Warning: Some pictures may seem too graphic.
Rapper Takeoff, best known as one-third of the hip-hop group Migos, was shot and killed Tuesday morning.
Takeoff, 28, whose real name is Kirshnik Khari Ball, was gunned down when a fight broke out over a dice game at a private party at 810 Billiards & Bowling in downtown Houston.
Houston Police and fire officials arrived on the scene at around 2:40 a.m. following multiple reports of a shooting.
Cops located a large crowd of around 40 to 50 people inside the premises, including a man lying on the ground with a gunshot wound.
Takeoff was pronounced dead at the scene and two additional victims were taken to a nearby hospital for medical treatment.
Police did not release the identities of the victims, but said the person killed was a man in his late 20s.
The victim’s identity will not be released until it is verified by the county coroner and his family has been notified.
Police confirmed that Migos members Quavo and Takeoff were in attendance at the time of the shooting. Quavo, who is also Takeoff’s uncle, was not injured.
Video footage showed Quavo and others gathered around Takeoff, who was lying on the ground. The group was trying to move his body before they put him back down and shouted for help.
Just hours before the shooting, Takeoff was all smiles on Instagram as she shared a selfie from the bowling alley.
Takeoff formed the band along with his uncle, Quavo, and cousin, Offset, in 2008. Months before rebranding as Migos, the trio called themselves Polo Club.
They released their first mixtape “Juug Season” in 2011. Rapper Gucci Mane became a mentor for the trio which led them to their first signing with Atlanta label Quality Control.
Their first major track was “Versace” which dropped in 2013 and instantly became a multi-platinum record. Drake was later featured on the remix of the song, boosting its profile even more.
The song paved the way for the trio’s 2017 album “Culture” which later received a Grammy nomination in 2018 for “Best Rap Album.”
Migos also received a Grammy nomination that same year for “Best Rap Performance” for their hit track “Bad and Boujee.”
The trio reportedly split from Offset, who is married to rapper Cardi B, earlier this year, and instead rebranded as Unc & Phew.
“We stand on real deal loyalty, and sometimes that s–t ain’t displayed,” Quavo said earlier this year. “This ain’t got nothing to do with no label, no paperwork, no QC, nothing. This got something to do with the three brothers. And s–t, it is what it is. Right now, we gonna be the duo ’til time tell.”
Thug life has some serious drawbacks. One less American negro.
Adios amigo!!
Good riddence. Another SFN bites the dust. Put a C in front of rapper. Someone couldn’t stand his crappy music.