Eugene "Big U" Henley helped launch Nipsey Hussle's career and was called rap's godfather by Wiz Khalifa. Now federal authorities are accusing him of murder, kidnapping, robbery, extortion and fraud.
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Feb. 6, 2025
December 2018 photo of Nipsey Hussle, left, and Eugene “Big U” Henley at an event in Atlanta
Nipsey Hussle, left, and Eugene “Big U” Henley at an event in Atlanta in December 2018.
(Prince Williams / Getty Images)
Eugene “Big U” Henley, a Crips leader who helped launch Nipsey Hussle’s career and was dubbed rap’s “godfather,” has been accused of murder, kidnapping, robbery, extortion and fraud, federal authorities announced on Wednesday.
As part of Henley’s purported grip on Los Angeles, his alleged victims “were required to ‘check in’” with Henley before arriving in the city in order to obtain “protection,” according the 107-page federal complaint unveiled Wednesday. Among those Henley allegedly extorted were professional athletes and musicians, the complaint said, whose business interests were not always legitimate.
Federal authorities likened Henley’s “Big U Enterprise” to a “mafia-like organization” that relied on his “stature and long-standing association with the Rollin’ 60s and other street gangs to intimidate businesses and individuals” in L.A. Authorities at a Wednesday press conference said Henley is a fugitive. More than a dozen others are in custody tied to the sprawling criminal case.
Following a years-long FBI investigation, federal authorities have accused Henley of kidnapping and fatally shooting a young rapper in the face and leaving his body in the Las Vegas desert over perceived disrespect and directing the robbery of an unlicensed L.A. marijuana dispensary that had stopped making extortion payments.
Henley also allegedly defrauded companies, donors, athletes and celebrities — including professional basketball player Draymond Green and former NBA MVP Shaquille O’Neal — persuading them to donate to his charities and later allegedly transferring the money to his own personal bank accounts. Authorities have also accused Henley of fraudulently obtaining funding from the Gang Reduction and Youth Development program overseen by the L.A. mayor’s office.
Henley previously served 13 years in prison after trying to rob an undercover sheriff’s deputy of 33 pounds of cocaine in 1991. His son is a linebacker for the Los Angeles Chargers.
Henley, his alleged right-hand man, Sylvester Robinson, and trusted lieutenant, Mark Martin, are accused of violating the Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act (RICO). Federal authorities have also charged Termaine Williams, aka “Luce Cannon,” with robbery, Armani Aflleje, aka “Mani,” with transporting an individual to engage in prostitution and Fredrick Blanton Jr. and Tiffany Hines with bank fraud. All of them are in custody, according to the U.S. Attorney’s Office in L.A.
In an affidavit filed with the criminal complaint, Andrew Roosa, a special agent with the FBI, said members and associates of the Big U Enterprise used Henley’s and the group’s history and reputation to “‘control’ Los Angeles through violence, fear, and intimidation.”
Henley “simultaneously attempted to create an air of legitimacy for the Big U Enterprise by promoting himself as a reformed gang member focused on bettering his community,” Roosa wrote.
Las Vegas killing
Five days before his killing in January 2021, Rayshawn Williams recorded a diss song.
In his affidavit, Roosa said he believed Williams’ diss song was about Henley, whose independent record label Uneek Music was representing the 21-year-old rapper. It’s unclear whether Henley had heard the diss lyrics prior to the killing, according to the complaint.
In the diss song, Williams referred to Henley as the “bro that makes some money,” Roosa wrote. Williams rapped that he himself might get shot in the face “for thinkin’ shyt funny.” He mentioned a .38 revolver with “no trace.”
Las Vegas police found Williams’ body in a ditch near a landfill on Jan. 25. He’d been shot in the face with a revolver that left no shell casings.
Williams is identified only by his initials in the complaint, but The Times was able to confirm his name through Las Vegas news reports and social media posts.
Uneek Music paid to fly Williams from California to Las Vegas in January 2021 and put him up in an Airbnb, according to the complaint. His family said Henley had coached the young rapper in football since he was young. Williams was supposed to spend a week at a recording studio and record a song a day. But he missed some days.
When Williams didn’t show up at the studio on Jan. 23, investigators said Henley and Robinson drove from L.A. to Las Vegas to confront him. A friend of Williams, identified only as C.A., recounted that Henley arrived at the Airbnb about 2 a.m. on Jan. 24.
Henley asked why Williams hadn’t shown up to the studio, C.A. told the authorities. Williams claimed he didn’t have a ride.
“I believe that R.W. wasting the time, thereby disparaging HENLEY’s name and the Big U Enterprise’s reputation, and potentially flouting that disrespect with the lyrics of the ‘diss’ song, led to a dispute,” Roosa wrote.
Henley arrived at the studio about 7 p.m. Williams arrived a couple of hours after and recorded until midnight, witnesses told authorities. About 12:30 a.m., Henley left the studio. The dark gray Lexus that he and Robinson had driven to the studio was no longer there.
Shortly before 1 a.m., Roosa wrote, Henley’s phones stopped reporting location data and didn’t start again until about 2:15 a.m.
Surveillance footage at the Airbnb where Williams was staying captured a dark gray or silver sedan arriving about 1:13 a.m., according to the complaint. Williams got out of the passenger side of the car, went inside and returned a few minutes later with his suitcase, despite the fact that the Airnb was rented for another day and he was not set to leave on a flight until the following day.
About 3 a.m., a witness said, Henley returned to the studio alone. The witness said Henley appeared to be drenched in either sweat or water. Henley told the witness he was coming back from the gym, according to the complaint.
Hours later on Jan. 25, about 9 a.m., Williams’ body was found in a ditch. He had died of multiple gunshot wounds.
Authorities compared DNA collected from Williams’ body to Henley’s DNA profile. The result “was inconclusive,” but Henley “could not be excluded” as a suspect, according to the complaint.