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Memorial
On March 9,1997: Christopher Wallace dies at the age of 24
Rapper Notorious B.I.G.--born Christopher Wallace--was killed in a drive-by shooting in Los Angeles at about 12:40 Sunday morning March 9, 1997. Little Ceaz and Wallace, 24, was leaving a party at the Petersen Automotive Museum celebrating the Friday night's Soul Train Music Awards when a car pulled alongside his Chevrolet Suburban and multiple shots were fired, police said. He was driven in his vehicle to a nearby hospital but died there about a half hour later The death of Wallace, who also performed as Biggie Smalls, recalled the still-unresolved murder of Tupac Shakur in Las Vegas last September. While there was no immediate evidence to connect the killings, Wallace and Shakur were enemies, the epitome of the East Coast-West Coast tension in the rap world. Shakur accused Wallace of involvement in a robbery outside a recording studio in New York in 1994 in which Shakur was shot. The Notorious B.I.G, was honored as rap artist of the year at the Billboard Music Awards in 1995; his single "One More Chance/ Stay With Me" was named best rap single that year. NOTORIOUS B.I.G , has grabbed the No 1 spot on the United States music charts with his new album (Life After Death). The double album sold almost 690,000. copies in previous week when some retailers violated its debut date, a common occurrence in rapmusic. The album's official first week tally is the the highest since the Beatles' double album (Anthology 1) debuted at the top of the charts with sales of 855,500 in November 1995.
The case was closed after federal prosecutors reviewed the evidence and concluded there was no basis for prosecution, Louis J. Caprino Jr., acting head of the criminal division of the FBI’s Los Angeles office, said in Friday’s editions of the Los Angeles Times. Notorious B.I.G., whose real name was Christopher Wallace, was shot to death in March 1997 in front of hundreds of witnesses as he left a music industry party in Los Angeles. Investigators have pursued various theories, including one that the killing, and that of rap star Tupac Shakur in Las Vegas the year before, was the result of a feud between hip hop figures from the East and West coasts. Shakur was the biggest West Coast hip hop star of his time, and he regularly exchanged insults and threats with Notorious B.I.G., his East Coast counterpart. The FBI had also spent 18 months investigating the possibility that a rogue Los Angeles police officer working with rap mogul Marion “Suge” Knight had orchestrated Notorious B.I.G.’s killing. Knight, whose Death Row Records was Shakur’s label, has denied any involvement. Investigators had said the officer, David Mack, owned a car matching the description of one seen speeding from the murder scene. A witness had also placed him at the scene hours before the murder. However, other information gathered by investigators did not support the theory and detectives turned their attention elsewhere. Mack, who has since been imprisoned for robbing a bank, has denied any involvement in the killing. FBI officials abandoned the probe in January after learning the lead agent on the case had talked with lawyers for Notorious B.I.G.’s mother, who is suing the Los Angeles Police Department for allegedly covering up police involvement in her son’s slaying. Voletta Wallace’s suit, which seeks unspecified damages, is scheduled to go to trial April 12 in federal court in Los Angeles. FBI officials said the lawsuit had nothing to do with the decision to end the investigation. |
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