| March 21, 1997
Over 250 tips received aft
er TV show's segment on Shakur
By Cathy Scott
LAS VEGAS SUN
The television show "Unsolved Mysteries" received more than 250 calls
after airing a segment about the Las Vegas murder of rap and film star
Tupac Shakur.
"That's a good number for us," said Judy Storch, a producer with the
NBC program. "We aired a 'lost love' case that was fairly solvable, but
we got more calls on Tupac."
FBI agents standing by interviewed some of the callers after the
March 14 broadcast, she said.
The show has been forwarding tip sheets to Metro Police's homicide
unit since Monday, Storch said.
"We are reading every one of them," said homicide Sgt. Kevin Manning.
Calls were still coming in Wednesday, Storch said. The show's solve
rate is 28 percent, according to program statistics.
One tip appeared to be a hot one, but the person did not leave a
telephone number out of fear of retaliation, so police can't follow it
up, Manning said.
Workers in a phone center take all the calls during and after each
show, Storch said.
"If there's a really good tip, a hot tip, the phone agent holds up a
red card and the FBI agents and local law enforcement officers will
listen in on the call to see if it's a good case," she said.
The center received what they and FBI agents considered to be a few
"valid callers" after the Shakur story ran, Storch said.
Homicide Lt. Wayne Petersen, who is overseeing the investigation,
said, "If we get one call out of a thousand, it's worth it."
Metro was invited to go to the phone center when the program aired,
but didn't send anyone. Local law enforcement officers often stand by in
the phone center when their cases are aired in case a good tip comes in,
Storch said.
Shakur, 25, was shot Sept. 7 on Flamingo Road at Koval Lane when a
Cadillac drove up next to a BMW in which Shakur was riding and opened
fire. Shakur, who was shot three times, died six days later at
University Medical Center. The BMW driver, Marion "Suge" Knight, 31, was
grazed. The two had attended the Mike Tyson-Bruce Seldon heavyweight
boxing match at the MGM Grand about three hours earlier.
Killed in a similar shooting on March 10 was rapper The Notorious
B.I.G., also known as Biggie Smalls, outside a Los Angeles party. Like
Shakur, the 24-year-old Notorious B.I.G. was sitting in the passenger
seat of a car after a well-attended event when a gunman in another car
opened fire.
Shakur and Notorious B.I.G. were two top names in hip-hop rap, and
both were shot to death in what some have called gang-style hits,
possibly over an East Coast-West Coast rap rival or a Los Angeles-based
gang dispute.
Both performed for record labels that were targets of federal
investigations. The night they were killed, both were with their record
label producers -- Shakur was with Knight, owner of Death Row Records on
the West Coast, and Biggie was with Puffy Combs, owner of Bad Boy
Entertainment on the East Coast.
Las Vegas police have not officially identified a gunman in the
Shakur case. Los Angeles police are reportedly looking into gang ties in
Notorious B.I.G.'s death, while also looking for possible connections to
the Shakur case.
Metro detectives, however, have said the cases don't appear to be
related.
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