Tupac Shakur's words published before his death

Tupac Shakur's last moments have been confessed to police documents, which have been published in public for the first time since his murder. Repper has said his last words while he was bleeding to death that were published by the Metropolitan Police Department in Las Vegas after a legal battle [...]
Tupac Shakur's last moments have been confessed to police documents, which have been published in public for the first time since his murder.
Repper has said his last words while there was a bloodbath published by the Metropolitan Police Department in Las Vegas after a legal battle in 2017, when they were indicted to make them public, writes The Mirror.
The files, which have been kept private for 24 years, have now been published and reveal that the rapper spent his last moments worried about his friend Marion Sugge Knight.

The documents also include an incident report on the shooting, letters of the country's analysis of the event, and statements by police present.
Knight was in the car with Tupac the night of the shooting in Las Vegas in 1996. He took the wounded rapper to the hospital, and now the recently published letters indicate that the latest words of the star of music were just for his friend.

Tupac told Knight: “You were shot in the head. You were shot in the head”
The documents contain a transcript of Knight's interview with police in which he described the attack.
He told the police: “We were talking. We heard a couple shots fired. We looked at our right side. I grabbed Tupacu and pulled it out. There were about 15 gunshots. They hit my head”.

Suge Knight and Tupac Shakur (Photo: Nypost)
The two were traveling with a security team at the time, with bodyguards following them in a car.
In the interview, police asked Knight what security did to help him, and he expressed his anger that they offered no more help during the shooting.
I don't understand until now. That's one of the reasons Tupac and I felt more reactive, because we knew we had Tupac” bodyguards, he said.
In his statement, Knight also dismissed claims that Tupac was carrying weapons at the time of the attack and insisted that he neither had a gun or had any leads on the identity of the suspects.












