Cops JUST STORMED Tupac’s Private Jet And What They Found Inside Changes Everything! | HO!!

Vegas cop who held Tupac Shakur as rapper took his final breath is targeted  by angry fans who think his home was raided

For nearly three decades, it sat forgotten—its once-gleaming fuselage baked by the brutal California desert sun, its luxury interior slowly collapsing under the weight of dust, time, and an unsolved murder that changed music forever.

But in February 2024, everything changed.

Armed with a fresh federal warrant and a level of urgency that insiders described as “quiet but unmistakably intense,” investigators stormed an abandoned Learjet 35A once owned by Death Row Records boss Marion “Suge” Knight—the same jet that carried Tupac Shakur during the final 48 hours of his life.

What they found hidden beneath warped floor panels, deteriorating carpet, and sealed maintenance bays is now being described by law-enforcement sources as:

“The most significant development in the Tupac Shakur investigation in more than 20 years.”

From forgotten tapes to sealed compartments no one knew existed, to records contradicting long-accepted timelines—this aircraft may hold the final missing pieces of America’s most haunting celebrity homicide.

THE JET THAT TIME ERASED

The aircraft—bearing the tail number N51VG—wasn’t just a private jet.
In the mid-1990s, it was a flying throne room for the most feared label in hip-hop: Death Row Records.

Purchased in 1995 for $2.1 million, the aircraft was outfitted with:

Gold-plated fixtures

Custom leather seating embroidered with the Death Row electric-chair logo

A private bedroom

A full bar stocked with top-shelf liquor

Early-generation luxury entertainment systems

Reinforced, soundproof interior modifications

At its peak, the jet was insured for $13 million.

It flew Michael Jackson during his HIStory tour.
It carried Eazy-E in his final days.
It ferried Snoop Dogg, Dr. Dre, and the entire Outlawz crew.

But it was one particular passenger, boarding on September 6th, 1996, who cemented this jet’s place in history.

TUPAC’S FINAL FLIGHT

On that warm Friday afternoon, Tupac Shakur boarded the jet at Van Nuys Airport with Suge Knight and a dozen members of the Outlawz.

Flying them to Las Vegas for the Mike Tyson fight, pilot Chris Wallace later recalled the atmosphere:

“He was vibrant, energized, but tense. Like he was preparing for something big.”

What Wallace says next is now sending chills through the hip-hop world.

According to the pilot:

Tupac carried a .40-caliber Glock on his person

He blasted tracks from All Eyez On Me through the cabin speakers

He joked, rapped, and played cards

He called his fiancée, Kidada Jones, from the rear phone console

Then came the prophetic words Wallace says he will never forget:

“If I die tonight, make sure they know who did it.”

Less than 36 hours later, Tupac was lying on an operating table at University Medical Center in Las Vegas with four bullet wounds.
Six days after that, he was gone.

And this jet—the last aircraft he ever boarded—returned to Los Angeles with Suge Knight, a shattered entourage, and one permanently empty seat.

A FALL FROM POWER

After Suge Knight’s imprisonment in 1997, everything changed.

Flight activity dropped sharply

By 2002 the jet was permanently grounded at Chino Airport

Its engines were removed and sold

Rodents infested the interior

Gold trim corroded

Leather upholstery collapsed

Unpaid storage fees spiraled to $1.4 million

By 2024, the once-iconic aircraft was valued at just $285,000—less than the price of a mid-tier SUV.

THE RAID THAT SHOCKED INVESTIGATORS

On a gray morning in February 2024, officers executed a warrant to seize and catalog the aircraft.

No one—not airport workers, not former Death Row staff, not even aviation officials—expected what came next.

Investigators quickly discovered:

1. A sealed maintenance bay containing a box of unlabeled magnetic tapes

These tapes were wrapped in deteriorated plastic and stamped with dates from 1995–1996.

2. A false floor panel beneath the cabin bar

Behind it, authorities found a weatherproof metal case containing documents, receipts, and photos that had not been seen since the mid-90s.

3. An undocumented compartment beneath the private cabin

Inside: several personal objects believed to belong to Tupac himself.

The contents have not been publicly revealed, but one officer present during the search told reporters:

“This was not junk. This was deliberate storage. It changes the timeline.”

Law-enforcement officials are refusing to confirm or deny whether the items include recordings, correspondence, or unreleased footage.

But what surfaced next sent the internet spiraling.

Newly released bodycam footage shows raid of home searched in Tupac Shakur  murder case - ABC7 New York

THE FLIGHT SNOOP DOGG THOUGHT WOULD END IN MURDER

One of the rediscovered documents on the jet corroborates an incident long rumored but never proven:
the infamous “flight from hell” involving Snoop Dogg.

