Carolina Slim
Superstar
My personal take on the documentary....
I FULLY believe the killer's side of the story. He was 15 years old and a short nikka in the heart of violent ass Chicago. After his dad died, he probably had fear in his heart each day in Chicago especially since he was never really bout that life growing up. Now mind you, the kid was going to the school to handle some goon who stole money from his sister and surprisingly, he didn't bust his gun on the goon and the altercation ended peacefully. This shows dude has a heart and was happy he didn't have to bust his gun but still handed the problem the best way he could. His main mistake was not going home and still hanging around the area like a bum with his homeboy
Now all you bums siding with Benji, hear me out. Dude was an excellent basketball player but had you paid more attention to the film, Dude was a pure simp to that high school crush of his. Everyone was commenting like as if to say "he was the next big thing but he was sweating this hoe, why??" and anytime she dissed him in public, he'd spaz out. YAll remember Benji pushed a teacher over that hoe in the hallway and got suspended. So if he would push a teacher without thinking (which most nikkas would never do), Im quite sure that nikka would push a 5'6' bum outside of a corner store and then talk greasy because he knew he was the basketball GAWD around town but this time, he bumped into the wrong nikka and got caught slippin.
Now, I dont condone this senseless violent shyt at all but since this is a film portraying how a young future got cut short so it wouldnt go into full detail how some of these young basketball prospects think their invincible and do whatever the fukk they want once they get some media shine. I mean, you heard Benji's brother say "I wish benji wouldn't have acted like me on that day" meaning the brother was leading that nikka wrong on a morality side on handing confrontations. Thats why its important families teach kids right from wrong at an early age because the decisions you make in life truly can affect in your future espcially in the hood.
Both guys were wrong, just one guy was more wrong than the other by killing dude so this is a simple case of "keep your emotions in check especially in dem skreets!"
P.S. very shocked no one mentioned how Wood Harris a.k.a "Avon Barksdale" was narrating this documentary but his character in "The Wire" had numerous young males doing wild violent shyt and and If i remember right, I think he put the hit out to shoot and kill the promising young "Wallace" character
The Wire Clip: Bodie and Poot Kill Wallace - YouTube
I smell you on this post. Only point I would contend with was the bolded part; only reason that Billy didn't have to go to the burner was because the situation was already squashed by the time him and his man got to Simeon. I don't think there even was an altercation.
But it did sound like, even from his peoples, that Benji knew he was "that nikka" and thought he could do no wrong, and that's what did him in.

i was just trollin about the Wood Harris reference but I didnt know he was from Chicago
" fukkin fakkits they aint care bout that man and 30 yrs later still dnt

good with son; he was gonna take us places". And he'd have been right there on that "Broke" documentary ESPN did a couple weeks earlier. 
