Keefe D has once again been refused bail in the ongoing 2Pac murder trial as the judge suspected a larger conspiracy behind the money to keep him out of jail.
Clark District Court Judge Carli Kierny made the decision on Tuesday (August 27), noting that she believed the source of funds provided by Wack 100 to underwrite Keefe’s $750,000 bail warranted investigation, KTNV reported.
“I have a feeling that things are being tried to be covered up,” she said.
She made the decision in part because she received two nearly identical letters from the entertainment company Wack said sent him money, one of which was signed by a signer who had zero ties to the company.
She previously refused bail for Keefe in June because she was unsure he and Wacker would not profit from selling the latter’s life story.
At the time, Wacker (real name Cash Jones) said he was giving 15 percent of his $750,000 bond as a “gift” to help the suspect. Despite his claims that the move was not premised on any business deal, prosecutors unearthed a VladTV interview from early June in which the record executive talked about exploiting Davis’ story.
“Only $75,000,” he says in the video. “I’ve been thinking about making an offer to him, which is that I would make the series based on it.”
Defending, the 44-year-old told Clark County Court: “That’s what I said to Flood, but Keefe D is already in a relationship with someone. I have no contract with him. Before you move on to Flood, you guys There’s a discussion about what to talk about and what needs to be said to formulate an opinion, there’s nothing in either Vlad or YouTube that says what we say about entertainment is true.
Prosecutors then further questioned that account, providing a recording of a phone call in which Wack can be heard telling Keefe: “You have to remember, this is something that could affect you for the rest of your life. I’m going to get you out, Then we sit down and talk about it all.
Earlier this year, the 61-year-old’s court-appointed attorney petitioned the court for leniency, claiming his client “posed no danger” due to his deteriorating health.
Keefe D, the only person charged with Parker’s murder in Las Vegas twenty-five years ago, was diagnosed with cancer. Although he has pleaded not guilty, he has claimed that he planned the shooting multiple times before, most notably in his 2019 book “The Legend of Compton Street.”