
“Blame is easy. Justice is hard. If Keffe D is guilty, prove it. If he isn’t, don’t convict him just because people want closure.” – RJ Bond
This Part One conversation between RJ Bond and Chuck “Jigsaw” Creekmur explores whether the prosecution has enough evidence to convict Keffe D.
Keefe D’s day is coming.
Nearly 30 years after Tupac Shakur was gunned down on the Las Vegas Strip, the case remains one of Hip-Hop’s greatest mysteries. For years, public opinion settled around one prevailing narrative: South Side Compton Crips member Duane Keith Davis finally admitted his role in the killing through interviews, a memoir and countless media appearances. His 2023 arrest seemed to validate what many believed all along.
But filmmaker RJ Bond says the public may be mistaking stories for evidence.
Bond has spent nearly two decades digging through police files, interviewing key witnesses and producing multiple documentaries on the murders of Tupac and The Notorious B.I.G.. Today, he serves as an unpaid consultant to Keffe D’s defense team, helping organize decades of investigative material while maintaining that his goal is not to prove Keffe D’s innocence, but to ensure the right person is held accountable.
In an exclusive interview with AllHipHop, Bond questions whether prosecutors have enough evidence to convict, argues that investigators relied too heavily on one narrative and explains why justice and blame are not the same thing.
AllHipHop: You’ve been researching Tupac’s murder for almost 20 years. Why haven’t you walked away?
RJ Bond: I thought I had.
Back in 2009, after Tupac Assassination: Conspiracy or Revenge and Reckoning, I said I was done. There wasn’t any more ground to cover.
Then something always happens.
Somebody dies. Somebody talks. Somebody remembers something they were afraid to say before.
Russ Poole always told me the best information comes after people start passing away because witnesses aren’t as scared anymore.
Every time I think I’m finished, something pulls me back in.
AllHipHop: Was Keffe D’s arrest the thing that pulled you back?
RJ Bond: Absolutely. When the indictment came down, I wasn’t thinking about guilt or innocence. I was thinking about evidence. Here’s a man who’s charged with one of the biggest murders in American history.
Where’s the gun?
Where’s the car?
Where are the eyewitnesses?
If you strip away everything else, what are you left with?
A man who said some things. That’s what bothered me.
AllHipHop: A lot of people would say those weren’t just “some things.” They’d call them confessions.
RJ Bond: I wouldn’t. I think they’re stories. Maybe true. Maybe partly true. Maybe not true at all. That’s very different from evidence. People have claimed responsibility for crimes they never committed throughout history.
People exaggerate.
People seek attention.
People make money.
People protect other people.
The question isn’t whether Keffe D talked. The question is whether what he said can actually be proven.
AllHipHop: You were especially troubled by prosecutors relying on his book.
RJ Bond: Very much so. They literally stood before a grand jury and read passages from Compton Street Legend. That should concern everybody. Books aren’t sworn testimony. Autobiographies are filled with embellishment. There’s even a literary term for it now: autofiction. An autobiography mixed with fiction. How do you separate what Keffe D actually believed from what his co-author added or dramatized?
That’s a real question.
AllHipHop: You also question why law enforcement made him an informant instead of simply prosecuting him.
RJ Bond: Exactly. According to public records, he was facing a huge federal drug case. If prosecutors already had enough to put him away for life, why trade that leverage for information in a murder investigation outside your jurisdiction? That’s never made sense to me. If your goal is to get dangerous people off the street, you already had your case. Instead, they allegedly made a deal hoping he’d tell them what they wanted to hear.
AllHipHop: So you believe there were incentives for Keffe D to tell stories?
RJ Bond: Absolutely. Money is one incentive. Avoiding prison is another. If police officers and attorneys are telling you there’s no downside to talking, that you’re protected, that you won’t be prosecuted…
Why wouldn’t you talk? That doesn’t automatically make everything you say true.
AllHipHop: You’re now assisting Keffe D’s defense. Some people will say you’ve chosen a side.
RJ Bond: No. I’m not being paid. I’m not shaping the defense strategy. I’m helping organize thirty years of information. Every time a new attorney comes onto the case, they’re handed decades of documents, interviews and theories. That’s overwhelming. My job is simply helping them understand what’s already there. Justice depends on everyone understanding the facts.
AllHipHop: At the end of the day, do you believe Keffe D is innocent?
RJ Bond: I think people misunderstand the question. Justice isn’t the same thing as blame. Blame is easy. Justice is hard. If Keffe D is guilty, prove it. If he isn’t, don’t convict him just because the public wants closure. This case deserves certainty. Not convenience.
AllHipHop: If the prosecution loses this case, what happens next?
RJ Bond: That’s what makes this so important. I think this is probably it. If Keffe D is acquitted, I don’t believe prosecutors are coming back with another suspect. This will likely be the final courtroom chapter of Tupac’s murder. That’s why it’s so important we get it right. Because history is going to remember whatever happens in that courtroom.

