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LAbyrinth: A Detective Investigates the Murders of Tupac Shakur and Notorious B.I.G., the Implication of Death Row Records' Suge Knight, and the Origins of the Los Angeles Police Scandal

LAbyrinth: A Detective Investigates the Murders of Tupac Shakur and Notorious B.I.G., the Implication of Death Row Records' Suge Knight, and the Origins of the Los Angeles Police Scandal

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Author: Randall Sullivan
Publisher: Grove Press
Category: Book

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Rating: 4.0 out of 5 stars 17 reviews
Sales Rank: 242712

Media: Paperback
Number Of Items: 1
Pages: 336
Shipping Weight (lbs): 1
Dimensions (in): 9 x 6.1 x 0.9

ISBN: 080213971X
Dewey Decimal Number: 364.15230979494
EAN: 9780802139719
ASIN: 080213971X

Publication Date: January 3, 2003
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
Shipping: Expedited shipping available
Shipping: International shipping available
Condition: Publisher's Overstock, Excellent Condition, may have remainder mark

Customer Reviews:
Showing reviews 6-10 of 17
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4 out of 5 stars A reader from Houston   March 6, 2003
 2 out of 3 found this review helpful

Lately I have been reading allot of "true crime" and "current affairs" and this is my latest read. I have to say the book is intriguing. If you are looking for a detailed autobiography of Biggy and/or Tupac this is not the book but it does discuss the theories involving their respective murders along with all sorts of corruption in the LAPD and a connection between several officers in the LAPD and Deathrow records. It is a little disheartening that corruption on multiple levels such as what is documented in this book can occur in today's society (especially people paid from our tax dollars). The most aggravating part of the book for me was the fact that the LAPD (chief Parks who is black) did not want to pursue the investigations on multiple murders/issues when it possibly involved "not only LAPD cops but black cops mind you" The book brings up some interesting questions.


4 out of 5 stars Open a can of Worms...   February 15, 2003
 12 out of 13 found this review helpful

I was drawn to this book by a radio interview I heard a year ago or so, I believe with the author (I missed the beginning of the interview) in which he detailed some of the allegations of shoddy policework that attended the LAPD's investigation of the murder of Christopher Wallace, who went by the rap alias Notorious B.I.G. One eye-opener was an eyewitness to the shooting who was willing to cooperate but was never contacted by authorities, and was shot to death in a housing project back east two months later. So I bought the book, and basically more of my opinions on the LAPD scandals of the last several years were confirmed.

The book starts with Russell Poole, a decorated detective with basically impeccable credentials, investigating a shooting in the San Fernando Valley. The shooter and the victim both turned out to be police officers: the shooter, Frank Lyga, was a white undercover narcotics detective, the man killed, Kevin Gaines, a black patrolman. When the detectives went to the house the black policeman was living in, they were a bit taken aback to discover it was a mansion in Beverly Hills. The man's girlfriend was Suge Knight's estranged wife. Knight, the owner of Death Row Records, had an unsavory reputation for intimidation, extortion, drug dealing, and murder anyway, so the police were somewhat taken aback.

Soon, Poole agrees to become the lead detective in the investigation of the shooting of Wallace mentioned above, and discovers that there may be LAPD officers involved in the killing, or at least working for Suge Knight. Soon, that part of the investigation is derailed, and Poole is ordered by superiors to look in other directions that he's sure will be fruitless, and of course they turn out to be. Meanwhile connections to other incidents, including the killing of Tupac Shakur in Las Vegas, surface, but nothing's pursued.

The minutae of the story does at times bog it down. This does one bad thing in terms of the book: it serves to obscure the author's basic message, which is that the political leadership in Los Angeles and its minority-run suburbs (notably Compton) are unwilling to investigate people like Suge Knight too closely, and the Los Angeles media is willing to cover for them because to do otherwise would damage various minority (read black) politicians and city leaders. Prominent in this category is Bernard Parks, the controversial now ex-chief of police. Sullivan has him basically uninterested in corruption among black police officers when he was in charge of the Internal Affairs division, and later when he was chief. The mayor, and Maxine Waters, our most prominent local black politician (she's a congresswoman from Compton and South-Central LA) are also implicated, if not in corruption, then in condoning it.

