Current track

Title

Artist

Background
Keffe D Duane Davis Tupac Shakur Shooter Murder Suspect Suppress Evidence Case UpdateKeffe D Duane Davis Tupac Shakur Shooter Murder Suspect Suppress Evidence Case Update

The attorneys for the man accused of killing rap icon Tupac Shakur in 1996 are pushing to suppress evidence. Lawyers for Duane ‘Keffe D’ Davis claim that law enforcement obtained their evidence through an “unlawful nighttime search.”

RELATED: Diddy’s Videographer Explains How Netflix Secured Docuseries Footage From Days Before His Arrest

Keffe D Fights Back Against Search That Led To His Arrest

Las Vegas criminal defense attorneys Robert Draskovich and William Brown filed a motion this week on behalf of their client, Keffe D. He was charged in the drive-by shooting of Tupac Shakur off the Las Vegas Strip.

Keffe’s attorneys argue that a judge relied on a “misleading portrait” of Davis as a dangerous drug dealer to grant the execution of a search warrant at night. Night searches should only be done in exceptional circumstances. An example: if there’s a risk that evidence will disappear if officers wait until morning.

When the search warrant was executed, Keffe D was long retired from street life, according to his lawyers. In reality, Duane Davis had left the narcotics trade in 2008 and began doing inspection work for oil refineries, per his attorneys. He was a 60-year-old retired cancer survivor with adult children and grandchildren. Additionally, he had been living with his wife in Henderson, a city outside of Las Vegas.

“The court wasn’t told any of this,” his attorneys 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.”

Police Department Declines To Comment On Motion

The Las Vegas Metropolitan Police Department — which conducted the search and collected Davis’ electronic devices, “purported marijuana” and tubs of photographs — declined to comment Friday, citing the pending litigation. At the time of the search, police said executing the warrant under the cover of darkness would allow officers to surround and secure the residence, and that if Davis barricaded himself, the darkness would allow officers to evacuate the surrounding homes with the least exposure to residents.
Davis was arrested in September 2023. He pleaded not guilty to first-degree murder and sought to be released since shortly after his arrest.
His attorneys claim Davis’ arrest stems from false public statements Davis had made in which he claimed to be present in the white Cadillac from which Shakur was shot. They say he has never offered details that would firmly corroborate his presence in the car, and that he benefited from saying he was present. He dodged drug charges by telling the story in a proffer agreement, and he has made money by repeating it in documentaries and his 2019 book, according to his attorneys.
He sought to dismiss his murder charges in the Nevada Supreme Court, but in November his petition was denied.
“Think of it this way: Shakur’s murder was essentially the entertainment world’s JFK assassination — endlessly dissected, mythologized, monetized — so it’s not hard to see why someone in Davis’s position might falsely place himself at the center of it all for personal gain,” his attorneys wrote.

RELATED: Tupac Shakur’s Brother, Mopreme, Reacts To Drake Using AI In His Recent Diss Track (LISTEN)

Associated Press writer Jessica Hill contributed to this report via AP Newsroom. 

The post Lawyers For Keffe D Seek To Suppress Evidence In Tupac Shakur’s Fatal Shooting Case (UPDATE) appeared first on The Shade Room.


Current track

Title

Artist

Background