Notorious B.I.G. Case Goes To Trial

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Trial to Probe Notorious B.I.G.'s Slaying

By RYAN PEARSON

Associated Press Writer

The mystery of who gunned down Notorious B.I.G. - and why - has frustrated and fascinated the hip-hop world for eight years. With FBI and police investigations failing to net even a suspect, a swirl of theories implicated corrupt cops, gang hits, bicoastal beefs - or all three at once. None have been provable, so far.

The case finally is in court, as a wrongful death lawsuit filed by the New York rapper's family against the city of Los Angeles and its police department. On Tuesday, a nine-person jury was selected. The panel is expected to at least get a peek inside the so-called murder book showing whom the Los Angeles Police Department interviewed and which leads were followed.

Both sides also presented opening statements, and B.I.G.'s mother Voletta Wallace dabbed at her eyes with a tissue as an attorney recounted the night of her son's death.

Christopher Wallace was killed shortly after midnight March 9, 1997, on a Los Angeles boulevard after someone in a dark sedan fired seven shots into his sport utility vehicle while both cars were stopped at a light. Wallace was heading to a hotel following an awards show after-party.

The suit claims LAPD officials covered up a former officer's involvement in the slaying and ignored a systemic problem of potentially dangerous moonlighting. The family claims a number of off-duty officers associated with gang members while providing security for Death Row Records, home of Wallace's West Coast rival, Tupac Shakur.

Shakur was slain on the Las Vegas Strip six months before the 24-year-old Wallace was killed, and the two are forever linked in hip-hop culture.

Both savored the good life but were obsessed with death. Shakur flaunted bullet wounds and rapped of dying young. Wallace, aka Biggie Smalls, titled his 1994 debut "Ready To Die" and posed for the cover of his posthumously released second album, "Life After Death," leaning on a hearse dressed for his own funeral.

Wallace was discovered by then-rising producer Sean Combs, now known as P. Diddy. Combs groomed the baritone rapper for a mainstream audience through dance-happy samples, guest spots on R&B songs and even a collaboration with Michael Jackson.

But a dark rivalry was forming outside the spotlight. A murky series of conflicts erupted in the mid-1990s between Combs' New York-based Bad Boy Entertainment and Los Angeles-based Death Row, led by Marion "Suge" Knight.

It began after Shakur survived a 1994 shooting at a New York recording studio; Wallace and Combs had been nearby and Shakur blamed them for it. Assaults continued as each company purportedly linked up with rival street gangs - Bloods for Death Row, Crips for Bad Boy.

A Knight bodyguard was killed in September 1995 after a confrontation with Combs and others at an Atlanta party. In December of that year, a man named Mark Anthony Bell was beaten and tortured at Knight's home by men seeking Combs' home address, according to an affidavit filed by an LAPD detective and released by Wallace's family Monday.

And then there was the war of words. Shakur boasted on record of having sex with Wallace's wife; Wallace released songs with seemingly veiled references to Shakur's 1994 shooting.

According to the Wallace family lawsuit, both record companies began hiring off-duty policemen as bodyguards. The suit describes several instances in which police investigating assaults involving Bad Boy or Death Row employees arrived to find off-duty officers on the scene.

One officer, David Mack, is at the heart of the lawsuit.

According to a theory advanced by former LAPD Detective Russell Poole - who's scheduled to testify - Mack arranged for his college roommate Amir Muhammad to kill Wallace on Knight's behalf. But Knight, who has served time in prison for assault and weapons violations, is not named in the Wallace suit. A lawyer who has represented him, Milton Grimes, did not return a call seeking comment.

Muhammad and Mack, who is now serving a 14-year sentence for bank robbery, have repeatedly denied having anything to do with the killing. The judge dropped both from the suit this month.

Perry Sanders, a Wallace family lawyer, said circumstantial evidence will show Mack "used cop tools" such as police radios to help plan the shooting and that the LAPD is liable "for allowing officers to be doing off-duty work, for allowing them to associate with people they shouldn't be associating with."

Several key witnesses have weakened the family's case by backing away from previous statements in recent interviews. Sanders said Monday they were among several reluctant to testify for fear of retaliation.

"All of a sudden, people get amnesia," he said. "Amnesia is a funny thing. It can't be cured in the courtroom."

