>>20653211
>>20653212
6. MARRIED TO THE MOB?
An informant claimed that Notorious B.I.G. and many of his cohorts had connections to New York City's Genovese crime family. According to the released files,the FBI speculates that they could have evidence of Biggie's shooting, but do not have proof of their hypothesis.
6. LACKING PEACE WITH THE MIDDLE EAST
While LAPD Officer Mack was investigated as a possible suspect in the events surrounding Biggie's death, Biggie's actual shooter was described by one informant as "a contract killer" with a "middle east sounding name" who was an ex-member of the Southside Crips gang. The shooter was allegedly then a member of "Fruits of Islam"— awing of the Nation of Islam, whose members sport distinctive blue or white uniforms, caps, and bowties. The suspect was a black male with short, cropped black hair, 6'1"-6'2", 220-230 lbs., and 29-30 years old. He was described as wearing a bow tie with a gray suit. On March 10, 1997, a composite artist—assisted by several eyewitnesses—completed a drawing of the suspected shooter in the case. On January 21, 1998, the FBI received a DMV photo from a redacted source that reportedly closely resembled the composite, believed to be Amir Muhammad (a.k.a. Harry Billups), another suspect in the case. Muhammad has said repeatedly he had nothing to do with Biggie's death. According to the FBI's files, another witness claimed that the Muslim shooter was not a real Muslim because he didn't greet people face-to-face, but was probably an LAPD officer because, "he knows a cop when he sees one."
8. STILL NOT ENOUGH PROTECTION
At the time of Biggie's murder, he reportedly had the following items on his person: 0.91g of marijuana, a pen, an asthma inhaler (Primatene Mist), and 3 magnum condoms.
9. DID THE BULLETS HIT THE WRONG MAN?
A later informant in 2004 suggested that Biggie was, in fact, not the intended target. The rapper would often walk around Los Angeles—go to the mall, go out to eat, go to the movies—without security, so he/she questioned the timing of the murder, in front of hundreds of eyewitnesses, since the rapper could have been killed at any time. However, according to the FBI's files, the informant did believe that the LAPD was involved. The police allegedly approached said informant with a strange picture of him/her with Wallace, and when the informant asked where they got it, the LAPD snatched it away. Later, when he/she asked LAPD officers where they were the night of the shooting, he/she got no response. The informant's lack of trust in the LAPD was reportedly augmented by the informant's observation that no police were around when the shooting occurred, despite it being a major award show after party with many celebrities in attendance.
10. DEEP IN THE HEART OF TEXAS
Years after the murder, the FBI conducted 30-day mail and trash orders—going through a potential suspect's mail and trash for evidence—on a man in San Diego. The search yielded no evidence. Furthermore, the FBI reportedly investigated a blue 1996 Bentley registered to Houston, Texas, as possibly being in connection with the shooting, as well as a Houston rap entrepreneur, who was allegedly near the crime scene that fateful night. Police have not produced evidence associating the Bentley or the Houston entrepreneur with the crime.
Marlow Stern works for The Daily Beast and is a masters degree recipient from the Columbia University Graduate School of Journalism. He has served in the editorial dept. of Blender Magazine, as an editor at Amplifier Magazine, and, since 2007, editor of Manhattan Movie Magazine.
https://www.thedailybeast.com/10-revelations-from-notorious-bigs-fbi-files-on-murder