The fatal Las Vegas shooting wasn’t the first attempt on his life. On November 30, 1994, three armed men entered the lobby of a Manhattan office building where Tupac Shakur was recording his third studio album and shot him in what was deemed an attempted robbery. Though seriously injured, Shakur lived through the attack (via History). He subsequently blamed the shooting on Sean “Puff Daddy” Combs and his rival in the rap game, Christopher Wallace (The Notorious B.I.G.), though no evidence ever surfaced to affirm the accusations (per The Source).
READ RELATED: Alamosa County mother remains vigilant in search for her daughter missing since 2019
A mere two years later, Shakur was murdered in Las Vegas. Though the killers were never identified, Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist Chuck Philips presented evidence that the infamous southern California-based Crips gang was likely involved. Through a slew of anonymous interviews with various informants, Philips gathered tips that seemingly pointed toward the aforementioned Wallace’s involvement. According to the evidence gathered by those “in the know,” Wallace allegedly offered the Crips a large sum of money (rumor states around $1 million dollars) to kill Shakur in cold blood. They also claim that he provided the gun, a .40-caliber Glock pistol (via Britannica).
Like other ominous postulations surrounding Shakur’s death, the theory was never confirmed in a court of law. The primary motive remains a mystery to this day.
Source: