It was as thought he had no life
except that given to him by Death Row."
By the late spring, Ogletree says, Tupac was carefully plotting his escape. "He had Euphanasia, he had
the Outlawz, he had his movie deals--he was building something that was all to be part of one
entity....He had a strategy--the idea was to maintain a friendly relationship with Suge but to separate
his business." The precedent of Dr. Dre's departure from Death Row did not seem particularly
encouraging. A music-business executive who was friendly with Dre says that Dre left because he was
uncomfortable with Knight's "business practices." Dre abandoned his interest in the company in return
for a relatively modest financial settlement, and Interscope facilitated the divorce by giving him a
lucrative new contract. "Look at Dre," Ogletree says. "Such a brilliant, creative musician. He started
Death Row, and in order to get out he had to give up almost everything....Now, what would it take for
Tupac, the hottest star around, whose success was only growing?" From a legal standpoint, Ogletree
said, it was not so difficult; the contract signed in prison could be challenged. "But you have to live
after that....It was a question of how to walk away with your limbs attached and bodily functions
operating.
"I remember seeing him just before his twenty-fifth birthday," Ogletree continued. "He felt it was a
glorious day. He never imagined he'd live to be twenty-five--but there was a sadness in his eyes,
because he still had these chains binding him. This was not where he wanted to be. I said, 'You can be
anything you want to be.' He said, 'Can I be a lawyer?' I said, 'You'd be a damn good lawyer!' I sent him
a Harvard Law School sweatshirt."

- 13 -
Through most of the summer, Tupac was on the set of "Gang Related," a film in which he was costarring
with Jim Belushi. The night it wrapped, Tupac celebrated by taking one of his lawyers, Shawn Chapman,
to dinner at the Peninsula Hotel in Beverly Hills. He had been seeing a lot of Kidada Jones, Quincy
Jones's daughter, but that didn't deter him from flirting with Chapman. She remembers him driving
away from the Peninsula in his midnight-blue Rolls-Royce with the top down, playing Sinatra's "Fly Me
to the Moon." It was a romantic and lighthearted interlude--and a stark contract to the grave business
Tupac was transacting.
Just a few days earlier, on August 27th, Tupac had severed a critical tie to Death Row. "He had been on
the set all day, and in the studio all night," Fula recalls. "He sent us to the studio to get cassettes of
what he'd done the night before--he wanted to listen to it. They said no, that Kenner wouldn't allow it.
Pac went crazy! He fired Kenner...I typed the letter...and he gave me permission to hire another lawyer.
"Tupac waited far longer than I wanted him to," Ogletree says. But, to Tupac's more streetwise friends,
firing Kenner seems impossibly rash. Syke didn't know that had happened until I told him, and when I
did he looked at me for a long moment, as if he was having difficulty processing what I had said. Then
he murmured--repeatedly--"He fired Kenner?"
Tupac was brilliant, but he wasn't smart," another friend says. "He didn't realize, or refused to accept,
what anyone from the street would have known--that you can't fire Kenner, you don't leave Death Row."
Suge Knight is said now to maintain that Tupac's differences were with Kenner, not with him.
KNIGHT had planned a big party at his Las Vegas club, 662 (on a phone pad the numbers spell
"M.O.B."), on September 7th, following the beavyweight-boxing-title fight between Mike Tyson and
Bruce Seldon. Tupac was supposed to attend with the Death Row contingent. He had just got back to
L.A. from New York that morning, and he decided he was not going to Las Vegas; he told Fula he was
going to Atlanta to settle problems with some relatives there, instead. But just a few hours later she
learned that he had changed his plans; Knight had persuaded him to go to Las Vegas after all.
After the almost nonexistent fight--Tyson knocked Seldon out in less than two minutes--Knight, Tupac,
and their entourage were on the way out of the M.G.M. Grand when they came upon Orlando Anderson,
a reputed member of the Southside Crips, the Bloods' longstanding enemies. According to an affidavit
that would later be filed by a detective with the Compton Police Department, some Crips had robbed a
member of Death Row of his company medallion a month or so earlier; now, in the hotel, the victim is
said to have whispered to Tupac that Anderson was the thief. Tupac, predictably, took off after
Anderson, followed by Knight and the rest of the Death Row entourage; they set upon him, beating and
kicking him, until hotel security guards arrived and broke up the melee.
