Vallejo Times Herald Article on Dre

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Apr 25, 2002
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Friends of Mac Dre struggle to understand

By RACHEL RASKIN-ZRIHEN, Times-Herald staff writer

Family, friends and fans of Mac Dre were trying to make sense of the rapper's violent death Tuesday as investigators sifted through evidence that included a bullet-riddled van and what may be the suspect's 2003 Infiniti G36.
Dre, whose given name was Andre Hicks, was killed early Monday in Kansas City, Mo., when an unknown suspect fired through the vehicle on U.S. 71. Though the driver crawled to safety, Dre was thrown from the van and pronounced dead at the scene.

Kansas City police reported late Tuesday that Dre died from a bullet wound. He was 34.

"He was like the Beatles or Elvis, but on a smaller scale to a lot of people," said Vallejo native James Trujillo, otherwise known as Jay Tee of the rap group, N2DEEP. "I've known Dre since the late 1980s. He was my biggest influence. He was a for-real superstar."

Kansas City Police Department spokesman Darin Snapp said homicide detectives are following leads and releasing few details.

"There were about a dozen bullet holes (in the van), I can say that, but I can't say what kind of gun was used," Snapp said. "Only one person knows that, and that way, when we catch the perpetrator, he won't be able to say, I read it in the newspaper.' "

Snapp said police have "some pretty good leads on it," and are questioning "someone who's cooperating. We should know something by the end of the week."

Police linked the Infiniti to the shooting but declined to specify what the evidence was, reported Channel 9 in Kansas City. The vehicle was found with no license plates.

Dre had staged a concert in Kansas City, Kan., on Friday night and stayed in the area during the weekend.

Back in the Bay Area, despondent relatives and friends paid tribute to the pioneer rapper. "Life wasn't fair to Andre. It dealt him a pretty low deal, but he always managed to keep his spirits up. He'd look at you in a certain way, and you'd know he was going to be OK," said Betty Landers of Vallejo, the grandmother of Hicks' 13-year-old child, Dran Hicks.

Landers described Hicks as her daughter's boyfriend - the man her daughter used to skip school to see - "a long, lanky kid trying to make people happy. He was funny as hell.

"I grew to love Andre. He was never Mac Dre to me. He left a legend for all of us to learn - not to give up on your dreams," Landers said.

Others, too, believe Hicks is too widely remembered for youthful mistakes.

"He tried so hard to be a good person. He was a good boy, and now that he's gone, he should be left alone with all the negative stuff," said Bernard Hicks, Dre's uncle, and the brother of Vallejo teacher and former City Council member Foster Hicks.

Andre Hicks spent several years in prison for his part in an attempted bank robbery, and was linked to a rash of robberies in the early 1990s by north Vallejo's Romper Room Gang. Even so, many said Hicks had pulled his life together.

"He was a very good person," said Marquetta Hall, Dre's stepmother. "He was a very young man when he did those negative things he did. But he also funded children's programs in Sacramento, and did free concerts there and in the park by the North Vallejo Community Center, near the Country Club Crest where he had lived with his grandmother."

Dre would hand out turkeys in the Crest at Thanksgiving, said Hicks' half-sister, Jacquil Hicks.

"I'm not saying he was a saint, but he just did things, out of the kindness of his heart and wasn't the type who liked to brag," Hall said.

Hall said she met Hicks when he was about 9.

"He was the cutest little boy," Hall said. "He always said, When I get older I'm gonna be a rapper.' "

Hicks attended Peoples High School in Vallejo and was well-liked, if a little rowdy as a teenager, Hall said.

"But he was always well-mannered and respectful of his elders," Hall said. "I know he did some things here and there, but lots of people make bad choices in their past."

Hall said Hicks moved to Sacramento about four years ago to make a fresh start. Jacquil Hicks, 24, also of Sacramento, said she fondly recalls the early days in Vallejo with her brother.

"He was my only big brother, and I really looked up to him," she said. "He was my idol. I was a girl and I wanted to be him. I dressed up as him for Halloween in eighth grade at Vallejo Middle School and won the costume contest."

Jacquil Hicks said her famous brother inspired her to write, something she still does.

"I won a talent contest at Vallejo High School for rapping, because of his inspiration," she said.

"He wanted to be a real star and he knew he had to get away from all the negativity to get there and that's what he was doing," Jacquil Hicks said. "He was getting out of all that rowdiness. He'd gotten more mature, and he was on his way. It's really sad. It was too soon. He'd made it so far. He was almost there. It almost seems like there are forces that don't want to see people pull themselves out of the negative energy, because just when they start to do it, something like this happens."
 
