Sean “P Diddy” Comb’s ambiguous response to rapper Eminem’s previous 2018 diss track Killshot tying him to the murder of Tupac Shakur has resurfaced as the rapper is entangled in legal troubles
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Sean “P Diddy” Comb’s cryptic response to rapper Eminem’s previous 2018 diss track Killshot targeting the rapper has resurfaced amid Diddy’s multiple lawsuits and home raids.
In the years-old song Eminem rapped: “Kells, the day you put out a hit’s the day Diddy admits that he put the hit out that got Pac killed, ah!” referring to the shooting drive by in which legendary rapper Tupac Shakur was murdered during in 1996. While this lyric alone was a bold call out, Eminem later clarified in the song that the lyrics were a joke when he sang: “And I’m just playin’, Diddy, You know I love you.”
But while Eminem made clear it was all a joke, Diddy still clapped back on a now-delete episode of the Joe Budden YouTube podcast. During his guest apperance, P Diddy responded to the lyrics that involved him sharing a very ambiguous reaction with listeners.
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In the podcast episode it was claimed that P Diddy said the situation with Eminem was “handled” privately and added: “He said, ‘There’s nothing to say about it. It’s in my hands. He wild.”
And according to reports by NME, rapper Jay Electronica – who also heard a public fued with Eminem – tweeted about the incident at the time and wrote: “How dare you accuse Diddy of killing Tupac…You best tread carefully, Son, before I come tear your ivory tower down like Sulaiman done the Templar Knights.”
While P Diddy is entangled in feuds with other rappers, the pair have not shared any other drama together in the public eye since. There have, however, been massive updates in the Tupac murder case in September of last year when Keefe D was arrested and charged with allegedly providing the weapon in the murder of rapper Tupac.
In the latest update in the case it was been announced that Keefe D’s trial date has been pushed back and he is now scheduled to go to trial on November 4th after his new lawyer Carl “E.G.” Arnold, argued that he needed more time to go over the discovery materials related to the case..