Dexter Isaac says he was going to cut King Tut & Big Stretch helped set Tupac up for cocaine

Lordgodking Nyc

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If true, damn Stretch.:snoop:



Play stupid games win stupid prizes
Rapper Slain After Chase In Queens


By CHARISSE JONESDEC. 1, 1995

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    December 1, 1995, Page 00003The New York Times Archives
    A rap artist who was with the rapper Tupac Shakur when he was shot last year was himself shot and killed early yesterday during a high-speed automobile chase in Queens, police officials said.

    Randy Walker, 27, who performed in the group Live Squad, was being chased by at least two men in a black car when he was shot at least four times, crashing his minivan at the corner of 112th Avenue and 209th Street in Queens Village just after 12:30 A.M., said Lieut. Vito R. Spano, commander of the detective squad in the 105th Precinct.

    His death occurred one year almost to the minute from the incident last Nov. 30 when he and Mr. Shakur walked into a Times Square building housing a recording studio, and Mr. Shakur was robbed and seriously wounded.

    "The shootings were one year and about five minutes apart," Lieutenant Spano said. "It's weird."

    The police said they had no suspects and had not determined a motive for the shooting. They said they were looking into a possible connection between the two attacks, but they had no hard evidence to suggest whether the incidents were related or whether the links were simply the result of a bizarre coincidence.

    In any case, Mr. Walker's killing is the latest in a string of incidents in which rappers have been caught in a web of violence, either as perpetrators or victims.

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    Mr. Shakur, for example, was convicted last December of sexual assault -- shortly before his shooting -- and was recently released pending his appeal. The superstar gangsta rapper Snoop Doggy Dogg is currently on trial in Los Angeles for his alleged role in a drive-by killing in August 1993.

    The sometimes deadly intersection between life and art has helped fuel a national debate about rap lyrics. But many rap artists and their supporters say the hard-edged lyrics of some raps merely reflect a grim, urban reality that they did not create.

    "Most of the stuff he would talk about wasn't about how bad he was, but the stuff he went through in the streets and how he responded to that," said Adario Strange, executive editor of The Source, a hip hop magazine. "He wasn't just some street thug trying to get paid. He was a street artist, and a talented one to boot. I'm very surprised at this."

    Mr. Walker, who rapped under the stage name Stretch, was not a star. But he was known and respected in rap circles, and hovered in hip hop's spotlight through his association with Mr. Shakur. The two men had been close friends, and Mr. Walker produced several songs for the rap superstar, industry insiders said.


    But in the wake of Mr. Shakur's shooting, the friendship shattered, shocking many in the rap community, friends said. In an interview published in Vibe magazine, Mr. Shakur suggested that several of his acquaintances acted suspiciously during and after the attack, including Mr. Walker, whom he accused of not trying to fight their assailants.

    "Tupac made disparaging remarks about him in Vibe magazine and it really hurt his feelings a lot," said Ed Lover, an MTV personality and radio show host who helped Mr. Walker get started in the music business. "I think -- just my opinion -- after Tupac got shot, I just think that Tupac just kind of turned against everybody."

    Mr. Shakur could not be reached for comment.

    Mr. Walker had had glimmers of success during his short career. In 1990, Mr. Lover took a demo tape of Live Squad's raps to Tommy Boy Records, where the group was signed for about two years, he said.

    Mr. Walker was on his way home after dropping off his brother, Chris, 23, when the car chase began and he was struck by bullets, at least two fired through his back, relatives and the police said. A father of one, he towered at 6 foot 8 inches, friends said, and was more often the one to cool tempers than start trouble.

    Still, his raps spoke of drugs and the violent repercussions such a life could yield. But Mr. Lover stressed that his friend had not lived violently. "The music that he made had nothing to do with the life that he led," he said. "He didn't glorify violence at all. He didn't live violently. A lot of the media will change it around to make it seem like a rap related incident and it's not."

    Mr. Walker lived with his mother, Lucilda, a native of Jamaica who came to the United States 29 years ago and, after the death of her husband in 1981, raised their two sons and two daughters alone, working as a nursing attendant at New York University Medical Center. "He never talked to me about having enemies," Mrs. Walker said yesterday.

