THE FINAL BETRAYAL: Tupac’s Father Breaks Silence — Claims Ex-Death Row Security Chief SABOTAGED His Son’s Protection the Night He Was Killed

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In a revelation shaking hip-hop history to its core, Tupac Shakur’s father, William Garland, has publicly accused Reggie Wright Jr., the former Death Row Records security chief, of betraying and endangering Tupac on the night of his murder.
What was once written off as conspiracy is now resurfacing with shocking credibility — backed by insider testimony, new evidence, and a chilling pattern of deception that may finally expose what really happened in Las Vegas, 1996.

“Reggie Betrayed My Son.”

Garland’s words hit like thunder: “Reggie Wright betrayed my son.”

According to new accounts from Delray Richardson (Straight Game TV) and former Death Row bodyguard Michael Moore, Tupac’s top security detail was intentionally pulled just hours before the fatal shooting.
Moore revealed that Wright ordered him off Tupac’s protection team, reassigning him to Club 662 instead — a move Moore said “made no sense.”

When Moore questioned the order, Wright allegedly replied coldly: “Do what you’re told. Handle the club.”

That single decision left Tupac — the label’s most valuable and targeted artist — exposed and unprotected.


A Chilling Instruction: “No Guns Tonight.”

Even more disturbing, witnesses say Wright issued a strange directive before the Tyson fight:
“Don’t carry a gun anywhere.”

For Death Row’s notoriously volatile entourage, this was unheard of. In every prior Vegas trip, security was armed. That night, they were disarmed — by Reggie Wright himself.
Delray Richardson calls it “a setup in plain sight,” claiming Wright’s actions stripped away every safeguard Tupac had.

Blame, Lies, and Cover-Ups

After the shooting, Wright reportedly shifted blame to another guard, Frank Alexander, accusing him of negligence.
But according to Richardson, Wright had taken Frank’s radio and given it to someone else, cutting off his communication entirely. “That wasn’t a mistake,” Richardson insists. “That was control.”

At the time, Tupac was allegedly planning to leave Death Row — firing Wright’s company and preparing to audit the label’s finances.
Sources close to the rapper confirm he told Frank Alexander he would “leave with him when he left Death Row.”
Wright knew — and, Garland believes, retaliated.

The Cracks in Wright’s Story

Every detail Wright gave over the years is now collapsing. He denied Tupac planned to quit Death Row — disproven.
He denied removing security — contradicted.
He denied any wrongdoing — but witnesses say otherwise.

“He’s been lying all this time,” Richardson said. “He didn’t just fail — he deliberately failed.”

Even Suge Knight himself reportedly asked Wright to send “five more security guards” that night — and Wright refused.

A Father’s Final Verdict

After nearly three decades of silence, William Garland’s statement has reopened the case in the public eye.
The father of hip-hop’s most iconic martyr says the betrayal was personal — and deliberate.

“My son trusted people who were paid to protect him. They didn’t protect him. They made sure he couldn’t be protected.”

As old allies begin to talk and timelines collapse, what was once “unsolved” may soon be undeniable.
The world is finally hearing from the men who were there — and the truth, long buried under fame, fear, and money, is clawing its way to the surface.

The Legacy Lives On

Even in death, Tupac’s presence refuses to fade.
Nearly thirty years later, his voice, his words, and now his father’s truth are demanding justice.

And as one fan wrote online:

“You can kill a man, but not his message. They tried to silence Pac — now the silence is breaking.”