Attorney Marc Harris, representing Mack, dismisses the case as "a house of cards" with lying witnesses parroting theories offered in books and movies. The trial is expected to feature jailhouse informants who have linked Knight and Mack to Wallace's slaying.

"You will hear a lot of hearsay and supposition from incredible witnesses, unreliable informants," attorney Vincent Marella, representing the city, told jurors Tuesday. "There won't be any believable evidence that will substantiate the theory that you heard."

It's unclear whether Knight or players in the hip-hop industry will be called. Combs has given a deposition, but Sanders said it's unlikely he'll testify.

"I'm completely supportive of the family and will always be supportive of the family," Combs said in an interview.

The trial will be split into three phases and could last up to a month.

First, jurors must decide whether Mack was involved in the killing and acted using his authority or skills as a policeman.

If they find he was, they'll then consider whether the LAPD and the city should be held responsible for the off-duty officer's actions.

In a third phase, jurors would award damages. The family is asking for an unspecified amount but can present evidence showing Wallace's potential earnings far exceeded $100 million, Sanders said.

In his two albums, which Nielsen SoundScan says together sold nearly 8 million copies in the U.S., Wallace appears to have foreseen the tumult that's followed his death.

On the final song of "Life After Death," Wallace warbles through the chorus: "You're nooobody til sooomebody kills you."

-Pat

www.wbpfilms.com

EST.

382

 
does some one wanna sum that up for me in like a paragraph i did see a shakur in there but my attention span doesnt last that long....oooooh SHINY RED PHONE!!!!!!!!

-keegan mcginnis, newschoolers.com

 
haha, that's fnny, I scrolled through and only saw shakur too

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~***************~~~~~~~~~~~~

If it aint Gorilla, it aint Steeze

 
Fuck Biggie, Tupac was killed first, they should look into his death first. The two killings were linked together, the fucking corrupt police and there bullshit scandals can pull off anything they want

"I believe that everything you do bad comes back to you. So everything that I do that's bad, I'm going to suffer for it. But in my heart, I believe that what I'm doing is right. So i feel like I'm going to heaven." -Tupac Shakur-
 
They are looking into the case because the Wallace family is filing against the city of LA. I am pretty sure the Shakur family has NOT done anythign of this sort and that is why they are looking more into the Biggie case.

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^ are you serious? You really think that Afeni tupacs mom doesnt care that her son got murdered by some pigs. She has looked into and tried to file but she cant win anything b/c there is no hard evidence bc the crooked cops that did it covered there asses made sure they intervewed the wrong people and paid off the right people

"I believe that everything you do bad comes back to you. So everything that I do that's bad, I'm going to suffer for it. But in my heart, I believe that what I'm doing is right. So i feel like I'm going to heaven." -Tupac Shakur-
 
Did I ever say that she didn't fucking care, she helped put together a whole fucking documentary of his life, obviously she cares. Don't put words in my mouth and make farfetched assumptions like that.

The only answer to why Biggies case is actually being brought to court before Pacs is that our legal system is fucked up. There is no point in trying to figure out reasons why, it just turned out that way.

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I like their music, but I don't give a shit about who killed them. If you're gonna be a gangsta rapper and try to be all hardcore then thats too bad, deal with the consequences. Its fun to talk about killing people but it sucks when you're involved in violence, doesn't it?

________________________________________

I woke the same as any other day

Except a voice was in my head

It said seize the day, pull the trigger

Drop the blade, and watch the rolling heads.
 
Just in case you didn't know. Before Pac first got shot and all the east vs west shit started he rhymed about the problems in black societys. Not just some bullshit about his 20 inch rims and the hater he capped last night.

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wow I read the whole thing and this souds like a good old hollywood script, some rappers got into gangs and fights and corruption and drugs and finally died, so what, do you expect them to leave forever in such twisted world? Sad thing they died, but theres more important stuff to care about, i'd never write such a big article about that...

