This video examines the complex legal challenges surrounding the FBI investigation into Diddy's alleged involvement in Voletta Wallace's death, highlighting how procedural delays, pending appeals, and the distinction between civil and criminal cases can create significant obstacles to justice, even when evidence reportedly exists.
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Biggie’s Mom Was M3RDERED — Diddy’s FBI Files Show He Paid To Erase Her!Added:
Puffy, who's a multi-millionaire, decides to align himself with the South Side Crips. So now you got this whole game that's going back and forth.
>> It just hurt cuz they lie too much, man.
It'd be lot of be lies, the way they put it together, cuz they listening to these white boys who wasn't even there.
>> Wait, let me make sure you heard that right. Diddy is currently serving a 4-year sentence, >> [music] >> locked up in a federal prison as we speak. And yet, according to multiple reports that keep surfacing from inside the investigation, the FBI has obtained evidence that Voletta [music] Wallace, the 72-year-old mother of The Notorious B.I.G., was deceased, and the evidence [music] points directly at him. The alleged motive? Stopping her from interfering with his complete [music] control over her son's music catalog, a catalog worth hundreds of millions of dollars.
>> [music] >> She passed away last February. No arrest has been made in connection with her passing. The man is already behind bars.
The [music] FBI reportedly has evidence of a serious crime, and still nothing has happened. That is not a delay.
[music] That is a gap that should make everyone nervous. Gene, here you go, Miss Wallace.
Gene Deal.
>> Hey, Miss Wallace, Gene Deal.
Oh, hi, Gene. How are you?
All right, man. You know I ain't seen you since I came to your house and had that conversation with you. How you been? You all right?
Uh I'm doing okay. I've been watching you on TV. Now, why does that gap matter so much? Because Voletta Wallace was not some distant estate figure who signed paperwork once a year. She was [music] the gatekeeper, the final say, the one person who could look at a licensing deal, a documentary, [music] a commercial placement, and just say no.
For nearly three decades after her son was taken, >> [music] >> she controlled every inch of his legacy.
That made her the last real check on Diddy's power over Biggie's music. Then, in late 2024, the estate [music] sold 50% of Biggie's rights to Primary Wave for $200 million, a deal that one competitor quietly described as a fire sale under pressure.
Voletta signed off on it, but [music] shortly after that deal closed, she was gone. And the old industry whispers, the ones that said Diddy wanted total monopoly, not just a piece, suddenly do not sound like gossip anymore. [music] Let me actually walk you through what that motive looks like on paper, because the numbers are not small. Diddy already controlled a significant chunk of Biggie's [music] publishing and master rights before the Primary Wave deal even existed. After the deal, his position became even more locked in.
>> [music] >> The estate sale was supposed to bring in outside money and outside management, but if you believe what is coming out of this new FBI inquiry, the real effect was removing the last person who could push back against him. [music] Here is the part that really stings. Voletta had already gone public in May of 2024, saying she wanted to slap the daylights out of him. She said she was ashamed and embarrassed that she ever liked him.
That is not a business dispute. That is someone who has become a public liability. And for a man who built an empire on eliminating obstacles, a liability like that is not something you just hope goes away on its own. Now, add the timing, because [music] the timing is where this whole thing starts to look deliberate. Voletta passed away last February. The estate sale was already finalized.
>> [music] >> The money was already moving. Within weeks of her passing, the industry started hearing a different kind of whisper. Not about bad contracts or old [music] grudges, but about something much darker. According to reports that have not been officially confirmed, but keep appearing from multiple angles, the FBI now has evidence that Voletta did not pass away from natural causes, that she was deceased, >> [music] >> and that the person who ordered it did so specifically to lock down Biggie's rights permanently. No more second-guessing.
>> [music] >> No more public embarrassment from a woman who had known him since Biggie was a teenager.
>> [music] >> Just a clean, quiet removal of the last person who could challenge his monopoly over the catalog. I used to be hurt because I knew the people that she had around her >> [music] >> was Puff boys.
So, we could never connect like that. So, [music] only time I tried to connect with Miss Wallace is when she needed me, and she used Perry Sanders to call me. So, here [snorts] is where the story stops feeling like speculation [music] and starts feeling like something is genuinely wrong. Diddy is already incarcerated. He is not a flight risk.
He is not going anywhere. So, [music] if the FBI has evidence of a serious crime, what exactly are they waiting for?
[music] The polite answer is that investigations take time, that you do not rush a case like this, that prosecutors want everything airtight before they add serious charges to [music] someone already serving time.
But that answer only goes so far when you remember the clock is already running in the opposite direction.
>> [music] >> His 4-year sentence ends in 2029.
