The speculation surrounding Sean “Diddy” Combs’ alleged involvement in Tupac Shakur’s 1996 murder has been reignited by the investigator.
Speaking to NewsNation on Friday, October 4, Tupac’s murder investigator Sheryl McCollum claimed that “this whole thing to me started in 1994 — the first time Tupac is shot.” The incident occurred at New York City’s Quad Studios where Tupac was in the elevator while Diddy and his “entourage of 40” were in the studio.
McCollum expressed skepticism over the supposed robbery that left Tupac shot five times, questioning why only he was targeted while Diddy’s crew of 40 remained untouched.
“You ain’t gotta shoot somebody five times to take their jewellery,” she further remarked, suggesting that it was an attempted murder.
That night, Tupac survived five shots to his body, including one to his head. Tragically, he was not as fortunate two years later when a drive-by shooting claimed his life.
In a 1995 interview with Vibe magazine, Tupac denounced rapper Biggie Smalls, his label Bad Boy Records, and the label’s founder, Diddy.
“Puffy was there, Biggie… there was about 40 n****s there. All of them had jewels on. More jewels than me,” he reflected.
He recalled limping into the studio, covered in his blood, yet no one looked shocked.
“Nobody approached me. I noticed that nobody would look at me,” Pac recalled.
Tupac’s murder remains unsolved, although the case was opened again with the arrest of Duane “Keefe D” Davis in 2023. Davis reportedly confessed that Diddy ordered a $1 million hit on Tupac.
This reportedly prompted Tupac’s family to launch a private investigation to help them file a wrongful death lawsuit against Diddy, per TMZ and Page Six.
Now, the same federal agents who put Diddy behind bars for alleged sex trafficking and racketeering conspiracy have reportedly been “collating information” with the prosecutors handling Tupac’s trial, per The Sun.