In late August or early September 1996—just days before Tupac was murdered—tensions between the two rappers were at an all-time high.

The spark?

Snoop publicly expressed willingness to work with East Coast artists, including Sean “Diddy” Combs and The Notorious B.I.G.

For Tupac—who believed he had been ambushed by East Coast rivals in 1994—this was unforgivable.

According to Snoop, what happened next was terrifying.

BOARDING THE ENEMY

When the Death Row entourage prepared to leave New York, Snoop says:

His bodyguards were barred from boarding

He was isolated at the back of the aircraft

No one—Tupac included—spoke a word to him

Realizing he was trapped, Snoop armed himself with:

A knife

A fork

A blanket covering his face

Sunglasses over his eyes

He described the mindset as:

“If I die, somebody’s dying with me.”

For five and a half hours, he sat silently at the rear of the jet, watching, waiting.

When they landed in Los Angeles, he walked up to Tupac and tried to reconcile:

“You good?”

Tupac’s response chilled him:

“I ain’t f*ing with you.”**

That was the last time Snoop Dogg spoke to Tupac Shakur while he was alive.

SUGE KNIGHT’S CONTRADICTION

Suge Knight, speaking from prison in 2025, claimed Snoop never boarded the jet at all, alleging:

Snoop took a luggage van

He avoided the confrontation entirely

He “ran from the situation”

But one of the documents retrieved during the 2024 search reportedly supports Snoop’s version, not Suge’s.

If verified, this would not only settle a decades-long dispute but also shed new light on Death Row’s internal fractures during Tupac’s final days.

THE SHOOTER’S CONFESSION THAT SHOOK THE CASE

To understand the jet’s importance, you must examine what happened after Tupac landed in Las Vegas.

Enter Duane “Keefe D” Davis, a high-ranking Southside Compton Crip and uncle of Orlando “Baby Lane” Anderson—the man long believed to have fired the fatal shots.

For years, Keefe D stayed quiet.

Then, in a shocking twist, he started talking.

Tupac Shakur's killing brought '10 days of hell' to Compton - Los Angeles  Times

THE DEAL THAT CHANGED EVERYTHING

To avoid decades in federal prison on drug trafficking charges, he accepted a secretive immunity deal.

In return, he revealed:

He was in the front passenger seat of the white Cadillac

The driver was Terrence “Bubble Up” Brown

Behind the driver was DeAndre “Dre” Smith

The right rear passenger: Orlando Anderson

Orlando received the murder weapon from a man named Zip

The group was actively hunting Tupac after the MGM Grand brawl

Keefe D claims:

“Orlando leaned across Dre and fired. The shots came from the backseat.”

Tupac was hit four times.
Suge Knight was grazed.
The Cadillac disappeared into the night.

Three of the four men in the car are now deceased.
Only Keefe D remains—and he is finally facing justice.

ARRESTED FOR HIS OWN CONFESSION

On September 29, 2023, Keefe D was arrested and charged with first-degree murder—a staggering twist 27 years after the killing.

Prosecutors argue:

He orchestrated the hit

He supplied the weapon

He is responsible regardless of who pulled the trigger

His trial is set for August 2026 after investigators turned over an astonishing 180,000 pages of evidence.

THE PRIVATE JET’S NEW ROLE IN THE CASE

Authorities are not commenting on exact details, but insiders close to the investigation say the jet’s seizure is directly connected to:

Keefe D’s prosecution

Conflicts inside Death Row

A new timeline

Records contradicting long-held assumptions

Potential audio evidence

One aviation official described the discovery as:

“The missing binder in a three-decade-old puzzle.”

THE MYSTERY TAPES

Perhaps the most explosive discovery was a sealed set of magnetic tapes dated 1995–1996.

These could contain:

Onboard conversations

Unreleased music

Video logs

Security recordings

Phone call data

Financial discussions

Death Row planning meetings

If any recording captures:

Arguments

Threats

Internal disputes

Evidence of surveillance

Statements contradicting sworn testimony

…the entire narrative of Tupac’s final 48 hours could shift.

An LAPD source told one reporter:

“We can’t comment on contents, but what was recovered explains the urgency.”

THE MOST EMOTIONAL DISCOVERY

The aircraft also contained several personal items believed to belong to Tupac—never catalogued, never seen by investigators, and never returned to his family.

Officials have not confirmed the nature of these items.

But one source said:

“Nothing on that jet was left there by accident.”