That sounds like a long runway, except for the appeal he filed in July of 2025, >> [music] >> which argues that his conviction is unconstitutional. If that appeal succeeds, he could be out far sooner than anyone expects. The question is not whether the FBI will eventually act, >> [music] >> the question is whether they will act before an appeal rips the window wide open.
>> [music] >> And that is the part that makes this whole situation feel so unstable. On paper, you have a convicted [music] felon sitting in a federal prison, already serving time, already stripped of most of his public power. [music] That should feel like justice. But if the FBI has evidence of a serious crime [music] and sits on it long enough for an appeal to spring him loose, then the system will have done something almost worse than failing. It will have given him a head start. He will walk out of one case and straight into the possibility of never being charged for the other. [music] That is not a procedural hiccup. That is a loophole with a body attached to it. If he gets 14 months, if the defense gets what they want, he'd essentially get out October 3rd because he's been in He's been in for a year. And you get 15% credit for time served. So, he'd basically be out after the sentence, and then he'd be on supervised release. Let me pause here for a second, because this is where the surface story [music] and the deeper reality start to separate. On the surface, Diddy is a convicted criminal serving time.
>> [music] >> The public has seen the hotel video.
They have heard the testimony. They have watched the documentaries. The man is not a hero anymore. But underneath [music] that surface, the legal machinery is moving at a completely different speed.
The civil cases keep piling up. More than 120 accusers announced by [music] attorney Tony Buzbee, including 25 who were minors at the time of the alleged incidents.
>> [music] >> Those cases are public. Those filings are out there. But the criminal case, the one involving Voletta Wallace, that one is being handled in whispers, in [music] sealed filings, in FBI evidence rooms that no journalist has seen. The longer [music] that silence continues, the louder the suspicion gets. You have to ask yourself why. [music] If the evidence is real, why is it not public? If the investigation is active, why has there been no arrest?
>> [music] >> And if Diddy is already in custody, why is the government treating this like a delicate negotiation instead of a [music] straightforward homicide investigation? The most generous answer is that they are building an ironclad case. The less [music] generous answer, the one that starts to feel more plausible the longer nothing happens, >> [music] >> is that someone does not want this case to move forward. Maybe it is the complexity of proving an order years after the fact.
>> [music] >> Maybe it is the challenge of tying Diddy directly to an instruction rather than just to a financial motive.
>> [music] >> Or maybe it is something else entirely.
But here is the thing about silence in a case like [music] this. Silence does not stay neutral. Every week that passes without charges, the suspicion deepens.
Every month that goes by without a public update, [music] the whispers get louder. Right now, the FBI has reportedly obtained evidence. Diddy is already behind bars, [music] and yet the only people talking are the civil attorneys and the documentary producers.
The criminal justice system, the one that is supposed to handle allegations of this magnitude, is barely making a sound. That [music] is not patience.
That is a gap that looks more and more like a problem the closer you look at it. Meanwhile, the [music] appeal is moving. The clock is ticking. And the window for justice is shrinking in a way that nobody in authority seems to want to talk about. They saw different They saw the evidence in the case.
>> [music] >> They immediately honed in on racketeering, and they started saying, "Why is this racketeering with one guy?"
And they're charging this one guy. They had a [music] real problem with that.
They did not have a problem with the Man Act. They found him guilty on the Man Act. And they they hung six to six [music] on So, here is where we are. Diddy is in prison, but not for Voletta Wallace.
>> [music] >> The FBI reportedly has evidence that she passed away and that he ordered it to secure his monopoly over Biggie's music rights. No arrest has been made. The appeal is pending.
>> [music] >> The sentence clock is running. And the question that nobody in a position of authority seems willing to answer is this: What are they waiting for? Because whatever the answer is, the longer [music] it takes, the closer we get to a reality where he walks free before anyone ever has to answer for what allegedly happened to her. [music] That is not justice. That is just a failure dressed up as process. Let me pull on a thread that does not get talked about enough.
>> [music] >> The jury acquitted him on racketeering.
That is the charge that would have covered running an organization through coercion and criminal acts. Without [music] it, any future prosecution for something like ordering harm to protect a business interest starts from a much weaker position. The same evidence, the same witnesses, the same timeline. And the jury [music] still said no to the big one. If the system could not connect those dots when the trial was happening live, why should anyone feel confident they will connect dots on something even more complex now? Think about what that acquittal means for how his legal team operates.
>> [music] >> They know exactly how to create reasonable doubt. They already did it once. That same group is now watching the Valleta Wallace situation unfold from the same [music] press releases and leaks that we are reading. They know the FBI has not made an arrest. They know the investigation is reportedly active but completely invisible. [music] And they know how to use every day of silence as leverage. Every week that passes without charges is another week they can argue to a future jury that even the government was not sure enough to move quickly.
