Close Menu
Showbiz Now Magazine
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest YouTube LinkedIn TikTok
    Showbiz Now Magazine
    • Home
    • Celebrity News
    • Books
    • Film
    • Television
    • Music
    • Fashion & Style
    • Horror News
    • Cover Story
    • Contact
      • About us
      • Amazon Disclaimer
      • DMCA / Copyrights Disclaimer
      • Privacy Policy
      • Terms and Conditions
    Showbiz Now Magazine
    Home»Music»Nipsey Hussle’s Accused Murderer Mounts Short Defense After Graphic Autopsy Photos
    Music

    Nipsey Hussle’s Accused Murderer Mounts Short Defense After Graphic Autopsy Photos

    AdminBy AdminJune 30, 20226 Mins Read
    Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Reddit WhatsApp

    The man who admittedly gunned down beloved rapper Nipsey Hussle in a caught-on-video attack three years ago rested his strikingly short defense in less than three hours at his first-degree murder trial Wednesday — a day after he allegedly was jumped and beaten unconscious by fellow inmates in county jail.

    Eric Holder Jr. sat at the defense table with an obviously swollen left eye and three staples in his head as prosecutors showed harrowing autopsy photos before resting their case by 10:30 a.m. and handing the reins to Holder’s public defender, Aaron Jansen.

    Nothing was said to the jury about Holder’s obvious injuries before the evidence and testimony phase of the two-week trial ended by mid-afternoon. As Rolling Stone first reported Tuesday, Holder was attacked by two inmates who purportedly, according to his lawyer, pummeled him and cut his head with a razor.

    Related Stories

    Nipsey Hussle Murder Suspect Beaten Up In Jail: Lawyer


    ‘He Shot Me’: Man Injured Alongside Nipsey Hussle Testifies, Recalls Slain Rapper’s Last Words

    Related Stories


    American singer Liza Minnelli poses in a white hat and fur. (Photo by Bettmann/Getty Images)

    The Private Lives of Liza Minnelli (The Rainbow Ends Here)


    Meet the Beatle: A Guide to Ringo Starr’s Solo Career in 20 Songs

    Jansen elaborated on the jail attack Wednesday, telling reporters during a break outside the courtroom that the incident started when “some guy sucker-punched” Holder in a holding cell filled with inmates waiting to be transported to court Tuesday morning. The alleged assailants “didn’t say anything,” Jansen said, so the motive for the beatdown wasn’t immediately linked to the trial.

    “He did lose consciousness,” Jansen said of Holder. “He’s in some pain, (but) he’s okay to go forward.”

    As expected, Holder did not testify in his own defense. Instead, Jansen called Hussle’s friend Herman “Cowboy” Douglas back to the witness stand to re-analyze the conversation that preceded the shooting. Jansen also brought in his own gang expert, who described Holder as an apparently “inactive” member of the Rollin’s 60s Crips the day of the shooting.

    With Holder’s admission he’s the shooter captured on surveillance video showing the March 31, 2019 attack. The case boils down to whether the crime qualifies as premeditated, first-degree murder, as prosecutors allege, or an act carried out in the “heat of passion,” as Jansen described it in his opening statement back on June 15. According to the defense, Holder believed that Hussle had accused him of “snitching” that day when he allegedly mentioned “paperwork” during their initial conversation amid a chance encounter in the parking lot of Hussle’s South Los Angeles clothing store, The Marathon. Holder became “so enflamed and enraged” by the exchange, he opened fire on the celebrated musician “a mere nine minutes later,” before he had time to “cool off,” Jansen said in his opening.

    On Wednesday, Jansen confronted Douglas with his grand jury testimony from May 2019 to expand on what he told jurors two weeks ago when he was first called by Deputy District Attorney John McKinney. (Douglas testified June 15 that Hussle greeted Holder that day while signing autographs and told him that a rumor was circulating that Holder had “some paperwork floating around” related to his possible cooperation with law enforcement and that he needed to “take care of it” to “clear” himself.)

    Jansen read from the grand jury transcript where Douglas testified that Hussle was “basically warning the dude, like you know, ‘They got some paperwork on you. I haven’t read the paperwork, but,’ you know, ‘You got to watch your back.’”

    Douglas, who walked into court wearing a rhinestone-studded white jacket and dark cowboy hat that he removed as he approached the witness stand, confirmed that he gave the grand jury testimony, but he said he wasn’t quoting Hussle directly. “Nipsey never told him to ‘watch his back.’ That was me generalizing the conversation,” he testified. Douglas said he never heard either Hussle or Holder use the words “snitch” or “snitching.”

    Robert Freeman, a private investigator specializing in gangs, took the witness stand next and testified for the defense that being called a “snitch” is so serious in gang culture, it could put someone’s “life in jeopardy to be beat up or killed.”

    “Which is worse, being called a snitch or saying they have paperwork?” Jansen asked.

    “Having paperwork means there’s proof, so that’s worse,” Freeman said, defining paperwork as proof of cooperation with law enforcement ranging from court transcripts to police reports.

    On cross-examination, Freeman conceded to McKinney that when confronted with a snitching accusation, gang members often are given the chance to “address it.” He also said that in his 26-year career investigating gangs — during which he’s talked to hundreds of gang members about alleged crimes — he’s never heard of one of his sources getting killed for talking to him. “You could take a beatdown,” he said. “Maybe you’re not killed, but I think that’s serious.”

