😱 One Week Before He Was Killed, Stretch Revealed the Chilling Truth About Tupac 🔥🎤
Randy Walker—better known in the hip-hop world as Stretch—wasn’t just Tupac’s hype man or collaborator.
He was family.
From their first meeting in 1991, a young, passionate Tupac and the towering, streetwise Stretch became inseparable.
They were brothers in grind and survival, bouncing between the Bronx and Queens, building tracks in basements, appearing together in the cult classic Juice, and creating a movement.
Tupac called him his “guardian angel with a drum machine.
” But when fame and danger collided, everything changed.
In 1994, Tupac was shot five times in the lobby of Quad Studios in Manhattan.
Stretch was there.
He pulled Tupac into the elevator.
He swore he tried to help.
But something about that night—about Stretch’s behavior, about the silence that followed—left a trail of suspicion that Tupac couldn’t ignore.
And when Pac was jailed months later, he turned on Stretch.
In a now-infamous Vibe interview, Tupac accused Stretch of knowing more than he claimed.
“He looked surprised, but not scared,” Pac said.
That one line turned the tide.
For the next year, Stretch was a man under siege.
His name was erased from credits.
His production offers dried up.
Friends disappeared.
Radio DJs called him out.
Rumors spread like wildfire in the barbershops of Queens and the studios of LA.
That he set Tupac up.
That he stood aside.
That he switched sides.
The man who once shared late-night dinners and mixtape dreams with Tupac had now become the alleged traitor.
Still, Stretch stayed mostly silent—until November 23, 1995.
One week before his death.
That night, in a modest studio in Hollis, Queens, Stretch finally agreed to sit down with Mike Tyson—not the boxer, but a videographer for the underground magazine Street Heat.
What followed was a raw, unfiltered 40-minute confession.
Stretch, seated against a cold brick wall, dropped bomb after bomb.
“I never set my brother up,” he said, his voice heavy.
“I dragged him into that elevator.
I prayed the whole way.
But he didn’t trust me… and that broke me.”
He explained how he tried calling Tupac in prison.
How he’d kept silent, hoping things would cool.
They never did.
He looked into the camera and said the words that would later echo on mixtapes and bootleg VHS tapes across New York: “I was waiting for the truth to matter.
Didn’t happen.”
For a moment, the hip-hop world started to listen.
That grainy footage, shared in barbershops and dubbed endlessly, became the only real defense Stretch ever gave.
DJs played clips.
Hot 97 lit up with callers.
Some defended him.
Others still doubted.
But for one week, Randy Walker’s voice was finally heard.
Then, on November 30, 1995, tragedy struck.
Just one year to the day after Tupac’s Quad Studios shooting, Stretch was gunned down in his own neighborhood.
He left a late-night studio session, climbed into his Plymouth Voyager, and was tailed by a dark Buick.
Within 90 seconds, four .
45-caliber rounds tore through the van.
Stretch died instantly, crashing into a cherry tree just blocks from his mother’s house.
No money was taken.
No jewelry.
No tapes.
Nothing.
This wasn’t a robbery.
It was an execution.
The timing was too precise to be ignored.
The same night.
The same anniversary.
The same echo of gunfire that had haunted Tupac one year prior.
The conspiracy machine ignited.
Some blamed Jimmy Henchman, the shadowy figure linked to Tupac’s attack and later convicted in unrelated murders.
Others pointed at local Southside Crips.
Some even suggested Suge Knight orchestrated it.
But the most chilling theory? That Stretch’s final interview sealed his fate.
Inside the Street Heat tape, Stretch not only denied setting Tupac up, he also called out the rap industry’s cowardice.
“Truth don’t trend,” he said, a line that hit especially hard when the footage started circulating just days before his death.
Some claimed the wrong people heard it.
Others said it was already too late.
Either way, Stretch was silenced just as his truth began to surface.
The streets mourned.
The Queens community packed into the Greater Allen Cathedral.
Nas, Busta Rhymes, Ed Lover—hip-hop royalty showed up.
But not Tupac.
He was in LA filming Gridlock’d, reportedly devastated.
Rumors swirled that he cried over the news.
Majesty, Stretch’s brother and Live Squad partner, told the crowd: “My brother died standing true.”
Police scrambled.
Suspects were named.
Ronald “Tinard” Washington, later tied to Jam Master Jay
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