>> If you had day 17 on the Diddy trial as the biggest one yet, guess what? Bingo, you won because today was >> [music] >> probably the most eventful day as far as things that happened that were said on the stand and [music] most importantly things that the judge said because Diddy almost got kicked out of his own trial.
>> Now look at the appeal he filed in July of 2025.
>> [music] >> It does not just ask for a new trial.
It argues that the conviction itself is unconstitutional because the payments [music] were to male companions for consensual activities with his girlfriends. That is the actual legal argument. Whether it works or not is for judges to decide.
>> [music] >> But the point is that his team is not just fighting the sentence. They are fighting the entire legal theory that put him in prison.
>> [music] >> If that appeal gains traction, the timeline for his release does not wait for 2029. [music] It could happen much sooner. That is the real wild card underneath all of this.
But let me also look at something else that sits underneath the surface of this whole story. The [music] same week the FBI report surfaced, Diddy's legal team filed another defamation claims against media companies. They are not just defending [music] against criminal charges anymore. They are trying to control the information environment before any criminal case even gets filed. That is a defensive playbook that assumes the worst is [music] coming. You do not spend that kind of money in legal energy on libel lawsuits [music] unless you are trying to shape what a future jury might hear. And that tells you something about what his lawyers think is coming next. [music] Now think about how the media has already handled the older connected allegations. For years, the claims about the 1996 and 1997 cases lived in a weird gray zone. Too specific to ignore, too thin [music] to prove.
Documentaries aired them. Podcasts debated them. But mainstream [music] outlets mostly stayed away because the sourcing was too soft. That changed the moment the Valleta Wallace reports dropped. [music] Suddenly the same journalists who would not touch the old stories started asking new questions [music] about pattern evidence. Not because the old evidence got stronger, because the new context made [music] the old whispers look different in hindsight. What was the backstory behind that? Big Momma calling you? My man.
[music] That had to be if I say >> [music] >> exhilarating, it has to be one uh highlights of coming out here.
That is the quiet pressure shift nobody is talking about. The civil cases, the documentary [music] leaks, the defamation lawsuits, the FBI silence, all of it is happening at the same time.
And in that kind of information fog, the oldest, strangest allegations start to feel less like conspiracy theories and more like unfinished business.
>> [music] >> A jury that already acquitted on racketeering might still look at a pattern that crosses decades. Three situations, one name. [music] A business monopoly that kept growing after each one. That is not proof, but it is the kind of accumulation that makes a prosecutor want to keep digging.
>> [music] >> And here is the part that should make everyone who covered the trial uncomfortable. The same witnesses who testified about control and coercion in the criminal case are still out there.
[music] Some of them are part of the civil filings. Some of them have given interviews to documentary [music] crews.
Their stories did not end when the verdict came down. If the FBI moves forward on the Valleta matter, those same witnesses could be called again.
Not to talk about what happened in hotel rooms, >> [music] >> to talk about how this man operates when he feels someone is in the way. That is a different line of questioning entirely.
>> [music] >> And it is one that did not get fully explored the first time around. So the legal math is shifting even before [music] any new charges are filed. The defense won a partial victory at trial.
But that [music] victory also locked in a record of what witnesses said under oath. If the government ever brings a case tied to the music catalog and the estate sale, [music] they will have deposition transcripts, trial testimony, and documentary evidence all pointing in the same direction. The acquittal on racketeering stands, >> [music] >> but it does not erase the foundation. It just means the next prosecution has to build a [music] different kind of ladder. And from where I am sitting, that ladder is already leaning against the wall. Diddy really screwed up and I'm not referring to his criminal trial, which has him sitting in prison right now, but it has to do with something that happened right before he got arrested. If you've seen the Netflix documentary about Diddy, Diddy the reckoning, which 50 Cent produced, there's some footage there um that had never been seen before. This is a photographer that Diddy [music] hired to follow him around and doc So where does that leave the FBI investigation?
>> [music] >> Imagine you are the prosecutor looking at evidence of an alleged crime connected to a music rights monopoly.
You know the suspect is already in custody, which takes the flight risk off the table.
>> [music] >> You know you have time to build a perfect case. Except you do not, because the appeal could collapse the whole reason he is in custody at all. That changes the calculation completely.
>> [music] >> It is no longer about building the perfect case. It is about building a case fast enough to file charges before the legal landscape shifts underneath you. Now let me bring in something that does not get mentioned in most of the mainstream coverage.
