Greg Kading

Greg Kading
Born (1963-05-01) May 1, 1963

Police career

Department Los Angeles Police Department
Country United States
Years of service 1986 - 2010
Rank Sworn in as Officer, 1986
Detective
Other work non fiction author
Private investigator

Greg Kading is an American author and former Los Angeles Police Department detective best known for working on a multi law-enforcement task force that investigated the murders of rap stars Tupac Shakur and Biggie Smalls.

Education

Kading graduated from Capistrano Valley High School in 1981. He attended Cal State Long Beach and Calvary Bible College.

Career

Kading was an Orange County Sheriff's Department deputy, where he worked in the jail, from January 1986 to September 1988. He then joined the Los Angeles Police Department in 1988.

He was removed from the joint task force during an investigation into allegations that Kading had made false statements on an affidavit. In April 2010, the LAPD completed its probe, and Kading was not penalized.

He retired from the department, where he worked in the robbery-homicide division, after 22 years of service in June 2010.[1] The following year, Kading released his book.[2] A full-length documentary adapted from his book began shooting in 2013.[3]

He works as a private investigator in Southern California.

Book

In September 2011, he self-published the book Murder Rap: The Untold Story of the Biggie Smalls & Tupac Shakur Murder Investigations. In it, he included new evidence in the rappers' murders that he said implicated entertainment mogul Sean Combs and record producer Suge Knight.[4] The release prompted what MediaBisto.com called "a new round of explosive media coverage about the unsolved killings."[5]

Combs responded to the allegation by telling Los Angeles local reporters in emails that "this story is pure fiction and completely ridiculous.”[5] Knight has not addressed the claim.[2] Lil' Cease, a rapper and childhood friend of Smalls, told radio host Sway Calloway on the “Sway In The Morning” show that he didn’t believe Combs had ordered Shakur's shooting as Kading alleged in his book.[6]

The book also details what Kading described as the behind-the-scenes failure by the LAPD to arrest Shakur’s and Smalls’ killers. The families of Shakur and Smalls have not responded to the allegations.[7]

References

External links


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