Jan 14, 2004
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#11
if friends are stuggling to find out why and what happened.. then why the fuck wont the people that were with him that night speak out, why don't they talk to the police? why did they lock themselves in their hotel room and not answer the door when the cops had questions.. ? shit makes no sense at all and w/o them speaking on shit nothing is gonna happen, dont let that we found leads bullshit fool u.. theyre just trying to scare who did it.. leads in a stolen car? like what? fingerprints? but no suspects? wtf could they possible have.. w/o people that were w/ him speaking out on what happened that night no one is gonna ever know the truth
 

CoopDVill

Super Moderator
May 4, 2003
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#12
Great Post, They Took My Niggas Fame From Him Twice First With locking Him Up After He Was Setting Trends In The 80's Now They Took His Life In The '04 Just When He Was Bouncing Back From All That Negativity This Is The First Post That I Read From An Article That Showed What We All Felt About Dre Those Who Knew Him And Those Who Felt Like They Knew Him...R.I.P To A Bay Area Legend... Mac Motherfucking Dre Thizz In Peace...
 

mrtonguetwista

$$ Deep Pockets $$
Feb 6, 2003
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Didn't want to start another thread so I posted this news story in here...if that's cool

When Wanda Salvatto heard Monday that her son was dead, she didn't trust the news. After all, Andre Hicks -- better known as Vallejo rapper Mac Dre -- had been slain three times before, according to rumors.

But at 4 p.m., Salvatto learned the latest buzz was true: Hicks, 34, was gunned down early Monday in a freeway shooting in Kansas City, Mo., where he was performing at a concert, police there said.

No motive was immediately revealed, but Hicks' death -- like his life -- seemed to befit his lyrics, as well as the rumor-filled lore of hard-core rap and the history of Vallejo's vaunted hip-hop scene. "V-Town" produced stars like E-40, Young KYOZ, Mac Mall and Coolio Da Unda Dog, but its music scene also has been linked to, and touched by, violence.

Police say Hicks was once part of Vallejo's northside Romper Room Gang, which was suspected of committing a series of bank robberies and pizza parlor stickups in the early 1990s. When his career was interrupted by a five-year prison stint for conspiring to rob a bank in Fresno, Hicks released a single he recorded on a jailhouse phone, taunting the police officers who put him behind bars.

But Salvatto said her son's story had changed after his 1996 release. He recorded album after album -- more than 20 in all -- and recently broke through on hip-hop radio stations, including KMEL, which Monday mourned Hicks by playing his tunes and airing pained calls from fans.

Hicks moved from Vallejo to Sacramento for a "fresh start" about four years ago, his mother said. He started a record label, Thizz Entertainment, and dreamed of hiring and mentoring teenagers he could steer away from the trouble he knew so well. His albums -- like this year's "Ronald Dregan: Dreganomics" -- began mining political themes.

"He wouldn't want his legacy to be that," Salvatto said of her son's legal problems. "He got through that and had been living a healthy, clean life. ... He started in the streets, and he got himself out."

"The part that hurts the most," she said, was that Hicks was killed after years of trying to reclaim his career after prison. "He was about to blow up again. It took him to this point to catch up. But he was determined."

Kansas City police officer Darin Snapp said investigators weren't sure who had killed Hicks or why. At 3:30 a.m. Monday, Hicks was the passenger in a white van heading north on Highway 71 through Kansas City when someone in a second vehicle opened fire.

"The driver said he heard shots and started ducking," Snapp said.

The van swerved across a grass median and four southbound lanes, then crashed into a ditch. The driver ran down the highway to a store to call 911, Snapp said. Paramedics found Hicks dead from a gunshot wound.

Snapp said investigators were looking into Hicks' performance schedule to find out whether he could have met his killer there. Bay Area rappers are popular in Kansas City and often perform there.

Hicks was a successful rapper while he was still in high school. He first found the radio airwaves with a song titled, ironically, "Too Hard for the Radio." It spoke of Vallejo's "Romper Room kickin' on Leonard Street/Mac Dre full of the Hennessy."

He soon lost his friend and fellow rapper Michael Robinson -- a.k.a. The Mac -- who was shot dead in Vallejo while sitting in his car with his pregnant girlfriend. Hicks' most recent album pays tribute to Robinson.

Hicks is "one of the pioneers of Bay Area rap and one of the guys who put Vallejo on the map," said Ryan Miller of Alameda, who operates rapbay.com, an online music seller that received a flurry of interest in Mac Dre on Monday.

Hicks made bigger news in 1992 when Vallejo police caught him preparing to rob a Fresno bank with two friends. Hicks had recorded a song called "Punk Police" that included rhymes like, "Man, can't even find who's been robbin' you blind."

Claiming he was not guilty, Hicks released "Back N da Hood," which he said he had recorded from a Fresno jail. He rapped, "Detective Nichelman I'd like to thank you/You put me on the news and tried to spread the lie/Then record sales jumped to an all-time high."

Vallejo police Lt. Richard Nichelman said Monday that Hicks had a long criminal history but that he was saddened to hear of his death. "It's a shame another young guy lost his life," he said. "I hope he was on the right track."
 

B-Buzz

lenbiasyayo
Oct 21, 2002
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#17
Thanks for posting that article Jay Tee, its good to see one that concentrated on the positive in Dres life instead of the negative


""He was my only big brother, and I really looked up to him," she said. "He was my idol. I was a girl and I wanted to be him. I dressed up as him for Halloween in eighth grade at Vallejo Middle School and won the costume contest.""
Thats Classic
 

Nuttkase

not nolettuce
Jun 5, 2002
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#18
Thanks for the article JayTee....I'm bumping "The Game Is....Thick Pt. 2" right now. It's such a shame that raw talent like Dre was taken so early in life.

R.I.P. Andre Hicks.........

Nuttkace