Ex-Gang Leader to Get Date for Murder Trial Stemming from 1996 Killing of Tupac Shakur 

Artist Joaquin Saavedra MacCarthy Thin paints a mural depicting rapper Tupac Shakur during a ceremony for a street renaming in the rapper's honor in Oakland, California, US, November 3, 2023. (Reuters)
Artist Joaquin Saavedra MacCarthy Thin paints a mural depicting rapper Tupac Shakur during a ceremony for a street renaming in the rapper's honor in Oakland, California, US, November 3, 2023. (Reuters)
TT

Ex-Gang Leader to Get Date for Murder Trial Stemming from 1996 Killing of Tupac Shakur 

Artist Joaquin Saavedra MacCarthy Thin paints a mural depicting rapper Tupac Shakur during a ceremony for a street renaming in the rapper's honor in Oakland, California, US, November 3, 2023. (Reuters)
Artist Joaquin Saavedra MacCarthy Thin paints a mural depicting rapper Tupac Shakur during a ceremony for a street renaming in the rapper's honor in Oakland, California, US, November 3, 2023. (Reuters)

A former Southern California street gang leader charged with killing rap icon Tupac Shakur in Las Vegas in 1996 is expected Tuesday to learn the date for his murder trial, probably next year.

Duane Keith “Keffe D” Davis won't face the death penalty but could be sentenced to life in prison if he’s convicted of one of hip-hop’s most talked-about killings. He pleaded not guilty last Thursday and remains jailed in Las Vegas.

Davis, 60, is originally from Compton, California. He was arrested Sept. 29 outside a Las Vegas-area home where police served a search warrant July 17.

In recent years, Davis said in interviews and a 2019 tell-all memoir that he orchestrated the drive-by shooting that killed Shakur at age 25 and wounded rap music mogul Marion “Suge” Knight.

Knight, now 58, is serving 28 years in a California prison for the death of a Compton businessman in 2015.

Davis is the only person still alive who was in the vehicle from which shots were fired. He has also said he was diagnosed with cancer.

Prosecutors say the shooting followed clashes between rival East Coast and West Coast groups for dominance in the musical genre dubbed “gangsta rap.” The grand jury was told that Shakur was involved in a brawl at a Las Vegas Strip casino with Davis’ nephew, Orlando “Baby Lane” Anderson, shortly before the shooting.

Anderson, then 22, denied involvement in Shakur’s killing. He died two years later in a shooting in Compton.

Davis implicated himself during multiple interviews and his memoir that described his life leading a Crips gang sect in Compton.

He wrote that he was promised immunity from prosecution in 2010 when he told authorities in Los Angeles what he knew about the fatal shootings of Shakur and rival rapper Christopher Wallace six months later in Los Angeles. Wallace was known as The Notorious B.I.G. or Biggie Smalls.

Shakur had five No. 1 albums, was nominated for six Grammy Awards and was inducted in 2017 into the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame. He received a posthumous star this year on the Hollywood Walk of Fame.

A street near where Shakur lived in Oakland, California, in the 1990s was renamed last Friday in his honor.



Dolly Parton Releases Sweeping Ballad in Tribute to her Late Husband

Dolly Parton Releases Sweeping Ballad in Tribute to her Late Husband
TT

Dolly Parton Releases Sweeping Ballad in Tribute to her Late Husband

Dolly Parton Releases Sweeping Ballad in Tribute to her Late Husband

Dolly Parton has released a breathtaking new ballad in tribute to her late husband, Carl Dean.
Dean, who was Parton’s devoted husband of nearly 60 years, died Monday. He avoided the spotlight and inspired her timeless hit “Jolene.” He was 82.
“I fell in love with Carl Dean when I was 18 years old. We have spent 60 precious and meaningful years together. Like all great love stories, they never end. They live on in memory and song," Parton wrote on Instagram Friday morning. "He will always be the star of my life story, and I dedicate this song to him.”
The song, titled “If You Hadn't Been There,” enters the pantheon of great, big-hearted Parton ballads. “If you hadn’t been there/Well, who would I be?” she sings. “You always see the best in me/You’re loving arms have cradled me.” The music swells and on the chorus, she's joined by a choir, her voice soaring.
At the end, she retreats back to a whisper for the song's titular line: “I wouldn't be here/If you hadn't been there.”
Parton met Dean outside the Wishy Washy Laundromat the day she moved to Nashville at age 18. They married two years later, on Memorial Day in 1966. Dean also inspired one of Parton's best-known songs, “Jolene,” after a flirty bank teller seemed to take innocent interest in her husband.
Parton and Dean kept strict privacy around their relationship for decades, Parton telling The Associated Press in 1984: “A lot of people say there’s no Carl Dean, that he’s just somebody I made up to keep other people off me.”