Evidence against the two men is scant, in part because key witnesses to the killings of Knight's friends have refused to cooperate with authorities. The Times is withholding the two suspects' names because they have not been charged and because efforts to learn their side of the story were unsuccessful.
"The roots for these feuds run very deep in Compton," said Det. Michael Caouette, a gang investigator for the Sheriff's Department. "Gang members don't forget a grudge. Word on the street is there's a hit out on Suge Knight."
Delayed Revenge Typically, gang members take vengeance swiftly. In this case, the killers worked patiently, leaving long intervals between hits. It was as if whoever was responsible wanted Knight to wait, and to worry.
After the first shooting — of "Heron" Palmer in June 1997 — there was a lull in the violence. On April, 4, 2000, the bloodshed resumed.
"Poochie" Fouse, a Knight associate, and Fouse's friend William "Chin" Walker were sitting in a white Chevrolet van on North Matthisen Avenue, a dead-end street in Compton. Just after midnight, two men rushed up, opened fire andfled.
Walker, 37, who was in the driver's seat, died an hour later. Fouse, 40, was severely injured and confined to a wheelchair for three months. He refused to cooperate with police.
Three weeks later, the body of Vence "V" Buchanan, 35, an alleged drug dealer and Bloods gang member, was found near a Compton graveyard, with a gunshot wound to the back of the head.
Buchanan's killers, disguised as police officers, had abducted him in a dark Cadillac at Central and 135th avenues. The kidnappers cuffed his hands behind his back, then brutalized him and videotaped his execution, informants have told police. The killers dumped his body outside a cemetery at Greenleaf Boulevard and Central Avenue.
Buchanan had been friendly with the disgruntled Death Row bodyguard and the drug dealer allied against Knight. They suspected that Knight orchestrated the slaying to avenge the shooting of Fouse and Walker, informants have told police. The two men allegedly set out to retaliate.
One of their targets was Alton "Buntry" McDonald, Knight's best friend. McDonald and a buddy, David "Brim Dave" Dudley, were rumored to have played a videotape of Buchanan's execution for an audience of friends at McDonald's home in Compton.
On March 25, 2001, nearly a year after Buchanan's death, Dudley was shot and killed in front of McDonald's house.
Knight was behind bars as this drama of revenge unfolded. In 1997, a judge had sentenced him to nine years in prison for violating terms of his probation from his earlier assault case.
Knight said he had no role in Buchanan's murder and did nothing to provoke the attacks on his friends.
"This feud they say is going on has nothing to do with me. I was in prison when these episodes took place," he said.
McDonald's family said he was not involved in the Buchanan killing, either.
With credit for good behavior, Knight was released from prison in August 2001, after serving less than five years. His world had been shaken, but he felt secure in the presence of McDonald. They had known each other since childhood, and McDonald was now Knight's chief bodyguard.
Eight months later, "Buntry" was cut down.
Bodyguard No. 2 It happened at a crowded Shell station at Rosecrans and Atlantic avenues on April 3, 2002. McDonald, 37, pulled in about 2:30 p.m. to fill up his black GMC Denali. He had paid the station attendant and was about to start pumping his gas when two men walked up and drew pistols.
McDonald was shot four times in the chest. The assailants fled in a pickup truck driven by a man with a ponytail.
Police released sketches of two suspects based on witnesses' descriptions. No one has been arrested.
"We think the same suspects who killed Alton McDonald were involved in the murder of David Dudley at Alton's house a year before — as well as the shooting of William Walker and Wardell Fouse a year before that," said Sheriff's homicide detective Beth Smith. "There are very unique identifiers that link these three cases together."
On Oct. 16, Henry "Hen Dog" Smith, another close friend of Knight's, was shot to death in the middle of the afternoon. Investigators say the connection to the earlier slayings is unclear.
Smith, 33, had been a fixture at Death Row for years and had designed the label's logo. He was sitting in a burgundy Jeep near a fried-chicken stand in South-Central L.A. while his girlfriend used a pay phone. A Death Row medallion hung from his neck. His girlfriend's baby was resting in the back seat when a young man leaned into the truck and fired six shots at Smith.
The attacker, fleeing on a bicycle, dropped his pistol. Witnesses said he stopped, bent over to pick up the gun and calmly resumed pedaling.
On July 24, unknown assailants again tried to kill Fouse, who had been wounded in a shooting three years earlier. This time, they succeeded.
Fouse was riding a motorcycle on Central Avenue in the early evening when a car rushed up behind him. Fouse was riddled with gunfire at Central and Stockwell Street.
The Next Chapter At 2:30 a.m. May 27, armed assailants staged a drive-by attack on Death Row's headquarters on Wilshire Boulevard, tearing holes in the stucco and shattering windows.
Knight professes not to be concerned.
"Listen, if somebody's planning to hunt me down, they are going to have to be more serious about their business," said Knight, chuckling. "How scary are these guys? They drive by my building at 2:30 in the morning and shoot the front windows out. Look out! They killed my windows. Who do they think they're kidding? You can't stop cowards from doing cowardly things."
Still, the bullet-ridden facade is a reminder of how far Knight has fallen. The lobby at Death Row's offices is barren these days, the hallways empty. Music executives duck Knight's calls.
Under his parole restrictions, Knight could not leave California without permission. That's why he had stopped attending prizefights in Las Vegas, music showcases in Atlanta and industry events in New York.
He also has been barred from associating with gang members. That ruled out social contact with almost everyone he grew up with in Compton.
To hear Knight tell it, he is ready to close the door on that chapter of his life anyway.
He is writing an autobiography and hopes to produce a film about the "true story" of Death Row. He talks about volunteering as a football coach at his alma mater, El Camino Community College.
But his biggest aspiration these days, he says, is to live long enough to become a grandfather.
"The thing I most look forward to is seeing my kids have their own kids. Man, that would make everything worthwhile," Knight said. "You know, in the generation before mine, most guys died from cancer, heartattacks and old age. But mygeneration, we die from bullets. Murders. It's not just my friends getting killed. Black men get murdered every day in the ghetto. I'm not nervous. I gotno reason to be scared."
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