![]() ![]() "I felt angry at the way Russell Poole was treated and angry that people believed the Kading theory. The Poochie theory was based "on the flimsiest of evidence, and it was obviously to dispel the Biggie Smalls lawsuit", Broomfield alleges. By this point, Kading's suspect could not be charged Poochie was dead, gunned down while riding a motorbike in 2003. In 2006, amid a wrongful death lawsuit filed by Wallace's family, which was eventually dismissed, the LAPD reopened the Biggie case, with retired detective Greg Kading concluding that Knight had commissioned a gang member called Wardell "Poochie" Fouse to carry out the shooting. Suge Knight went to prison and a lot of people were prepared to come forward and say things that they were never going to say before." ![]() "Over the 20 years, there were certain developments. "I kept in touch with Russell Poole a bit," he tells Sky News. Pic: Dogwoofīroomfield says he wanted to return to the story because he always believed Poole was right - and with Knight in prison, he felt more confident of finding evidence to try to prove it. Image: Russell Poole was an LAPD detective who believed fellow officers were involved in Wallace's murder. ![]() A legal representative for Knight did not respond to Sky News' request for comment. The LAPD told Sky News it did not want to comment on the claims and the documentary, but has previously denied the allegations. Poole, who featured in the first documentary, retired early and went on to continue his investigations privately, the case consuming his life he died after suffering an aneurysm in 2015, while discussing the Tupac and Biggie murders at the Los Angeles County Sheriff's Department. These are not new accusations claims about Knight and the alleged involvement of corrupt police were made years ago by LAPD officer Russell Poole, a leading investigator in the Biggie case who was "vilified" by the force, says Broomfield. The documentary paints a picture of Death Row as a workplace entrenched in violence and misogyny, and features new testimonies supporting the theory that Knight commissioned the hit on Biggie - with "dirty cops" from the Los Angeles Police Department (LAPD) allegedly involved. And creating his sound, that's what the whole album title was.Steinberg is one of several people featured in Broomfield's follow-up, Last Man Standing, which sees the director revisiting the story almost 20 years later. That's why the album was called My Way, because we were trying to make a point about getting it done his way. I didn't really know, I mean it's hard to know.He didn't have a sound at that point and time. "I was just trying to make sure the music sounded like it was fitting the time that it came out," he told Complex. But his remix of "Think of You" made him feel like they could work well together, and the result was what Dupri called " the beginning of who you know Usher to be now." 4.Ĭo-producer Jermaine Dupri had originally been hesitant to work with him because Dupri felt he had already worked with too many young artists. 1 on the Hot 100, and the title track hit No. Its first two singles, "You Make Me Wanna." and "Nice & Slow," topped the R&B/Hip-Hop chart, with the latter reaching No. ![]() Commercially, it was a massive leap from his 1994 debut, selling 6 million copies and peaking at No. A month shy of his 19th birthday, Usher gave us his second album, My Way. ![]()
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