Quayle decried the “irresponsible corporate act” that Warner and Interscope committed by pressing 2Pacalypse Now. The trooper’s family sued Interscope and its parent company, Time Warner, along with the 21-year-old rapper, Tupac Shakur, whose work had supposedly animated the killing. The accused was said to have had 2Pacalypse Now in the tape deck of the stolen truck he was driving at the time of the shooting. There had been a murder in Texas a teenager was accused of fatally shooting a state trooper during a traffic stop. In September of 1992, Vice-President Dan Quayle called on Interscope to pull a record called 2Pacalypse Now off of retail shelves. Photo: Al Pereira/Michael Ochs Archives/Getty Images
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