🕶️“Snoop Warned Him?! Suge Knight Claims Snoop Dogg Tried to STOP Tupac from Going to Vegas – Napoleon Responds 😱
It starts with an audio.
Suge Knight, now behind bars but still very much plugged into the whispers of the industry, plays a recording from the late Bad Azz, a Death Row affiliate and West Coast rapper,
claiming Snoop Dogg warned him about going to Las Vegas in September 1996—the night Tupac was shot.
“Snoop told me not to go,” the audio says. “He told me something was going to go down.”
That moment alone raised a million red flags.
Because if Snoop really did try to stop Bad Azz, and if Bad Azz passed that message to Pac, then why did Tupac still go to Vegas?
Napoleon, appearing calm but visibly stunned, reacts in real time.
“That’s the first time I’ve heard something like that,” he says. “I don’t even know how to react.”
But Suge’s version of the story is direct. He claims Snoop warned Daz Dillinger, Daz warned Bad Azz, and Bad Azz tried to warn Tupac.
A trail of caution. A chain of last-minute warnings. But somehow, Pac still ended up in that BMW on Flamingo and Koval… walking straight into a hail of bullets.
Napoleon, however, isn’t buying it completely.
“I don’t think Snoop knew anything was going to happen to Pac,” he states. “I really don’t.”
His voice is firm, almost defensive. It’s as if he’s protecting not just Snoop, but the memory of something sacred: brotherhood, loyalty, and truth.
“Whatever we think of Snoop’s interviews now,” Napoleon adds, “I don’t think Snoop ever wanted something bad to happen to Pac.”
Still, the timeline doesn’t lie.
According to Suge, Tupac was getting ready to hit the Vegas strip that night with a select group of homies. Bad Azz suddenly backed out—claiming his older homie warned him things
would go left.
“None of the homies are going to be there,” Bad Azz says in the audio. “It’s just gonna be Bloods. Snoop ain’t going. Why would you want to go?”
That’s when Bad Azz apparently told Tupac, “I’m probably not going to roll.”
Pac’s response?
“That’s what’s up… I’ll catch you when I come back.”
Those were Tupac’s last words to Bad Azz. Hours later, he was shot four times in a white BMW while sitting next to Suge Knight.
Now here’s where it gets strange.

Napoleon suspects the back-and-forth between Suge and Snoop is more about “tit for tat” than truth. He believes Snoop and Suge have been tossing accusations at each other for
years, and now it’s just a back-and-forth power play.
“I think it’s politics,” Napoleon says. “I don’t think either of them wanted anything bad to happen to Pac. I think they’re just throwing shots now.”
But that doesn’t answer the key question: Did Snoop know?
Because if he didn’t—why wasn’t he in Vegas that night?
Why did he, one of Death Row’s biggest stars, skip the fight, the after-party, the entourage?
Why did he admit, in an interview years later, that he didn’t trust Suge or Pac at the time and was riding with a knife and fork under a blanket on the plane out of New York?
Why did he fall out with Pac just days earlier after saying he respected Biggie and Diddy on a public interview—an interview Pac allegedly never forgave him for?
These aren’t fan theories. These are Snoop’s own words.
And while Napoleon doesn’t believe Snoop would ever want harm to come to Tupac, he doesn’t deny the warning story is “weird.”
“It’s very weird,” he admits. “Because Pac had love for Bad Azz. It’s just strange that something like that was never mentioned until now.”
So here’s what we’re left with:
Snoop wasn’t in Vegas the night Tupac was killed.
He admits to feeling “unsafe” around Suge and Pac in the final days.
Bad Azz reportedly told Tupac he wasn’t going to Vegas because of a warning.
Snoop allegedly gave that warning.
Napoleon says he doesn’t believe it… but even he admits the story is suspect.
And in the middle of all of it? The silence.

Bad Azz is gone. Tupac is gone. Suge Knight is locked away. And Snoop remains the last man standing, with memories—and maybe secrets—that he’s only begun to share.
Was it fear? Instinct? Guilt?
Or did Snoop Dogg really dodge that trip to Vegas because he knew more than he was ever willing to say out loud?
Napoleon may not believe it. But one thing’s for certain: too many people saw the storm coming. And too few said anything before it hit.
That’s what makes this moment haunting.
Because for everyone who knew Pac, the real pain isn’t just in how he died… it’s in how preventable it might’ve been.
And maybe—just maybe—how many chose to stay quiet.
Rest in power, Tupac Shakur. The silence still speaks volumes.
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