Tupac Shakur warrant was for house of gang member who says he witnessed murder

Duane Keith Davis, 60, also known as “Keefy D” or “Keffe D,” was the target of the warrant out of Clark County

FILE – In this Aug. 15, 1996, file photo, rapper Tupac Shakur attends a voter registration event in South Central Los Angeles.
AP Photo/Frank Wiese, File

Nevada police executed a search warrant in the murder investigation of Tupac Shakur Monday looking for laptops and other electronic devices at the home of a gang member who said he was in the car when the superstar rapper was fatally shot in Las Vegas in 1996, according to the warrant exclusively obtained by NBC News on Thursday.

Duane Keith Davis, 60, also known as “Keefy D” or “Keffe D,” was the target of the warrant out of Clark County in which Las Vegas police also searched desktops and other electronic storage devices such as thumb drives, CDs, external hard drives and audio recordings, the warrant said.

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Davis, the warrant said, was affiliated with the South Side Compton Crips street gang, and he has been vocal about his involvement over the years.

Tupac Shakur’s five-part Hulu docuseries “Dear Mama” comes out on Friday, and it examines his relationship with his mother. Access Hollywood is looking back at a rare 1996 interview from the Access archives with the late rapper just weeks prior to his death that same year. “Dear Mama: The Saga of Afeni & Tupac Shakur” is out on Friday on FX and streaming on Hulu.

For more on this story, go to NBC News.

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