Gravity sucks

'Weighing in at only 125 lbs, I could easily bench double my weight as a senior in H.S.; maxing out at an outstanding 245 lbs. I still had the build of a small person.' - d-loc

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Im not putting words in your mouth, you said your pretty sure that she hasent looked into it, and im saying that she has. And if you like there music why wouldnt you care who killed them, they could still be rapping today. You dont care that police pulled some bullshit, and somehow are still getting away with it

"I believe that everything you do bad comes back to you. So everything that I do that's bad, I'm going to suffer for it. But in my heart, I believe that what I'm doing is right. So i feel like I'm going to heaven." -Tupac Shakur-
 
lets just chill and listen to biggy

-kulpy-

vincepru-"i jibbed a car in a parking lot yester day and the bumper fell off, then i ran."
 
does this matter.at all. who cares. go ski. i know its summer. go ski in dirt.

"i'll nosepress your box if you lipslide my rail"

https://newschoolers.com/NS2/Forums
/ReadThread.php?cat_id=2&thread_id=16675&
start=150 ^Wisdom teeth and Constipation^

 
i saw some stuff on vh1 or something about who there lookin at for the shit, i hope they get him

__________________

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if it's not you then do it for the sake of fashion

your friends like a certain you

that's who you've got to be
 
I never said Tupac was completely shallow, I just said he rapped about violence and killing people, which he undisputably did. He was the one who started the whole thug life thing that has taken rap in a horrible direction. Now each rapper is trying to be more gangsta, which has ruined mainstream rap. Gangsterism can be ok in small doses, and even meaningful when rappers speak about how bad their life used to be. But those are the key words, "bad" and "used to be." Living that way is bad, and once you become a rich rapper, its over, so stop living a fantasy.

________________________________________

I woke the same as any other day

Except a voice was in my head

It said seize the day, pull the trigger

Drop the blade, and watch the rolling heads.
 
B.I.G.

R.I.P.

Hunter S Thompson RIP 1939-2005

My heroes don't appear on no stamps.

Our greatest glory consists not in never falling. But in rising every time we fall.

 
Yes but him gettign shot the first time is what triggered the whole Thug Life deal. Before that his rhymes had a lot of meaning to them

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i just was watching something on TV about biggies murder, those corrupt pigs

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Free Xbox 360, it actually works, from the makers of gratis networks. if your going to sign up anyway do it through me

 
yea, like some other kids said, it was just on "Behind the Glory" on VH1. It was talking about how it was probably this crooked cop, and some other cop found out, but LAPD wouldn't let him pursue it.

______________

Ski. Eat. Sex. Sleep. Ski. What else is there?

Dude, joke's totally on them, you should make a t-shirt that says 'all you fools suck' and on the back it can say 'I rule coz T-dawg said so' and yeah, you'll be rockin it shibby, new steeze brah, wikkid! ~PhattTim

~Phunkin Phatt Phreerider~

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*Northeast*
 
Yeah tupac didnt take rap in a bad direction, biggie and pdiddy tried to kill him in the studio, so then he had people who would follow his every move and he just organized it and started to call it Thug Life. There is more to "thug life" though then most people know they had rules, and shit they had to follow it wasnt just a bunch of people going around and killing people just because they screamed thug life

"I believe that everything you do bad comes back to you. So everything that I do that's bad, I'm going to suffer for it. But in my heart, I believe that what I'm doing is right. So i feel like I'm going to heaven." -Tupac Shakur-
 
What do you mean you dont think so, im not throwing anything but facts out there i dont what you are thinking

"I believe that everything you do bad comes back to you. So everything that I do that's bad, I'm going to suffer for it. But in my heart, I believe that what I'm doing is right. So i feel like I'm going to heaven." -Tupac Shakur-
 
Mon bad mec, I didnt specify but the way your writing doesnt seem beleivable or like hard fact. Your post I quoted seemed like a lot of BS or a personal opinion. Show me an article where you found all this ''Biggie attacked Tupac'' hoopela and I'll beleive you.

~Phunkin Phatt Phreeriders~

 
http://www.streetgangs.com/topics/tupac/090602mtv.html

There is a ton of shit on how Biggie was involved with the first shooting and how what he said and how tupac reported was to different stories. Then BIG and Pdiddy both did an interview and changed there story completly, go rent Tupac Reserection, there is a whole part on it in there.

"I believe that everything you do bad comes back to you. So everything that I do that's bad, I'm going to suffer for it. But in my heart, I believe that what I'm doing is right. So i feel like I'm going to heaven." -Tupac Shakur-
 
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