    "My son was a very loving, kind person. I don't know why they did this to him

    :pacspit::pacspit::pacspit::pacspit::pacspit::pacspit:
 

⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐

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This is another reason that cocaine should be legalized so we can remove the criminal element and black market control
 

Benefited

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its nearly impossible for stretch to feed jimmy info when him & pac was together all day - the technology in 1994 just didn't exist then

and like i said that drug deal gone bad was with Queens nikkaz not Brooklyn nikkaz - jimmy a BK nikka

This man right here is wrong almost all of the time when I see him in Pac threads,and has little to no credibility as he is very bias. But I tend to agree with him on this one.But Pac seems to always be on the right side of history so I will wait for more details or for someone to back this up.
 

kingofnyc

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this what dex said in the book..

About ten minutes passed before my cellphone rang. “Tupac will be here in a fifteen minutes. He's got a couple of dudes with him." "A'ight. We ready." When I ended the call, I began formulating our strategy.

"Spunk, I need you to chill in the lobby and act like you're the security guard. When they come inside the lobby, me and JD will come from behind and get 'em right there. Under no circumstances are we to kill them. Jimmy doesn't want him shot. He just wants to teach him a lesson."

A few moments later, Jimmy calls again letting me know that Pac and his entourage were in the garage around the corner, parking their car and that I'd be able to see them walking around the corner at any minute. It was midnight by now on November 30th. All this up-to-date information led me to believe that Jimmy had someone in Pac's camp who was feeding him information. Sure enough, a minute later, I saw Tupac bopping down the street, arms swinging back and forth, leading about four dudes to the studio. Me and JD crossed the street and followed the group into the building.


but from pac own VIBE interview jimmy kept hittin him up to see where he was at.. maybe dexter thought that was stretch..


You went up to the Polo Grounds?

Me, Stretch, and a couple other homeboys. After I laid the song, Then I got a page from this guy Jimmy telling me he wanted me to rap on Little Shawn's record. He's Little Shawn's manager, and he'd been asking me for a while to rap on this record because it's going to be a song with me and Notorious B.I.G. on Bad Boy Records and all this. He said we need you.

Now this guy I was going to charge, because I had no connections with him. I could see that they was just using me out of the blue they wanted me to do this song. So, I said, "All right, you give me seven G's and I'll do the song." So he said, "All right, I've got the money. Come." When I got finished with Ron-G, Jimmy paged, like, "You're on your way?" I said, "Yes, I'm on my way." I stopped off to get some weed, smoked the weed, and he paged me again. "Where you at? Where you at? Where you at? Why you ain't coming?" I'm like, "I'm coming, Man, I'm on my way, hold on." I wasn't thinking, Why they want me here so bad?

We got lost looking for the studio in Manhattan. And I called him like, "Where the hell is the studio?" Jimmy said, "Where you at?" I told him where we were at, which is right around the corner. He was like, "How long is it going to take you?" I was like, "Five minutes. We'll be there in five minutes."


the new info is jimmy allegedly promising stretch drugs for not warning pac :francis:

only thing backin that up is this part from queens reign supreme book..



w81doh.jpg

yeah
Dexter always insinuating that Stretch was the dude feeding Jimmy the info on Pac But in reality it doesn’t make sense due to the fact that Jimmy was paging Pac 24/7 and Pac himself would tell Jimmy his location whereabouts & info

I never read the book queens reigon supreme
I can tell you that shyt is completely false ain’t no shorty walk up to Jimmy and say that shyt to him and Stretch didn’t have a gun with him that night - i know that for a fact
 

KENNY DA COOKER

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Ed Lover is a piece of shyt

Correction: MOST people from QUEENS ARE A PIECE OF SH1T

i have dealt with cats from all 5 boros.....

but honestly in my personal experiences...the QUEENS PEOPLE are the most deceitful sheisty ..shifty mofos out of the Big Apple

the only person i got a real problem with in my family just happens to be from Flushing Queens... :snoop:

and the most foulest shyt a byatch ever tried was done by a broad from queens

 
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