The decades-old mystery surrounding the death of Tupac Shakur has erupted back into global conversation — and this time, Netflix is pouring gasoline on the fire.
A new documentary has surfaced with shocking allegations, resurfacing one of hip-hop’s darkest and most controversial theories: that Sean “P. Diddy” Combs may have orchestrated a million-dollar plot to kill Tupac and Suge Knight during the height of the East Coast–West Coast rivalry.
Nothing has been proven in court, and Diddy has always denied these claims.
But the documentary has people talking — loudly.

The $1 Million Allegation
According to individuals interviewed in the documentary, Diddy allegedly discussed offering $1 million to gang members at a private event sometime between 1995 and 1996.
These claims suggest the money was meant to target Tupac and Suge Knight as retaliation for the growing feud, including the infamous Quad Studios incident.
The documentary does not present courtroom-level proof, but the testimonies are intense, detailed, and unsettling enough to raise new questions.
Suspicious Cash Transfers in Las Vegas
Another segment of the film highlights financial records and witness accounts suggesting that Diddy allegedly wired money to certain “unusual contacts” in Las Vegas around the time of Tupac’s shooting.
Investigators in the documentary interpret these transactions as potential “hush money,” while others argue it could all be coincidence or misinterpretation.
Nothing is confirmed — but the timing has sparked massive online debate.
Fans Ask the Same Question: Who Really Did It?
For years, the hip-hop world pointed fingers at Suge Knight.
Now, with this Netflix documentary, the spotlight swings toward Diddy like never before.
The film uses interviews, old case files, street testimony, and insider rumors to paint a picture of manipulation, power struggles, and dangerous alliances. Viewers describe the experience as “terrifying,” “dark,” and “too real to dismiss but too murky to trust.”
The documentary doesn’t claim to solve Tupac’s murder — but it intensifies a truth we already knew:
Someone knows. Someone lied. And the real story has been buried under money, fear, and power for nearly 30 years.
A Mystery That Still Haunts the Culture
While the documentary fuels speculation, one thing is undeniable:
Tupac’s death remains one of the greatest unsolved tragedies in music history.
And until the truth comes out — if it ever does — the world will keep asking:
Who really wanted Tupac gone?