🎤 “He Died for the Truth—And They Made It Look Like Chaos” — Katt Williams Exposes the Dark Plot Behind Malcolm X’s Assassination ⚠️📜
The moment landed like a lightning bolt in the middle of a quiet Thursday.

Katt Williams was a surprise guest on the Black Mirror Society podcast—a fringe, long-form platform known for deep dives into government surveillance, Black liberation history, and hidden figures of resistance.
The audience tuned in expecting a few hot takes, maybe some jokes about Hollywood hypocrisy.
Instead, they got a revelation.
“I ain’t here to entertain y’all today,” Katt began, his voice low, his eyes unwavering.
“I’m here because the lie has lived longer than the truth.
And I ain’t letting it breathe no more.”

What followed was 90 minutes of unscripted, unfiltered history-torching.
“Malcolm didn’t die ‘cause of division.
He didn’t die ‘cause of no damn beef.
He died ‘cause he was winning,” Katt said.
“They had already decided before he left the Nation [of Islam]…before he ever touched Mecca…that he wasn’t coming back alive.”

Then came the line that exploded across TikTok, YouTube, and Instagram reels:
“It wasn’t a conspiracy theory.
It was a conspiracy with a budget.”
The room went dead silent.
The podcast host froze.
Comments poured in by the second.
But Katt wasn’t finished.
He detailed how in early 2025, while working on a private documentary project involving declassified COINTELPRO files, he was granted access to a set of never-before-seen memos from the FBI and NYPD Intelligence Division—documents that had been sealed for decades and quietly slipped into the public domain through a legal loophole.
Inside? Chilling evidence that not only had Malcolm X been monitored around the clock in the months leading up to his death—but that certain agents had pre-written contingency reports in the event of his assassination.
Let that sink in.
Not “if something happens.”
Not “should there be unrest.”
But a “preliminary narrative” prepared in advance, titled: “Breakdown of Potential Civil Response Following Termination of MX.
Termination.
“They didn’t say ‘death.
’ They said ‘termination.
’ Like he was a contract.
A threat assessment.
A damn algorithm,” Katt said, holding up one of the unredacted pages.
“And the worst part? They planned it to look messy.
So folks would argue forever over who pulled the trigger, instead of asking who wrote the script.
The page he held up is now circulating online, and while some skeptics are questioning its authenticity, digital forensics experts have verified the formatting matches official bureau correspondence from the 1960s.
Even more disturbing is the memo’s final paragraph, which outlines the need to “leverage internal fractures” within Black nationalist organizations to “avoid martyrdom optics.
Translation? Make it look like he was taken out by his own people.
Divide.
Discredit.
Distract.
And that’s exactly what happened.
On February 21, 1965, Malcolm X was assassinated in the Audubon Ballroom in New York City.
Three men were arrested.
All Black.
Two were Nation of Islam members.
For years, this intra-community conflict narrative dominated the public imagination: that Malcolm had simply been “too divisive,” too radical, too out-of-line even for his own.
But Katt Williams is challenging all of that.
“They knew if Malcolm died by white hands, he’d become a god overnight,” he said.
“But if he died in a mess of Black-on-Black betrayal? He’d just become another cautionary tale.
And that’s what they needed.
”
He’s not alone in that belief.
Since the 2021 exoneration of Muhammad Aziz and Khalil Islam—two of the three men convicted in the assassination—new scrutiny has been placed on the original investigation.
Independent researchers, including Malcolm’s own family, have long pointed to FBI infiltration and deliberate evidence suppression.
But Katt’s documents take that suspicion to a new, undeniable level.
And the timing? Crucial.
With renewed public interest in historical coverups, and increasing demands to unseal COINTELPRO records, Williams’ bombshell arrives like a spark to gasoline.
“I’m not tryna get paid for this,” Katt said during the podcast.
“I’m tryna get this man his dignity back.
He went on to describe how Malcolm’s evolution from separatist to global human rights advocate made him a unique threat to American power.
“When he went to Mecca, and he came back talking about unity instead of division, that’s when the alarms went off,” Katt explained.
“Because a militant is easy to villainize.
But a visionary? A man who can unify the oppressed worldwide? That’s when the State starts counting down your days.
One of the most chilling segments of the interview was when Katt revealed a handwritten note—allegedly penned by Malcolm X weeks before his death—where he wrote:
“If I am silenced, know that I was speaking too clearly.
That quote now appears in thousands of posts, stitched with video clips of Malcolm’s final speeches, especially his infamous “Ballot or the Bullet” address, which warned that American democracy was crumbling under the weight of racial injustice.
But why is Katt Williams the one breaking this?
That’s the other question igniting debate online.
Why not a historian? A journalist? A scholar?
Because, according to Katt, those people are still in the system.
“The truth don’t come from people with tenure.
It comes from people who already lost everything,” he said.
And perhaps that’s what makes his testimony so devastating.
He’s not reading a script.
He’s not preserving a brand.
He’s putting everything—career, safety, credibility—on the line.
As for the backlash?
It’s already begun.
Major networks are refusing to cover the podcast.
Fact-checkers are scrambling to discredit the documents.
But online? A storm is brewing.
Young audiences are reposting clips with hashtags like #MalcolmWasMurdered, #KattWasRight, and #TruthLeaks2025.
Meanwhile, Black activists and scholars are calling for a full congressional investigation into federal involvement in not just Malcolm’s assassination, but a long list of Black leaders who died under suspicious circumstances.
As one tweet put it:
“They killed him twice.
Once with bullets.
Once with the lie.
For Katt Williams, this wasn’t just a mic drop moment.
It was a declaration of war on historical amnesia.
“Y’all love quoting him.
Love posting his image in February,” he said at the close of the interview.
“But if you ain’t ready to fight for the truth of what they did to him, you don’t love Malcolm.
You just love the myth.
No applause.
No fade-out.
Just silence—and a reckoning long overdue.
Because if Katt’s right—and the paper trail says he is—then Malcolm didn’t die because he was radical.
He died because he was right.
And someone… somewhere… couldn’t let that truth survive.
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