By Neil Strauss
LOS ANGELES - A man who at one time was listed as a suspect in
the killing of rap star Tupac Shakur has changed significant
elements of his story in a six-hour deposition, his most extensive
interview since the slaying in Las Vegas 18 months ago.
The man, Orlando Anderson of Los Angeles, changed several
details concerning his trip to Las Vegas, where the slaying
occurred, and admitted lying previously under oath. He was deposed
as part of a civil wrongful-death suit filed against him by
Shakur's estate.
Anderson, had been named as a suspect in Shakur's killing
shortly after he was fatally wounded in the drive-by shooting. But
Las Vegas police now say they have no suspects, and there is no
indication that arrests are imminent in the death of the man who
remains one of the country's biggest-selling rappers.
Shakur's mother, Afeni, has named Anderson as her son's slayer,
however. Her suit claims that he stepped out of a white Cadillac at
a red light and fired a round of bullets into Shakur's car.
The incident occurred just hours after Anderson was beaten in a
Las Vegas hotel by a number of people associated with Death Row
Records. Shakur was seen administering blows on a videotape of the
incident, and Death Row's chief executive, Suge Knight, was
returned to prison on a parole violation as a result of his
participation.
At Knight's parole hearing, however, Anderson testified that
Knight did not harm him and was trying to stop the fight. But in
his recent deposition, Anderson admitted to having lied in his
previous testimony. He said that he was punched and kicked by
Knight.
"One thing that's been accomplished is that we've shown that
Anderson has lied under oath," said Donald David, the lawyer for
the Shakur estate who took the deposition. "That's a critical
accomplishment. And we now have Anderson's side of the story for
the first time. And once you have that, you can start verifying or
disputing it."
Lawyers for Anderson minimized the contradictions. They said
that he previously lied because he had been threatened by Knight's
associates and that the wrongful death lawsuit was simply
retaliation against a personal-injury suit Anderson filed as a
result of the hotel beating.
The lawyers point to other contradictions: In previous sworn
statements, Anderson pleaded his Fifth Amendment right against
self-incrimination when asked whether he and members of his family
were members of the Crips, the notorious Los Angeles street gang
involved in a violent longstanding rivalry with the Bloods, the
gang Knight has been associated with. This time, Anderson answered
both of these questions negatively.
And while Anderson previously said that the Excalibur Hotel in
Las Vegas had given him a free room because he was a big gambler,
in the new deposition, he said that he has had no income for the
past five years, had not filed any tax returns in that period,
spent less than $100 gambling and paid for his room in cash.
The testimony provided the most significant shift in an
unproductive investigation of Shakur's death. If they can establish
Anderson's gang connections, the Shakur Estate lawyers said, they
would be able to produce a motive (fighting between Crips and
Bloods has been the source of much of the rap-related violence in
Los Angeles) as well as provide another instance of Anderson lying
under oath.
A second defendant in the wrongful-death suit, Jerry Bonds, the
driver of the white Cadillac, is also said to be a Crip and has
been missing since the filing of the suit, the Shakur estate
lawyers said. Anderson denied knowing Bonds.
Typically, a wrongful-death suit would follow a completed police
investigation, but Richard S. Fischbein, a lawyer for the Shakur
estate, said he was forced to step in when Las Vegas police dragged
their heels.
"We would end the civil trial in a second if they would take a
very serious look at this issue," he said. "But I've called and
pushed and prodded them, and these guys aren't doing anything. So
that leaves us with the mother forced into a position of having to
deal with this situation on her own, and that's an outrage."
"I have my own theory," he continued. "And that is that
they're trying to create the Disneyland of the Far West in Las
Vegas and the last thing in the world that they want is a story
about black-gang drive-by shootings taking place in their town. So
this is not something they're going to bring to a big trial that
will be covered by the national press."
In response, Las Vegas Police Sgt. Kevin Manning said: "I know
what they think, and they have that right to think what they want.
I don't think they'll ever prove there's anything to that
particular thought of theirs." He would not comment on the extent
of the investigation, but he said that the case was still open.
March 18, 1998
Change of Story in Shakur Case
NEW YORK TIMES