Wednesday, April 6, 2011

FBI Release Reports Consisting of More Than 300 Pages of Their Investigation into The Murder of The Notorious B.I.G.


It's been just a little more than 14 years since the murder of Hip Hop Icon The Notorius B.I.G.

Though so much time has passed, we are still left with mostly nothing but open ended speculations on who was responsible for his murder. Today we can atleast get a deeper glimpse into exactly what the FBI uncovered while investigating the homicide which took the life of a shining star on March 9, 1997.

Read the full article and report here and leave your thoughts and comments:

Asking any fan or rap impresario who killed the Notorious B.I.G. is a question that undoubtedly yields countless guesses.

Since the rapper’s controversial -- and still unsolved -- killing in 1997 after leaving a Los Angeles music party, conspiracy theories have swirled about his death, fueled among other things by the fact that his death closely mirrored that of one time friend and believed rival Tupac Shakur months earlier.

The FBI has released hundreds of pages of files from its investigation into the murder of the Notorious B.I.G., a.k.a. Biggie Smalls. The records come from a civil rights probe the bureau launched into the killing.

The 359-page document, which you can read here, is heavily redacted, which should reopen the dialogue for the countless conspiracy theorists who have long held that the Brooklyn-bred rapper’s death was covered up.

The family of the rapper, born Christopher Wallace, filed a wrongful-death suit against the city of Los Angeles in 2002, accusing officials of covering up police involvement; the family had alleged that corrupt LAPD officers were involved in Wallace's slaying, a claim the city has denied. A federal judge dismissed the suit last year.

Read more at L.A. Now.

RELATED:

Read the FBI documents on Biggie Smalls


-- Gerrick D. Kennedy

twitter.com/gerrickkennedy


Source: LATimes.com

1 comments:

Anonymous said...

Yo, I read a 24 page article in a 2004 December issue of Rolling Stone Magazine(Jay-Z on the cover) and all fingers pointed to Suge setting up Pac's death because he wanted out of Death Row records and the killing of Biggie was a conspiracy to fuel that so-called coastal beef that the media and record execs hyped. Drama makes record sales, record sales make execs rich. The execs killed our best of that time.

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