The first police officer at the scene of Tupac Shakur's 1996 drive-by murder has revealed the last words spoken by the late rap legend. And they're not exactly peaceful.
"He looked at me, and he 
took a breath to get the words out, and he opened his mouth," says Chris
 Carroll, a retired sergeant with the Las Vegas Metropolitan Police 
Department, in a new feature with Vegas Seven. "And then the words came out: 'F**k you.'"
Shakur was shot multiple 
times on September 7th, 1996. After leaving a boxing match with former 
Death Row Records CEO Suge Knight, the rapper and his bodyguards got 
into a scuffle with 21-year-old Crips gang member Orlando Anderson in 
the lobby of the MGM Grand casino. Carroll, who worked with the city's 
bike patrol unit, had also been watching the same Mike Tyson fight, but 
was unaware of the brawl taking place in the lobby.
Later, a white Cadillac 
pulled up beside Knight and Shakur while they were stopped at a traffic 
light and one man began shooting out of the back window. Carroll was the
 first officer to respond to the grisly scene.
"I grab the car door and 
I'm trying to open it, but I can't get it open," he says. "[Knight] 
keeps coming up on my back, so I'm pointing my gun at him. I'm pointing 
it at the car. I'm yelling, 'You guys lay down! And you, get the f**k 
away from me!' And every time I'd point the gun at him, he'd back off 
and even lift his hands up, like 'All right! All right!' So I'd go back 
to the car, and here he comes again. I'm like, 'F**ker, back off!' This 
guy is huge, and the whole time he's running around at the scene, he's 
gushing blood from his head. Gushing blood! I mean the guy had clearly 
been hit in the head, but he had all his faculties. I couldn't believe 
he was running around and doing what he was doing, yelling back and 
forth."
Carroll says when he 
finally was able to open the door, Shakur's limp body fell out of the 
vehicle, "like he was leaning against the door."
"So I grabbed him with my
 left arm, and he falls into me, and I've still got my gun in the other 
hand," he continues. "He's covered with blood, and I immediately notice 
that the guy's got a ton of gold on -- a necklace and other jewelry -- 
and all of the gold is covered in blood. That has always left an image 
in my mind. . . After I pulled him out, Suge starts yelling at him, 
'Pac! Pac!' And he just keeps yelling it. And the guy I'm holding is 
trying to yell back at him. He's sitting up and he's struggling to get 
the words out, but he can't really do it. And as Suge is yelling 'Pac!,'
 I look down and I realize that this is Tupac Shakur."
Carroll says he 
attempted to get a "dying declaration" of a potential suspect from 
Shakur, but the rapper was ignoring him at first.
"And then I saw in his 
face, in his movements, all of a sudden in the snap of a finger, he 
changed," he says. "And he went from struggling to speak, being 
noncooperative, to an 'I'm at peace' type of thing. Just like that. . . 
He went from fighting to 'I can't do it.' And when he made that 
transition, he looked at me, and he's looking right in my eyes. And 
that's when I looked at him and said one more time, 'Who shot you?'. . .
 He looked at me and he took a breath to get the words out, and he 
opened his mouth, and I thought I was actually going to get some 
cooperation. And then the words came out: 'F**k you.' After that, he 
started gurgling and slipping out of consciousness."
So why is Carroll coming
 forward with with information in 2014? Two reasons: Retiring from the 
Metro has allowed him the freedom to speak about the homicide case 
without being reprimanded ("It's been almost 18 years," he says. There's
 clearly never going to be a court case on this."), and he also didn't 
want "Tupac to be a martyr or a hero because he told the cops 'F**k 
you.'"
Carroll says Shakur 
never spoke another word -- remaining silent even when another officer 
tried to draw out a declaration in the ambulance.
"As soon as he got to 
the hospital, he went into surgery and was heavily sedated, and I guess 
he went into a coma and really never came out of that, until they took 
him off of life support," he continues. "So that moment I talked to him 
was his last real living moment where he was speaking. I talked to the 
cop who rode in the ambulance with him. He said Tupac never came out of 
it, and he never said anything at the hospital. There was nothing else."

 
 
No comments:
Post a Comment