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For nearly three decades, the world has asked the same burning question: Who was really behind Tupac Shakur’s death?
Conspiracy theories, documentaries, endless debates — yet one voice remained painfully absent: Snoop Dogg.

Now, in a rare and emotional interview, the West Coast legend has finally laid it bare: the grief, the twisted lies, and the betrayal he believes “killed” the unbreakable brotherhood that defined an era of hip-hop.

Brotherhood in the Chaos

Snoop and Tupac weren’t just labelmates at Death Row Records, they were brothers in arms in the blood-soaked world of 90s rap. Away from the bling and bravado, Snoop remembers nights spent talking about survival, loyalty, and the dream of one day leaving the violence behind.

“Pac wasn’t just about ‘thug life,’” Snoop said. “He wanted peace. He wanted out. And that scared a lot of people.”

The Night Las Vegas Fell Silent

On September 7, 1996, Tupac was shot. Snoop still recalls the hospital, the machines, the helplessness, the moment he knew his brother was slipping away.

“It broke me in ways I never let the world see,” Snoop confessed.

But what haunted him even more? The story Suge Knight told afterward.

“There were words, actions, that didn’t line up. Suge always painted himself as the protector… but I saw the cracks.”

Betrayal from Within

For Snoop, the greatest tragedy wasn’t only Tupac’s death, it was the betrayal from within the so-called “family.”

“Tupac trusted the wrong people. He thought Death Row was home, but it was a cage. And when you try to break out of a cage, somebody will always make sure you don’t fly away.”

Why Speak Now?

“I’ve held it in for too long,” Snoop admitted. “Pac deserves honesty. The fans deserve honesty. And I need peace.”

His words have reignited one of hip-hop’s most heated debates: was Tupac betrayed by the very people closest to him?

A Legacy Written in Pain

Nearly 30 years later, the wounds remain open. For Snoop, speaking out isn’t reopening the past, it’s the only way to honor Tupac with truth.

“Pac was more than rap. He was a soldier, a voice, a brother. And he deserved better.”

✨ Tupac once rapped: “I ain’t mad at cha.” But Snoop admits: he still carries the weight of that night and the sting of betrayal every single day.