According to the Los Angeles Times, the FBI is
investigation a 6-year-old theory that former Los Angeles police officer David
A. Mack and Suge Knight orchestrated the 1997 murder of Christopher "Notorious
B.I.G." Wallace.
The FBI is following leads to determine if Mack,
acting on orders from Knight, arranged for a man named Amir Muhammad to ambush
the Brooklyn bred rapper in front of the Petersen Automotive Museum on Wilshire
Boulevard, after the Soul Train Awards.
"I have stated from the outset that I have
nothing whatsoever to do with any of this," Muhammad said in a telephone
interview Thursday from his attorney’s office. "I’ve done nothing wrong.
I don’t have anything to hide."
Knight also denied the allegations, claiming
he had never met David Mack or Amir Muhammad.
Investigators are seeking to determine if Knight
had both Wallace and Tupac Shakur gunned down. Theories abound, but the most
widely circulated is that Knight had Shakur murdered because he was attempting
to leave Death Row Records, the label Knight heads up.
He then had Wallace murdered to make it appear
both were victims of a "East Coast/West Coast" feud.
Mack was arrested and convicted in December of
1997 of robbing a bank and was sentenced to 14-years in prison. Mack owned a
black impala, similar to the one reported at the scene and a witness reported
seeing him when Wallace was murdered.
A driver’s license photo of Muhammad resembles
the police sketch of Wallace’s killer, based on witness descriptions. One witness
even claims to have seen Muhammad himself outside of the Peterson museum the
night of the shooting.
Former LAPD Detective Russell Poole, who advanced
the theory, will testify as an expert witness in July during Volletta Wallace’s
wrongful death lawsuit against the LAPD.
Wallace, the mother of B.I.G., claims that the
LAPD covered up the police’s involvement in her son’s murder.
Court documents show that LAPD
detectives are focusing on another theory that involves an unnamed Houston rap
entrepreneur.
Police interviewed the unnamed owner of a blue
1996 Bentley that they believe played a role in the shooting. Police traveled
to Houston several times since September, interviewing witnesses about potential
new suspects.
Police are looking into the unnamed Houston entrepreneur
and a friend, who were allegedly near the crime scene on the night of the shooting.
No evidence has been produced linking the man
or the Bentley to the shooting.