Prosecutors have alleged that late rapper Tupac Shakur's murder suspect Keefe D should stay in custody despite a bid for house arrest because he has an 'authorization to kill' witnesses.
Court-appointed
lawyers for Duane 'Keefe D' Davis say their 60-year-old client is in
poor health, poses no danger to the community, and won't flee to avoid
trial. They want the judge to set his bail at no more than $100,000.
Keefe, currently being held in Clark County Detention Center in Las Vegas, has pleaded not guilty to a murder charge and has remained jailed without bail since his arrest on September 29 outside his home in suburban Henderson.
The filing said that his son told him during a recorded phone call on October 9 that a 'green light' order was given.
'In [Keefe's] world, a 'green light' is an authorization to kill,' prosecutors Marc DiGiacomo and Binu Palal said in the court filing.
He
added that the federal government was worried enough that it 'stepped
in and provided resources to at least (one witness) so he could change
his residence.'
Prosecutors added that this was evidence
enough of 'credible threats to witnesses [that] demonstrate both a
consciousness of guilt and that defendant poses a danger to the
community.'
There is no reference in the court filing to Keefe, from Compton in California, instructing anyone to harm someone, or to anyone associated with the case being physically harmed.
One of his defense attorneys, Robert Arroyo, said he did not see evidence that any witness had been named or threatened.
They
also called attention to Keefe's own words since 2008 - in police
interviews, in his 2019 tell-all memoir, and in the media which provides
strong evidence that he orchestrated the September 1996 drive-by
shooting.
But his lawyers said that these were sensationalized for 'for entertainment purposes and to make money.'
Despite
this claim, prosecutors told Clark County District Court Judge Carli
Kierny that, by his own descriptions, Davis was 'the shot-caller' in the
fatal shooting and he should remain jailed.
Keefe is the only person still alive who was in the vehicle from which shots were fired, a white four-door Cadillac.
He
asserts he was given immunity in a 2008 agreement with the FBI and Los
Angeles police who were investigating both the killings of Shakur in Las
Vegas and rival rapper Biggie Smalls in March 1997 in Los Angeles.
The
shooting saw the shooter hit Tupac and Suge Knight five times between
them with bullets fired from a 0.40 Smith & Wesson and Winchester
Glock 22 at 11:15pm on September 7, 1996.
Tupac was hit twice
in the chest, once in the arm and once in the thigh, while Knight's head
was hit by fragmentation in the black BMW sedan they rode in that
night.
If convicted of the shooting, Keefe could spend the rest of his life in a Nevada state prison.