    Before prosecutors rested Wednesday morning, they called Los Angeles County Medical Examiner Lawrence Nguyen as their final witness. McKinney walked Nguyen through a series of harrowing, brightly lit autopsy photos showing the 11 gunshot wounds on Hussle’s dead body. The never-before-seen images caused some observers in the packed courtroom audience, including a friend who arrived with Douglas, to gasp. One showed a gunshot entry and exit wound near the top of Hussle’s head.

    Nguyen said one bullet entered Hussle’s right abdomen, blasted through his liver and severed his spinal cord. The doctor said that injury would have left Hussle paralyzed had he survived. Nguyen said he believes Hussle was struck by 11 separate bullets, though it was possible one bullet hit his elbow and then re-entered his body somewhere else. He said the rapper suffered “a significant amount of bleeding,” with more than a liter of blood found pooled in his chest.

    Jurors took notes throughout the last day of evidence and were ordered back to court Thursday morning for closing arguments.

    Nipsey Hussle, born Ermias Asghedom, grew up in South Los Angeles and was already a Grammy-nominated musician, father of two and local philanthropist known for investing back in his community when he was killed. He won two posthumous Grammys for his songs “Racks in the Middle” and “Higher” shortly after he died.

    In a December 2018 interview with Rolling Stone, Nipsey shared why his acclaimed Victory Lap album, which garnered his first Grammy nomination, meant so much to him: “There are life stories on there. You look at other albums that have been recognized in the past and you see the same quality. I know it’s my music, and I’m close to it.”

    Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Email Reddit WhatsApp

    Related Posts

    Tyler Farr Suffers a ‘Severe Concussion’ in Vehicle Crash

    June 15, 2026

    Oliver Tree, ‘Life Goes On’ Singer, Dead at 32

    June 15, 2026

    Top 10 Riley Green Songs; Country’s Most Important Modern Artists

    June 14, 2026

    All of the Celebrity Appearances

    June 14, 2026

    Alan Jackson Museum Announced for Downtown Nashville

    June 13, 2026

    Post Malone’s Big A– Stadium Tour Set List Is Here! [PICTURES]

    June 12, 2026

    Popular Posts

    The Best Horror Book Deals of Amazon Prime Days

    Books

    8 of the Best Self-Help Books for Kids

    Books

    More Details About Jeremy Renner’s Snow Plowing Accident Have Been Revealed, Including His Chest Collapsing

    Film

    9 Habits Of Well-Groomed Men

    Fashion & Style

    LISTEN: Kane Brown Remains Committed With ‘Leave You Alone’

    Music

    Is There A Community To Find A Sexting Partner?

    Celebrity News

    How To Wear Leopard Print In 5 Easy Ways

    Fashion & Style

    Categories
    • Books (2,737)
    • Celebrity News (3,448)
    • Cover Story (34)
    • Events (40)
    • Fashion & Style (2,741)
    • Film (2,973)
    • Horror News (3,115)
    • Interviews (93)
    • Music (4,755)
    • News (54)
    • Television (2,337)
    • Uncategorized (4)

    Archives

    HIghlights

    How To Prepare Library Pride Displays: Book Censorship News, May 12, 2023

    Books By Admin

    With Pride just a few weeks away, it’s time for library workers to start thinking…

    ‘Stranger in the Woods’ – A Chilling Fight for Survival Begins on Valentine’s Day [Poster]

    January 13, 2024

    Godzilla X Kong Director Adam Wingard Teases Plans For A Third Movie

    March 23, 2024

    Watch Angela Lansbury’s Final Pre-Recorded Interview Following Her Death

    October 12, 2022
    Categories
    • Books (2,737)
    • Celebrity News (3,448)
    • Cover Story (34)
    • Events (40)
    • Fashion & Style (2,741)
    • Film (2,973)
    • Horror News (3,115)
    • Interviews (93)
    • Music (4,755)
    • News (54)
    • Television (2,337)
    • Uncategorized (4)
    HORROR
    • ‘Scream’ Just Became One of Only Six Horror Franchises to Cross  Billion at the Box Office‘Scream’ Just Became One of Only Six Horror Franchises to Cross $1 Billion at the Box Office
    • DC Horror Movie ‘Clayface’ Moves Theatrical Release Closer to HalloweenDC Horror Movie ‘Clayface’ Moves Theatrical Release Closer to Halloween
    • ‘Practical Magic 2’ Moves September Release Up One Week‘Practical Magic 2’ Moves September Release Up One Week
    • ‘Under Paris 2’ – Alexandre Aja Directing Sequel to Netflix’s Hit Shark Attack Movie‘Under Paris 2’ – Alexandre Aja Directing Sequel to Netflix’s Hit Shark Attack Movie
    USEFUL LINKS
    • Contact us
    • About us
    • Amazon Disclaimer
    • DMCA / Copyrights Disclaimer
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms and Conditions
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest YouTube LinkedIn Reddit TikTok
    © 2026 Showbiz Now Magazine. All rights reserved. All articles, images, product names, logos, and brands are property of their respective owners. All company, product and service names used in this website are for identification purposes only. Use of these names, logos, and brands does not imply endorsement unless specified. By using this site, you agree to the Terms of Use and Privacy Policy.

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.