The courtroom was tense, the air thick with anticipation.

 

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Day after day of disturbing testimony had left jurors visibly shaken.

But nothing, nothing could have prepared them for what happened when Kanye West walked in.

Dressed in black, sunglasses on, hands trembling slightly but voice steady, Kanye took the stand.

He began not with music, but with murder.

“I’m not here to talk about music,” he said.

“I’m here to talk about murder.”

Gasps echoed through the room.

The judge ordered silence, but the tension refused to die down.

Kanye calmly explained he was there to speak not just about Diddy’s behavior, but about his alleged role in the systemic takedown of Michael Jackson.

This wasn’t tabloid gossip or backstage rumors.

Kanye alleged that the same forces that tried to institutionalize him were connected to those who surrounded Michael in his final days.

Pointing directly to Fahim Muhammad, Diddy’s longtime head of security, Kanye revealed that Fahim was also hired as Michael Jackson’s personal bodyguard months before the singer’s death in 2009.

According to Kanye, Fahim wasn’t just there for protection — he was there to make sure Michael didn’t talk.

 

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“The same people who warned me to fall in line or disappear had once told Michael the exact same thing,” Kanye testified.

“If you go against us, you won’t make it to the stage.”

Michael didn’t listen, and neither did Kanye.

Then came the bombshell.

Kanye claimed he had heard Michael’s final voicemail, played to him in confidence by the Jackson family.

In it, Michael sounded terrified, breathing heavily and whispering as if someone might be listening.

The last chilling line reportedly said, “Tell them it’s Puffy. He knows he’s here.”

The courtroom froze.

Jurors looked horrified.

Diddy gripped the edge of the table, his lawyers whispering urgently in his ear.

Kanye simply repeated, “Michael knew.”

Kanye then focused heavily on Fahim Muhammad, a name rarely mentioned in mainstream media.

He questioned why the most famous man on earth would entrust his life to a 20-year-old with no high-level security experience.

Fahim had just graduated from Sacramento State when he was placed in charge of security for Michael Jackson.

 

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Even stranger, Fahim wasn’t chosen by Michael himself.

Testimony from the 2011 Conrad Murray trial revealed Fahim was introduced through industry connections that traced back to Shaun “Diddy” Combs.

Kanye claimed Fahim had long worked for Diddy, sometimes unofficially, and his role in Michael’s security was more about control than protection.

He had access to Michael’s schedule, prescriptions, staff, and most dangerously, his fears.

Kanye revealed Fahim had been a guest speaker at the prestigious Wharton School, a red flag in Kanye’s eyes.

He insisted institutions like Wharton have longstanding relationships with military intelligence.

“What kind of bodyguard speaks at Wharton?” Kanye asked the jury.

“Not one who carries a gun, but one who carries a mission.”

Kanye recounted rumors that Fahim helped clear hard drives and erase security footage from Michael’s mansion after his death.

“This same man helps Diddy run his empire,” Kanye said.

 

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He described the Lil Rod lawsuit, which named Fahim Muhammad as the enforcer behind a criminal operation involving parties, sex trafficking, drugs, and bribery.

“The same lawsuit alleges Fahim could make people and problems disappear.”

Kanye asked the jury, “First Michael Jackson, then me, who’s next?”

He shifted focus to handlers — shadowy figures placed in celebrities’ lives to control, manipulate, and silence them.

Kanye pointed to his former trainer, Harley Pastnac, as his own handler, who once threatened to institutionalize him if he didn’t comply.

“That man threatened to lock me up in a psych ward for not behaving,” Kanye said.

“What do you think happens to people who don’t play along?”

He drew a direct connection between Harley and Fahim — two handlers, two artists, one goal: control.

 

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According to Kanye, Michael had his own version of a handler, one who didn’t just threaten but held keys to his house, medicine cabinet, and fate.

Kanye described a pattern: Michael gains power by owning half of Sony’s catalog, challenges executives, protests publicly, then suddenly falls sick, is sedated, and dies with Fahim in charge of his security.

Similarly, Kanye rose to fame, challenged Adidas, the Grammys, Balenciaga, and Jay-Z, refused to conform, and was forced into hospitals, losing deals — becoming a modern-day Michael.

But Kanye wasn’t done.

He revealed other artists who stood too tall and proud — Prince, DMX, Whitney Houston — had expressed fear before their deaths.

“You don’t have to believe me,” Kanye said, “just look at the pattern.

They silence us and smile doing it.”

The courtroom sat in stunned silence.

One juror reportedly teared up.

Diddy stared blankly ahead, face unreadable but body tense.

The judge called a brief recess, but the impact had landed.

Kanye’s testimony took a darker turn as he narrated a final phone call made by Michael Jackson days before his death — a voicemail never publicly released but saved by a family insider.

In it, Michael said, “I don’t feel safe.

He’s here.

I know he is.

They’re trying to take everything.”

Kanye quoted the voicemail’s last chilling words: “Tell them it’s Puffy.

 

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He knows he’s here.

Please protect the kids.”

Gasps filled the courtroom again.

Kanye said Michael became increasingly isolated before his death, barred from his own team and surrounded by industry plants with security badges.

He asked why Fahim, a young man barely out of college, was assigned to the most famous man on earth.

He questioned why Michael’s longtime security staff disappeared and why Fahim was suddenly in charge.

Kanye pointed out that Michael’s security camera system malfunctioned on the night of his death.

The same house that should have been locked down with surveillance failed.

Footage was wiped, cameras down — just like the mysterious missing Diddy tunnel footage.

 

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Then Kanye dropped a theory that rocked the room:

What if Michael wasn’t supposed to die from Propofol?

What if he was being prepped for something else, and someone panicked and pulled the plug too soon?

He described the financial stakes: Michael was worth billions in publishing rights, and his comeback tour was expected to break records.

“That catalog is worth killing for,” Kanye said.

He closed with a chilling line:

“Michael’s death was the cleanest business move Sony ever made.”

Kanye’s words exploded across media outlets worldwide.

CNN, TMZ, Rolling Stone — all ran headlines about Kanye accusing Diddy of orchestrating Michael Jackson’s death.

The Jackson family responded emotionally, with Germaine Jackson calling Kanye’s testimony what they couldn’t say for 15 years: “My brother was murdered.”

Latoya Jackson echoed, “Michael didn’t die from an overdose.

 

 

He died because someone wanted him silenced.”

Kanye West’s courtroom revelations have changed everything.

This trial is no longer just about Diddy.

It’s a reckoning for the entire music industry.