>> [music] >> In the Netflix documentary that came out after his sentencing, there is audio of Keefe D giving a proffer interview to law enforcement back in 2008. [music] In that audio, he claims Diddy arranged a significant payment for a million dollars. Keefe D has since said the proffer was made under duress, so you have to hold that at arm's length. But the [music] audio is real. It exists.
Then you have Kirk Burrowes, a co-founder of Bad Boy, [music] claiming in the same documentary that Diddy ushered someone to their end by making him stay in Los Angeles when he wanted to leave. The estate manager has publicly denied Burrowes' claim.
Burrowes has a long history of legal disputes with Diddy. [music] So no, this is not proven evidence. But here is why it matters anyway. Before the Valleta Wallace report surfaced, those older claims sounded like old hip-hop conspiracy talk. The kind [music] of thing that lives on YouTube forums and documentary bonus features.
But if the FBI evidence on Valleta is real, >> [music] >> then suddenly those older claims stop being background noise. They become pattern evidence.
>> [music] >> They become the thing that makes a jury stop and think, oh, this is what he does. This is how he operates when someone stands in the way of his money or his power. [music] You My whole thing about it is you got to understand, I'm not the dude that you could talk to and have that kind of conversation with you. It wasn't about pay. They needed me more than I needed them. They needed me because they felt safe because I worked for Chaz Williams.
And that is the part that makes the whole story feel larger than one investigation.
>> [music] >> You have three different situations connected to the same man. One from 1996, one from 1997, and now [music] Valleta Wallace, 72 years old, allegedly removed to lock down a music catalog. Three different eras, three [music] different sets of investigators, one name that keeps appearing in the background of all of them. That by itself would be a pattern.
>> [music] >> Add the reported FBI evidence on Valleta and the pattern starts to look like something a prosecutor would actually want to take to trial. Now look at how the media has handled the older allegations. For [music] years, the 1996 and 1997 cases were treated as cold with [music] no realistic chance of resolution. The Keefe D proffer was out there, but it was dismissed as unreliable because he recanted. The Burrowes claims were dismissed as a disgruntled former partner with an axe to grind. [music] That was the safe journalistic position.
But the Valleta situation changes the temperature. [music] If she was allegedly harmed to protect a business monopoly, then the question [music] of whether the same man had motive and opportunity in the earlier cases is not a conspiracy theory anymore. It is a reasonable line of inquiry. Let me push on something else that does not get enough attention.
>> [music] >> The civil cases are still moving through the system. 120 accusers announced by attorney Tony Buzbee. 25 of them were minors at the time of the alleged incidents.
>> [music] >> The youngest was 9 years old. That number alone should stop you cold. Those cases are not criminal charges. They are money claims. But here is what matters for the bigger picture. If the [music] FBI goes forward with a criminal investigation, there is a real question about whether those 120 voices get pushed to the side. Not because they matter less, >> [music] >> but because the system only has so much attention to give. A homicide case will always swallow the room.
>> [music] >> Now think about the pressure coming from the other direction. The defamation lawsuit Diddy filed against NBC Universal over the Peacock documentary.
He is arguing from inside a federal prison that a documentary made false claims about him involving minors and other serious allegations.
>> [music] >> Whether he wins or loses is not the point. The point is that he is still fighting. He is still using the legal system to push back against narratives [music] he does not like. That tells you something about how much fight he has left.
>> [music] >> And it tells you something about how his team thinks about the long game. They are not sitting quietly. They are punching back wherever they can. lawsuit >> [music] >> specifically challenges allegations suggesting that Mr. Combs and his involvement in the 2018 of his former [music] partner Kim Porter, whose passing was uh officially attributed to natural causes [music] by the Los Angeles County Cor >> None of this changes the central problem. The FBI reportedly has evidence that Voletta Wallace was harmed. Diddy is already sitting in a federal prison.
No arrest has been made for what [music] happened to her. The appeal is pending.
The sentence clock is running. Every [music] week that passes without charges is a week his legal team can use to argue that even the government lacks confidence in its own case. That is not a defense strategy. [music] That is just the natural consequence of silence in a high-profile investigation.
At some [music] point, the absence of action starts to look like the absence of evidence. So, the question is not whether the evidence exists. The question [music] is whether the system can move fast enough to use it. If the appeal succeeds first, or if the [music] sentence runs out before an arrest is made, then the whole thing becomes a procedural failure disguised as a cautious investigation. He will walk out of one case and straight [music] into the possibility of never being charged for the other. That is not justice delayed. That is justice denied by the calendar. If the defense in the Diddy case gets its way, >> [music] >> Diddy could be a free man next month.
Next month. Next >> What do you think is really happening behind the [music] scenes with that FBI evidence? Drop your take in the comments. I will be back when something breaks. Stay with me.
>> [music]
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