Here
is an exact copy of Tupac's 'Official Autopsy Report'. I do not know
if the report is authentic or not, so please do not ask me. I am
simply a scribe! This report was written by reporter Cathy Scott and
features in her book which details Tupac's death.
No one followed the
mortuary van carrying Tupac Shakur's body from the hospital to the morgue.
The van drove three blocks without being noticed. An autopsy was done the
evening of Sept. 13, 1996, almost immediately following his death,
according to authorities.
While the autopsy report is not deemed by Nevada state law to be public
information, the coroner's report is available to the public. However,
after I bought a copy for $5, an office employee later said it had been
given to me in error, and that they would not be releasing it to anyone
because of the ongoing homicide investigation. To my knowledge, I am the
only reporter to have a copy of that report. Six 35-millimeter photos
taken during and after the autopsy are on file at the coroner's office,
along with the autopsy report.
According to statements on the four-page coroner's report, Tupac Shakur's
remains were positively identified by his mother, Afeni Shakur. The
autopsy determined that Tupac didn't have any illegal drugs in his system.
He was, however, heavily sedated during his hospital stay, it says.
He had been shot in his right hand, right hip and right chest just under
his right arm. "I interviewed the decedent's mother, Afeni Shakur,
and she stated that the decedent was not married and he had no
children," coroner Investigator Ed Brown wrote in his report.
"She stated that Tupac A. Shakur was his name. She was not able to
give any more information than this."
After Tupac's arrival at University Medical Center immediately following
the shooting, a trauma center surgeon removed one bullet from Tupac's
pelvis area. In a conversation with Ed Brown at the hospital following
Tupac's death, the surgeon told Brown that Tupac's injuries included a
gunshot wound to his right chest with a "massive hemothorax" and
a gunshot wound to the right thigh with "the bullet palpable within
the abdomen." Tupac also had a gunshot wound to a right finger with a
fracture. The preoperative diagnosis was a gunshot wound to the chest and
abdomen and post-operative bleeding.
The one bullet remaining in Tupac's chest was not removed during surgery,
but during the autopsy, Coroner Ron Flud told me. It then became evidence,
he said.
When Tupac arrived at
the hospital's trauma center, he was wheeled into the recovery area and
"was resuscitated according to advanced trauma life support
protocol," the report said, and "a full trauma activation was
called."
He was placed on life support machines. Two liters of blood that had
hemorrhaged into his chest cavity were removed. His pulse was "very
thready and initially he had a minimal blood pressure, which rapidly
declined." He was taken immediately to the operating room for
operative intervention and further resuscitation. His right lung was
removed. The report states that Shakur underwent two operations. The first
started at 6:25 p.m. on Sept. 8 and lasted an hour. The surgery
"consisted of exploratory" procedures. The surgeon noted that it
appeared Tupac had had some prior surgery for bullet wounds on his upper
right chest area.
The second operation at
University Medical Center consisted of "ligation of bleeding"
and removal of a bullet from his pelvic area. It was done at midnight on
Sept. 8 and completed at 2:35 a.m. on Sept. 9. Tupac was pronounced dead
at 4:03 p.m. Sept. 13 Dr. James Lovett at University Medical Center. Clark
County Coroner Investigator Ed Brown was called to the hospital at 4:15
p.m.
"Upon my arrival ... I found no apparent life signs, and trauma was
observed to the right hand, right hip and right chest under the right arm,
apparently caused from gunshots.'' Death certificate details In February
1997, SUN reporter Cathy Scott went to the Clark County Office of Vital
Statistics and viewed Tupac Shakur's death certificate. The only copy
released was to his mother, Afeni Shakur. The original is on file with the
county.
It's against Nevada Revised Statute to forge or sign a public document,
including death certificates. The death certificate acts as the official
notice of death. It includes the following: Tupac Amaru Shakur was
pronounced dead by Dr. Lovett at 4:03 p.m. on Friday, Sept. 13, 1996, at
University Medical Center's Intensive Care Unit.
The one-page death certificate was filed with Clark County's vital records
section by County Coroner Ron Flud on Sept. 18, 1996. Dr. Ed Brown with
Coroner's office signed the certificate.
His mother, Afeni Shakur, made a positive identification of his body at 5
p.m. at the hospital. His body was then taken by Davis Mortuary to the
morgue, three blocks away. An autopsy was performed and the official cause
of death was respiratory failure and cardiopulmonary arrest in connection
with multiple gunshot wounds.
Shakur's occupation was listed as "rap singer" and the company
he worked for was shown as "Euphanasia" in Los Angeles, Calif.
A county seal was
stamped on the certificate, making it an official document.
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