LAS VEGAS — A Nevada judge said Tuesday she wasn't immediately convinced of the legality of an effort by a hip-hop music figure to underwrite a $750,000 bond to free a former Los Angeles-area gang leader from jail ahead of his murder trial in the 1996 killing of hip-hop music legend Tupac Shakur in Las Vegas.
Clark County District Court Judge Carli Kierny expressed doubts after hearing arguments about granting Duane ''Keffe D'' Davis' release to house arrest with electronic monitoring, but said she would review financial records submitted by his benefactor — Cash Jones, a music record executive who has managed performers such as rappers The Game and Blueface. In recent years, he's gotten into street fights and made controversial comments about the late Tupac Shakur and Nipsey Hussle.
The judge promised to post a brief description of her decision in the court record. She did not say when.
Davis' attorney, Carl Arnold, told reporters outside court that he hoped for a decision later Tuesday. Prosecutors Binu Palal and Marc DiGiacomo declined to comment.
Jones, who uses the moniker ''Wack 100," offered sworn testimony by internet video link from an unspecified place in California. Under questioning by Arnold, Jones said he paid 15% of the bail amount, or $112,500, as ''a gift'' from his business accounts to secure Davis' release.
''I know him in passing,'' Jones said of Davis, a 61-year-old self-described head of a Crips gang sect in the Los Angeles suburb of Compton who has been held at the Clark County Detention Center since his arrest last September. Davis and his attorneys have said he isn't getting proper medical care in jail following treatment before his arrest for colon cancer.
''I know his son," Jones said of Davis. "We talked a few times. I know he's having an issue with his health.''
''He's always been a monumental person in our community,'' Jones added during questioning by Palal. ''Especially the urban community.''