You forgot about tha time 60s came to Suges office after their homie got stomped out, had Suge coppin please like
I always wondered what the story was behind that because it seemed like there were no repercussions for what happened to him after the Quik incident. A tangent to that story I thought was interesting was that people from Tragniew had a role in that whole mess.
http://www.hiphopdx.com/index/inter...lever-line-and-tupac-s-menace-ii-society-days
So, the situation at the El Rey was [my homeboys being like], “Oh, this cat performing up here tonight; we going up there. This ain’t got nothing to do with Eiht. That’s the homie, but you mentioning the whole sector, which means you taking this to another level.” ‘Cause your personal beef with Eiht is your personal beef; I ain’t got nothing to do with that. But you wanna alienate the whole section, now that’s what’s gonna happen. And, you have to deal with them repercussions. So, they felt, as men, they needed to address that situation. So they went up there, he saw ‘em, and during his performance they figured, “We fin to just start a ruckus.” And it was only three of them, and there was a whole club full of cats [from other gangs]. But, that’s how they felt: “Us three fin’ to go up in here with this sea of Quik’s people and Bloods and other factions and we fin to go stand our ground and let ‘em know we from Tragniew Park and this is how it’s gonna go down.”
DX: And one of your homeboys got killed?
MC Eiht: Not one of my homeboys; somebody else who was in there from another set. I think he was from the [Rollin’] 60’s. And him being affiliated with the Crips, and being involved in this big mass confusion of sets and Bloods and Crips and fighting, he lost his life basically because in that moment there’s no [separation] like, “Oh, he’s not from Tragniew, he’s from here.” There’s none of that. You a Blood, you a Crip, and this is how it’s going down.