Gene Deal LEAKS The Tupac Evidence 50 REMOVED From Diddy Documentary
The progressive establishment and the corporate gatekeepers at Netflix are officially in damage-control mode. While 50 Cent’s documentary, Diddy: The Reckoning, was marketed as a definitive exposé, the most lethal evidence was left on the cutting room floor. Gene Deal, Diddy’s former personal bodyguard, has finally gone public with the “censored” files—evidence that doesn’t just suggest Diddy was a “party animal,” but implies he was the architect of an atmosphere that led to the deaths of the two greatest icons in hip-hop history.
The Pay-to-Play Censorship
It is a staggering display of liberal hypocrisy that a documentary titled “The Reckoning” would exclude the man who was literally standing next to the subject during every major “reckoning” of the 90s. Gene Deal has revealed that his exclusion wasn’t an accident; it was a choice made by director Alex Stapleton. According to Gene, Stapleton claimed that 50 Cent had no real control over the content or the finances.
When Gene asked for fair compensation for his exclusive footage and firsthand testimony, he was met with the typical industry “grift”—the claim that they “don’t pay for interviews” while they simultaneously cut multi-million dollar deals with streamers. Gene walked away, and in doing so, he took the most dangerous truths with him.
The Quad Studios “Spy Mission”
Gene Deal’s most explosive claim is one that 50 Cent apparently couldn’t touch: Diddy knew Tupac was going to be shot at Quad Studios in 1994 because he was in the building to witness it.
According to Gene:
The Spying: Diddy wasn’t in the studio to record; he was in Jimmy Henchman’s office spying on Biggie. Diddy owned Biggie’s publishing and was paranoid that Biggie was trying to move his money to a different entity (like his wife Tatiana or Lil’ Cease).
The Warning: While in that office, Jimmy Henchman allegedly told Diddy that they were about to “teach Pac a lesson” over a debt.
The Refusal to Warn: Diddy knew exactly which room Biggie was in, but he didn’t go there. He stayed in the office, allegedly waiting for the shots to ring out.
The documentary completely scrubbed this, likely because it moves the narrative from “Diddy is a jerk” to “Diddy is an accessory to attempted murder.”
The Million-Dollar Check
Perhaps the reason Netflix blinked was Gene’s mention of the “Zip Check.” Gene claims he saw Eric “Von Zip” Martin with a $1 million check shortly after Tupac’s murder in Las Vegas. Zip allegedly bragged that the money came from Barry Hankerson and Jimmy Henchman for “Blackground Records.”
Gene’s point is simple: follow the money. You cannot cash a million-dollar check without a paper trail. If the feds were serious about solving the Tupac case, they wouldn’t just be looking at Keefe D; they would be tracing that check. But the industry protects its own, and a million-dollar link between Diddy’s inner circle and the hit on Tupac is a “truth bomb” that would blow a hole through the entire music business.
The Biggie Smalls “Set-Up”
The most heartbreaking part of Gene’s testimony involves the night Biggie was murdered in Los Angeles. Gene recalls receiving multiple “vest up” warnings from high-level street sources, including kingpin Wadsworth “Unique” Hall from federal prison.
Gene personally warned Diddy:
The Robe Scene: Gene found Diddy at Andre Harrell’s house, wearing a stolen Beverly Hills Hotel robe, and told him the intel was real. Diddy’s response? “I don’t want to hear that [ __ ].”
The Security Refusal: Diddy reportedly refused to hire more than four guards for the entire crew despite the clear threats.
The Hospital Delay: After the shooting, the caravan bypassed a hospital just two blocks away to drive 30 minutes to a different facility. Gene believes Biggie could have survived if Diddy hadn’t insisted they leave the scene immediately in a specific direction.
The “Atmosphere” of Death
Gene Deal’s perspective is a scathing critique of the “CEO as a Monster.” He doesn’t say Diddy pulled the trigger, but he accuses him of “setting up the atmosphere.” Whether it was releasing “Who Shot Ya?” immediately after Tupac was attacked or refusing to attend peace meetings arranged by Death Row’s East Coast representatives, Diddy allegedly fueled the fire to stay at the top of the charts.
Netflix and 50 Cent may have given us a “sanitized” version of the Diddy story to avoid lawsuits from Diddy’s aggressive legal team, but Gene Deal has reminded us that the real “reckoning” has yet to happen. If this is how Diddy treated his “friends,” imagine how he treated his enemies.