Tupac went to his hotel briefly, then rejoined the others; about two hours after the fight, they were on
their way to Knight's club, in a long convoy of cars. Afeni Shakur says that Kidada Jones, who was in Las
Vegas that night, told her that Tupac had wanted to drive his Hummer, which is akin to a combat
vehicle; but Knight, insisting that they had things to discuss, had prevailed upon Tupac to ride with him.
Knight drove his black B.M.W., and Tupac rode in the front passenger seat, with his window down. A
former Death Row bodyguard told me that the situation was aberrant; ordinarily an armed bodyguard
would have been riding with them, and additional armed bodyguards would follow in the car behind.
This night, however, Knight and Tupac rode alone. The Outlawz were in the car behind them, with a
bodyguard who was unarmed.
A white Cadillac pulled up alongside Knight's B.M.W. and a black man who was riding in it fired about
thirteen shots from a .40-calibre Glock pistol into the passenger side, hitting Tupac, who struggled to
get into the back seat. Knight (by his own account in a subsequent police interview) pulled him down.
Tupac was hit four time; Knight's forehead was grazed. (He would later maintain he had a bullet lodged
in his head.) At the hospital, Tupac went into emergency surgery, where doctors removed one shattered
lung, and he was listed in critical condition. According to his mother and others who saw him over the
next several days, he was first unconscious and then, because he was so agitated, he was heavily
sedated. Knight, interviewed several weeks later by Time magazine, claimed that when he was sitting
on Tupac's bed, Tupac "called out to me and said he loved me."
Tupac died on the afternoon of September 13th. Afeni says that doctors tried to resuscitate him several
times, and that she then told them not to try again. She later told me that when he was thrashing
about she surmised that he was trying to tell one of his cousins that he wanted him to "pull the plug."
She also said repeatedly that "Tupac would not have wanted to live as an invalid."
ON March 9th, six months after Tupac was murdured in Las Vegas, Biggie Smalls, who had been singled
out by Tupac as a traitor and mortal enemy, was shot in his car as he left a music-industry party in Los
Angeles. No arrests have been made in either Tupac's or Biggie's murder. While the Las Vegas police
would appear to have been almost lackadaisical in their approach to Tupac's murder (they made only a
perfunctory attempt to question Tupac's cousins, who were riding in the car behind Knight's, for
example), it is also true that in that group of witnesses--and among their peers--giving information to

- 14 -
the police is taboo. When Knight was interviewed on "Primetime Live," he said that even if he knew who
had shot Tupac, he would not say. "I don't get paid to solve homicides," he declared.
There have been many theories about who killed Tupac; one of the most prevalent rumors, which
began to circulate shortly after Tupac was shot and has persisted to this day, is that Knight himself had
something to do with Tupac's murder. In mid-March he gave an interview from jail to "America's Most
Wanted" and said that he had not been involved. But many of those who were close to Tupac continue
to suspect--based only on circumstantial evidence and their understanding of the street--that it was his
attempt to leave Death Row that led to his death. Dre had managed to do it, but only by relinquishing
any claim on Death Row. A music-business veteran who is close to Dre told me that "if Tupac had left
Death Row...it would have been worse than devastating--it's an insult. It's a public slap in the face. It is
not tolerable. 'I've made you and you're going to leave me? And six months after Dre did it?' In another
culture," he concluded, "people sue you."
In the last few months, Knight has been buffeted by one damaging revelation after another. The Los
Angeles Times reported in October that he had given a recording contract to the daughter of the
deputy district attorney Lawrence Longo, who had helped strike his probation deal in the assault case,
and also that David Kenner had rented a nineteen-thousand-dollar-a-month Malibu Colony house from
the Longo family and that Knight had stayed in it. (Longo denies any wrongdoing.) Then, in December,
the Los Angeles Times reported that Steve Cantrock, Death Row's accountant and a principal in the L.A.
office of Gelfand, Rennert & Feldman, a division of Coopers & Lybrand, had signed a document saying
that he stole four and a half million dollars from Death Row. Cantrock was said to have told federal
investigators that he had been invited to a San Fernando Valley house where Knight, Kenner, and
others were gathered, that he had been forced to his knees and, fearing for his life, signed the
handwritten confession that Kenner had drafted on the spot. (Knight says that no force was involved.
