rap - Video - Gangsters Inc. - www.gangstersinc.org2024-03-28T16:17:11Zhttps://gangstersinc.org/video/feed/tag/rapShould rap lyrics be used as evidence in court?https://gangstersinc.org/video/should-rap-lyrics-be-used-as-evidence2023-02-04T09:09:19.000Z2023-02-04T09:09:19.000ZGangsters Inc.https://gangstersinc.org/members/GangstersInc<div><img src="https://storage.ning.com/topology/rest/1.0/file/get/10954099653?profile=RESIZE_400x&width=400"></div><div><p>Should rap lyrics be allowed to be used by prosecutors as evidence in court? D.L. Hughley breaks it down in a new Long Story Short.</p>
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</ul></div>Who killed Jam Master Jay? Latest on the murder investigationhttps://gangstersinc.org/video/who-killed-jam-master-jay-latest-on-the-murder-investigation2022-11-25T15:49:26.000Z2022-11-25T15:49:26.000ZGangsters Inc.https://gangstersinc.org/members/GangstersInc<div><img src="https://storage.ning.com/topology/rest/1.0/file/get/10891727055?profile=RESIZE_400x&width=400"></div><div><p>The Original Gangsters Podcast crew sat down <span class="style-scope yt-formatted-string">with investigative journalist Frank Owen about the 20th anniversary of Jam Master Jay's murder. Jay was a member of the legendary group RUN DMC. Frank reports the murder was indirectly connected to a drug deal gone bad involving BMF (Black Mafia Family). </span></p>
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</ul></div>One Night in Las Vegas: 25 years since the murder of Tupac Shakurhttps://gangstersinc.org/video/one-night-in-las-vegas-25-years-since-the-murder-of-tupac-shakur2021-11-24T10:39:23.000Z2021-11-24T10:39:23.000ZGangsters Inc.https://gangstersinc.org/members/GangstersInc<div><img src="https://storage.ning.com/topology/rest/1.0/file/get/9839619895?profile=RESIZE_400x&width=400"></div><div><p>On September 7, 1996, in Las Vegas, hip hop superstar Tupac Shakur was shot four times while sitting in the passenger seat of a car idling at a stoplight. Shakur died six days later at a local hospital. Shakur’s death was devastating to his family, friends and millions of fans. It also further inflamed tensions between rival record companies on the West and East coasts, as well as between the street gangs associated with them. In conjunction with the 25th anniversary of the tragedy, a panel discussion at The Mob Museum explored the events leading to Shakur’s death, the police investigations that followed, and Shakur’s cultural legacy. Panelists were rap music legend Chuck D, Tupac music collaborator E.D.I. Mean and retired Los Angeles homicide detective Frederick Reynolds. The discussion was moderated by journalist and film producer Stephanie Frederic.</p></div>