Attorneys for Duane 'Keffe D' Davis are fighting to toss out evidence from his arrest in the 1996 Tupac Shakur murder case. They claim the search warrant was based on a misleading picture of their client and executed unlawfully at night. This latest twist keeps the decades-old mystery alive.
Oh, the drama just won't quit in the Tupac saga! 😩 Duane 'Keffe D' Davis, the man charged with orchestrating the drive-by shooting that took the rap icon's life off the Las Vegas Strip back in 1996, is pulling out all the stops. His legal team—shoutout to Las Vegas defense attorneys Robert Draskovich and William Brown—filed a motion this week to suppress key evidence. Why? They say the Las Vegas Metropolitan Police Department's nighttime raid on his Henderson home was straight-up unlawful.
Picture this: Cops painted Davis as some dangerous drug dealer lurking in the shadows, convincing a judge to greenlight a dark-of-night search. But hold up—his lawyers are spilling that by 2023, the 60-year-old was a retired cancer survivor, long out of the narcotics game since 2008. He was just chilling with his wife, adult kids, and grandkids, doing legit inspection work for oil refineries. 'The court wasn’t told any of this,' they wrote in the motion. 'As a result, the court authorized a nighttime search based on a portrait of Davis that bore little resemblance to reality—a clearly erroneous factual determination, in other words.'
The haul from that search? Electronic devices, 'purported marijuana,' and tubs of photographs. LVMPD's excuse? Darkness would help them surround the place safely and evacuate neighbors if things went south. They zipped their lips on the motion, citing ongoing litigation.
Davis, who pleaded not guilty to first-degree murder after his September 2023 arrest, argues the whole case hinges on his old tall tales. He claimed to be in the white Cadillac that fired at Tupac, but his team says there's zero hard proof—and he cashed in big time, dodging drug charges via a proffer deal and profiting from docs and his 2019 book. 'Shakur’s murder was essentially the entertainment world’s JFK assassination—endlessly dissected, mythologized, monetized,' they shade in the filing, suggesting he fudged it for clout. His bid to ditch the charges at the Nevada Supreme Court? Denied in November.
Police rationale aside, is this motion the plot twist that sets Keffe D free, or just more smoke in the Tupac fog? 👀