The last part of the book, however, was a surprise for me. When Poole was investigating the connections between Death Row Records and various black police officers who were illegally working for the company providing security, one of the officers involved was a gang task force detective named Rafael Perez. For those not up to date on LA current affairs, Perez was caught with several kilos of cocaine, and turned state's evidence in return for a reduced sentence. The subsequent investigation led to what's been known as the Rampart police scandal, after the Rampart division where it occurred. His testimony got many (hundreds) of people released from prison, and has resulted in the city paying millions (some estimate it's going to run into the hundreds of millions or even more) in damages to the alleged victims. Perez himself is something of a chamelion (black to blacks, latino to latinos, colorless to whites) and apparently has been fabricating at least some of his allegations, but meanwhile he's worked himself a deal such that he's already negotiating a release from prison. Poole's investigation seemed to show that Perez's allegations should be carefully viewed, but the higher-ups in the LAPD wouldn't listen, and the whole thing has blown up in their faces. Even worse, they shut down the gang task force that Perez was part of, and predictably gang homicides increased almost immediately.

This is a tangled, convoluted, difficult book. People get killed left and right, and most of those killed aren't exactly angels themselves. Notorious B.I.G., for instance, was a drug dealer before he became a rapper, and Tupac shouldn't need any introduction. The implication that the police are or were running interference for the people who killed them, however, is pretty horrifying, and the author presents some evidence that one cop should be at least looked at in connection with Notorious B.I.G.'s murder itself, though an associate of his is the likely shooter. While this is troubling, it's the racial politics that's the most aggravating to me. One person is quoted as saying that the L.A. Times, for instance, wouldn't investigate the story further because they didn't want to be involved in bringing down an African-American police chief (Bernard Parks). This sort of thing has to stop. While Suge Knight is black, yes, so were most if not all of this victims. Failing to demand justice on that rationale is insane, and if the allegations in the book have merit, they should be investigated thoroughly.


1 out of 5 stars Using Tupac and Biggie's names to sell books!   October 14, 2002
 2 out of 8 found this review helpful

This was an interesting book about what was going on in the LAPD, but it does not discuss the topics that is titled to. The amount of information on Tupac is probably one page at most and Biggie maybe four or five. I felt that Det. Poole and R. Sullivan were more about getting back at the LAPD (not that his information is not valid) than discussing the details about Tupac and Biggie's murders. This books title should be LAbyrinth: A Detective Investigates the L.A.P.D. I don't recommend this book if you are looking for answers or information about Tupac, cause you won't find it. If you want to know more about the L.A.P.D., this is a great book.


5 out of 5 stars A shocking and horrific read   June 28, 2002
 5 out of 5 found this review helpful

The book is an excellent read, and for the reader from Trenton, NJ, if you already knew what was going on in regards to the whole Death Row/Tupac/Biggie murder, then why did you buy the book? And if the reader from Trenton did know so much about Suge Knight, then he would not have found it highly unlikely that these rougue cops who were associates of Suge Knight could instill the kind of fear into their co-workers as they did. The book exposes the dirty side of both politics and law enforcement and although it does happen in every city it doesn't mean it's right. And apparently the Chief of police was not doing his job since he was not re-elected. I admire this detectives time, dedication, and courage to expose Suge Knight. I also admire his dedication to trying to solve the horrific murders of these great entertainers and it is just unfortunate that politics is overriding these two unjust murders and who knows how many others. A must read!


4 out of 5 stars A good read... for the most part   May 28, 2002
 1 out of 3 found this review helpful

I enjoyed reading LAbyrinth, it was a quick and fascinating read. Although it did not tell me a lot of new information, it helped tie together things that I already knew about Suge Knight and interjected new details along the way.

There are times in the book that Sullivan gets bogged down in the minutiae and loses the reader. There are also moments where Sullivan is clearly sympathetic and biased towards the ex-cop (Russell Poole). This book is loaded with details but it is one man's view of the events.

The book also jumps around from different characters, events & dates. So there is not a natural flow from chapter to chapter.

All in all, I enjoyed reading LAbyrinth. I recommend the book to all. But please remember that this is one man's interpretation of the facts. There are always two sides to a story and this book only shows one.

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