Cantrock denies stealing the money.) Cantrock, who is in hiding, has since been forced out by his firm.
He has also been reported to have been an intermediary between Knight and alleged organized-crime
figures; federal investigators have reportedly been examining possible links between Death Row and
organized-crime families in New York and Chicago. When federal grand jury subpoenas were sent out
last February, they focussed not only Knight's role but on Kenner's as well.
In mid-April, Afeni Shakur filed a racketeering suit against Death Row, Suge Knight, and David Kenner,
alleging that they were engaged in a conspiracy to steal from Tupac. The suit included a claim against
Kenner for malpractice and breach of fiduciary duty, charging that his "purported representation of
Tupac was in hoeless conflict" with his own interests--inasmuch as Kenner, the suit alleges, was both an
attorney for Death Row and an owner of it. Several people close to the situation say that the suit is on
the verge of being settled, and that Interscope has helped to make that possible.
Since Tupac's death, Interscope has repeatedly sought to mollify Afeni. In Octover, when she found
Knight and Kenner unresponsive and she was threatening to block the release of Tupac's last album
unless she got an accounting of the money due to him, it was Jimmy Iovine who met with Afeni and her
lawyer, Richard Fischbein, and agreed that Interscoep would pay her an immediate three million dollars
with more to come. And it was Interscope, not Death Row, that underwrote a memorial service for
Tupac in Atlanta in November.
Interscope has, in a way, been a model of corporate responsibility. Indeed, in a strictly corporate sense
it has done more than was required. Tupac was not officially Interscope's artist, after all. But Interscope
executives may feel a level of responsibility for having pushed Tupac into Suge's arms. And there is also
a compelling business rationale for Interscope to do everything possible to quell the skirmishing
between Tupac's estate and Death Row. As one lawyer close to the situation points out, if Afeni didn't
get what she wanted from Death Row she would surely sue not only Death Row but Interscope as well,
on the theory that the companies were so closely related as to have shared exposure. Being subject to
a legal process of discovery on this issue could hardly have been an attractive prospect for Interscope--
particularly in light of the ongoing criminal probe of Death Row.
IF Interscope escapes unscathed in the federal probe, Suge Knight's undoing could well prove a boon.
"Joint ventures are only as successful as the operations are frugal," an executive close to Interscope
points out, and at Death Row the spending was "obscene." "If they can shift the Death Row assets
within Interscope, they'll come out smelling like roses--and not have the wild card of Suge and Kenner."
A couple of months ago, it was reported that Seagram, the parent of Universal, is considering buying,
for three hundred and fifty million dollars, the half of Interscope that Universal does not already own.
This would mean a colossal profit for Iovine and Field.
To many blacks in the music business, the lack of congruency in this particular morality tale is bitterly
familiar. Suge Knight has retained Milton Grimes, who defended Rodney King, to represent him in the
federal investigation. Grimes argues that Death Row did not operate in a vacuum. "Their money came
from Interscope, and from MCA, and they"--Interscope--"were hands-on. So if there are going to be
indictments, let them take on the industry--not just this one black business."

- 15 -
That Interscope is widely regarded as the most successful new label since Geffen Records cannot be
attributed solely to its affiliation with Death Row. Interscope has hugely successful rock groups,
including Nine Inch Nails, Bush, and the Wallflowers, and the pop groups No Doubt and God's Property.
But it was Death Row that rescued them from their early doldrums and that delivered one multi-
platinum album after another. And the legacy of Death Row to Interscope is a rich one. "Death Row
served an amazing purpose for Interscope," an entertainment executive told me. "It helped put them in
the black-music business. Today, no matter what happens, they have that. People in that community
feel that they gave a black man power. They gave a black man autonomy. They gave a black man
money."
Iovine and Field did bet on Suge Knight and Dre when other companies would not. They have justified
what they did by alluding to the First Amendment, and to their belief in giving a chance to black artists
and entrepreneurs from the street. But Death Row was no enterprise zone. And anyone who got near it
could have predicted that there would be a price to pay for its cultivation of gangsterism--in lyrics, in
social conduct, and perhaps in business practices as well.
Tupac, of course, paid the heaviest price of all.

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