The bullets retrieved from the recent 2Pac murder search don’t match the shell casings found at the original crime scene, according to a new report.
ABC News has revealed the body cam footage from the night Las Vegas SWAT descended on the home of Duane Keith Davis — better known as Keefe D — to execute a search warrant.
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Amongst the many things they retrieved were bullets from his Henderson, NV, home, which is just outside Las Vegas city proper.
Now, it’s been revealed that the bullets found on the property do not match the shell casings from the original crime scene.
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While this revelation suggests that Keefe D may be innocent, neither ABC News nor Las Vegas police have confirmed this.
Regardless of whether Keefe D is exonerated in 2Pac’s murder, however, he is still an important material witness in the case.
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“Items retrieved from the home included computers, hard drives and pictures from the 1990s that apparently show individuals who might have been connected to people directly or indirectly involved in the drive-by shooting,” an official connected to the case said, according to ABC News.
This suggests that Keefe D has more than a bit of information about what really happened on the night of Pac’s murder.
Keefe D has stated on numerous occasions that he was seated beside the person who allegedly shot and killed ‘Pac — long believed to be Keefe’s nephew Orlando “Baby Lane” Anderson, who himself was killed in an unrelated gang shooting in 1998.
And he is the only other living witness, besides Suge Knight, who can testify to ‘Pac’s murder.
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Knight, the former head of Death Row Records, was driving the BMW shuttling 2Pac away from the Las Vegas hotel on September 7, 1996, the night he was killed.
What’s more, Knight — who previously refused to cooperate with authorities who were investigating the murder of his signee — may be compelled to testify by subpoena if the case goes to trial.
Though this revelation about the shell casings is nothing if not shocking, all the evidence retrieved from Keefe D’s home is still currently being presented to a Las Vegas grand jury, and a police official said it could take months for the grand jury to decide whether to indict anyone.