😳 Suge Knight EXPOSES Snoop Dogg’s FEAR of 2Pac💥—Says He Hid With Luggage to Avoid a BEATDOWN!🧳

In yet another explosive phone call from behind bars, Suge Knight gives his most detailed and damning account yet of the rift between Tupac Shakur and Snoop Dogg.
The root of it all? A single radio interview.
According to Suge, the entire fallout was triggered when Snoop went on Hot 97 and casually stated that he had no beef with Puff Daddy or The Notorious B.I.G. , calling them his “friends.
” In Suge’s world, that was nothing short of treason.
And Tupac? He apparently saw it as the ultimate betrayal from someone inside the circle.
Suge claims that after Snoop’s radio remarks, the Doggfather was terrified—so terrified, in fact, that he refused to ride in the same limo as Tupac and Suge on the way back.
Instead, he voluntarily climbed into a cramped van filled with luggage, just to avoid being in close quarters with a furious Pac.
Suge, recounting the moment, says he begged Snoop to get in the limo like everyone else, but Snoop wouldn’t budge.

“Pac crazy as a [__],” Suge recalls Snoop saying, convinced that Tupac was about to beat him down then and there.
The knife-and-fork story? Suge calls it nonsense.
Snoop has said in the past that he carried silverware on the flight just in case he had to defend himself.
But Suge scoffs at the idea, saying if Snoop had tried to stab Tupac, “he would’ve left that plane with his neck broke, his back broke.
” To Suge, the story is more myth than menace—a cover-up to make Snoop look braver than he really was.
Then Suge digs deeper, suggesting that Snoop wasn’t just afraid—he was also disloyal.

According to Suge, Snoop didn’t bring his Dogg Pound crew on private trips or flights because he chose not to.
“Nobody told him no,” Suge insists.
“He just didn’t do it.
” It’s a subtle but powerful jab: Snoop wasn’t a team player, even when he had the chance.
The narrative intensifies as Suge reveals that the day-one Death Row insiders all knew what time it was—Tupac was not going to let this slide.
Suge claims Pac made Snoop ride with the luggage as a direct humiliation, and that everyone around them knew Pac was pressing him hard.
He insists that anyone who claims otherwise wasn’t really there and has no right to speak on Pac.
“If you never shook Pac’s hand, you can’t tell me if he had rough hands or soft hands,” Suge snaps.
“You were just an employee.”

And then comes the most brutal statement of all: “Pac wasn’t going to stop until he broke Snoop’s jaw and knocked his teeth out of his [__] mouth.
” Suge makes it clear that Snoop had become a target for Pac’s unrelenting sense of betrayal, and had Shakur lived longer, a violent confrontation seemed inevitable.
“Snoop knew that Pac was a problem for him for the rest of his life,” Suge adds.
But why did it go so far? According to Suge, the foundation of Death Row was always built on loyalty, not respect.
He even says he didn’t have “respect” for his own mother if respect means obeying every rule.
Instead, he valued loyalty, trust, and honor—and that’s where he says Snoop failed.
Once Snoop made that radio interview, the damage was done.
Pac, who was on a mission to reshape Death Row into something cleaner and more independent, saw Snoop’s alliance with Puff and Big as a poisonous betrayal that fractured the label from within.
And Suge isn’t just pointing fingers—he backs it with anecdotes.
When one of the Death Row lawyers asked Andre to testify as a character witness to help Snoop avoid prison time, the answer was chilling: “If it depends on me, he going to prison for life.
” That cold rejection reportedly triggered a shift in Tupac’s mindset.
Suge says from that moment on, things were never the same.
The infamous Vegas trip—where Tupac was ultimately fatally shot—also plays into Suge’s timeline.

He claims Snoop was a no-show for the fight and the club, and only showed up in Las Vegas a week later, trying to save face.
Suge mocks this belated visit, saying it made “no sense” and only further highlighted the growing divide between Snoop and the rest of the Death Row family.
To Suge, Snoop’s actions weren’t just cowardly—they marked the beginning of the end.
“That was the separation,” he explains.
“That’s when Death Row
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