
“THEY WANTED HIM DEAD” — Suge Knight Drops Nuclear Accusation From Prison: Tupac Was Betrayed By The Men He Trusted Most
Nearly 30 years after bullets tore through a BMW on the Las Vegas Strip, Suge Knight is lighting a match under hip-hop history — and this time, jealousy, not gangs, is the villain.
From a prison phone in 2025, the infamous Death Row boss claims Tupac Shakur was never a casualty of the street wars. According to Knight, the rapper who changed the world was “taken out by envy from inside his own circle,” a betrayal so deep it makes Hollywood tragedies look tame.
Knight, who sat inches from Tupac in that car on September 7, 1996, now points fingers at three shocking targets:
• Dr. Dre
• Snoop Dogg
• His own attorney, David Kenner
All men once considered brothers. All now painted as traitors.
The Rise That Sparked Rage
Knight says everything changed when he paid Tupac’s $1.4 million bail. Within months came the diamond-selling phenomenon All Eyez On Me, blasting Tupac into a solar system of fame Death Row had never dreamed of.
“People couldn’t handle him shining brighter than the rest of us,” Knight insists.
Suddenly, the label that Dre built… belonged to Tupac.
And that, Knight says, poisoned hearts.
Former artist Danny Boy backs him up, recalling how every song, every dollar, every meeting became “Pac first, everyone else nowhere.”
Dre: The Silent Knife
Knight claims Dre refused to testify for Snoop during his murder trial and couldn’t stand that Tupac questioned his legendary reputation as a producer.
When Dre walked away from Death Row in 1996, Knight calls it “a jealousy-fueled abandonment that left Pac exposed.”
Snoop Dogg: The Friendly Face With Growing Grudges
There were two Death Rows, insiders say:
Pac’s relentless grind all night, every night… and Snoop’s chilled-out studio vibe.
Knight twists that crack wide open.
He says Tupac axed a proposed tour with Warren G — Snoop’s own cousin — claiming Warren couldn’t fill seats.
What Pac saw as business… others took as betrayal.
“Someone Inside Wanted Him Gone”
Knight describes a terrifying moment during the “To Live and Die in L.A.” shoot when Pac wore Crip-blue clothing right inside Blood territory.
“Someone tipped them off,” Suge says.
He swears he had to dye Tupac’s hat red on the spot to save his life.
He became convinced enemies didn’t need spies.
They already had them.
Inside his own label.
Enter Diddy… And A Chilling Confession
As Sean “Diddy” Combs faces his own legal reckoning and Keefe D heads toward trial, Knight claims he has known the truth for decades.
He says Keefe D admitted the plot.
That Bad Boy had security stand down.
That this wasn’t rivalry — it was premeditated elimination.
The Final Betrayal: Knight’s Lawyer
The most jaw-dropping allegation?
Knight claims attorney David Kenner — the man handling both his and Tupac’s most sensitive business — was secretly coordinating the hit using walkie-talkies that Knight says he has now found in his old legal files.
Lawyer. Brother-in-arms. Snake in the grass.
A Story That Will Never Die
Whether Suge Knight is speaking truth or rewriting history to suit his vengeance, one line cuts like a blade:
“Tupac was killed by jealousy.”
Not by strangers.
Not by the streets.
By people who ate at his table.
Tupac Shakur shined too bright.
Someone wanted the lights out.
And if Suge Knight is telling the truth…
hip-hop still hasn’t identified every hand that pulled the trigger.
 
                     
                    