![the notorious big and tupac the notorious big and tupac](https://i.pinimg.com/736x/04/30/ab/0430abf3e20bed29d9b95cbf5ad7c7aa.jpg)
But it’s also evidence that there’s no value placed on their lives. Randall Sullivan: It’s the closest equivalent to JFK’s murder for people of a certain generation. Why do you think this ongoing mystery, and the inability to solve the murder of one of the most iconic rappers ever, continues to be so alluring in pop culture lore? They didn’t give a damn about justice, truth, or any of the things they’re supposed to be about. They didn’t want to be on the record about why they weren’t doing it.
![the notorious big and tupac the notorious big and tupac](https://atlantablackstar.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/01/Tupac-Shakur-The-Notorious-BIG-min.jpg)
It’s a standard protocol that if the US Attorney’s office turns down an FBI case, they have to write what’s called a ‘letter of declination’ saying why they won’t prosecute the case. The FBI actually made a case that supported Russell Poole’s theory and the US Attorney wouldn’t file it. I’m hoping that the combination of this book and the City of Lies movie, being released close together, will shine a bright enough light on the LAPD to compel them to explain some things. I don’t think they’ll be solved, unless the pressure mounts. Randall Sullivan: I don’t think there’s any incentive on the part of the police department in Los Angeles or Las Vegas to solve those crimes. It looked like the lies were going to win and the truth was going to get buried, and I just couldn’t stand that.ĭo you think Biggie’s or Tupac’s murders will ever be solved? The book is to some degree an honour to their memory, but it’s more than that. Also, I watched the two people that really tried to solve that crime, Russell Poole and Sergio Robleto, both die unexpectedly of heart attacks. The LAPD had no intention of solving the crime, and nobody was holding any of the powers that be in Los Angeles to account – and that includes the media. But it was also clear that Biggie’s murder was going to get buried. Considering what transparent lies they were, that really amazed me. Those lies have gained traction because nobody was really disputing them. It’s been 17 years, and a lot of lies have been piled on top of the truth. Randall Sullivan: LAbyrinth was really the story of everything that had happened up to 2002. Why did you feel the need to follow up LAbyrinth with Dead Wrong all these years later?
![the notorious big and tupac the notorious big and tupac](http://2.bp.blogspot.com/-j9dtSLzj-gU/TVllm1ksVnI/AAAAAAAAAA8/53h5NEmJ5RA/s1600/2pacbiggie_2pac_Vs_Biggie_-_The_Story_Of_2_Gs-front-large.jpg)
We talked to Sullivan about his new book, the deaths of Biggie and Tupac, and whether he thinks the mystery will ever be solved.
![the notorious big and tupac the notorious big and tupac](https://i.ytimg.com/vi/L1pg1KqspOA/maxresdefault.jpg)
Murder Investigation, released last month, is a follow-up to LAbyrinth, and picks up where the story left off. Sullivan’s new book, Dead Wrong: The Continuing Story of City of Lies, Corruption and Cover-Up in the Notorious B.I.G. 21 years later, though, and there have still been no convictions for the murders, despite all the high-profile attention that the case generates. It caused an uproar at the time, and was later adapted into the Johnny Depp-starring, as-yet-unreleased film City of Lies, in which Depp portrays the since-deceased Poole. The book’s primary source was LAPD detective Russell Poole, who claimed that the murders were tied to a crew of cops associated with Suge Knight and Death Row Records. In 2002, Randall Sullivan released LAbyrinth, a book that claimed that the Los Angeles Police Department were implicated in the deaths of rappers Notorious B.I.G.