The documentary about King Von, Rap's First Serial Killer, has been divisive, to say the least. The documentary, released on YouTube, was briefly removed before being restored to the site on Wednesday. However, fans of the late rapper have sprung to his defense. They call the documentary "speculation" and criticize the presentation of theory as fact.
Rap's First Serial Killer, created by Trap Lore Ross, alleges that King Von was responsible for at least ten murders prior to his 2020 death. This includes the death of Malcolm Stuckey, for which King Von was acquitted in 2017. Now Von's former partner, rapper Asian Doll, is speaking out about the documentary.
Asian Doll Calls Documentary "Not True"
In now-deleted tweets, Asian hit back about Rap's First Serial Killer, calling it "not true.". She also argued, "How They Tell A Story About Somebody That DIED before he could tell his own." Furthermore, the second tweet reposted to Instagram by theneighborhoodtalk is in reference to a claim that the documentary isn't saying anything that King Von hadn't already said. As a top comment on the documentary reads, “The wild part is folks can’t be mad at dude for making this documentary the same information he’s sharing is the same information that Von HIMSELF and his peers put out there, NOBODY ELSE. This information was already there he just cumulated all of it into one complete video.” Despite this belief, Asian makes a valid point.
The claim that Von was a "serial killer" is a heavily disputed one. Aside from the Stuckey murder that he was acquitted of, Von was attached to two other murders. He was arrested in 2019 in connection with the robbery and murder of Alexander Witherspoon in Atlanta. Von was released on a $300,000 bond. Additionally, in 2021, nearly a year after Von's death, Chicago police labeled Von as responsible for the 2014 murder of Gakirah "K.I." Barnes. However, they stated that they had been unable to prosecute him due to a lack of cooperating witnesses. Despite this, and whatever supporters of the documentary may have, Von's case will forever be unsolved. Unless full-proof evidence emerges, the claims that he was a "serial killer" are merely theories.
[via]