Napoleon stated he has no sympathy for Keefe's predicament while speaking to The Art Of Dialogue, which was, ironically, one of the places where Keefe blabbed about his involvement in the Tupac case.
He admitted that he never had the patience to watch the entirety of a Keefe interview, but he believes that the man's clout-seeking tactics finally caught up with him because he was openly boasting about being a passenger in the vehicle that killed Tupac.
The rapper said that Keefe's decision to revisit the circumstances behind Tupac's murder nearly 30 years later at the age of 60 was a bad idea.
Suge Knight, who was driving the BMW when Tupac and Pac were shot, reiterated this view when he said that if Tupac had survived the shooting, he would not want Keefe to languish in prison.
Suge Knight, who talked to TMZ earlier this week from prison, triple-downed on his unwillingness to implicate Keefe in any way and denied that Keefe's relative, the late Orlando Anderson, was the one who fired the shot.
Orlando, Keefe's nephew, was shot and killed in a shooting in 1998, despite the fact that he was long thought to be the gunman. The six guys who took part in the 1996 shooting are all still alive, but only Suge and Keefe remain.
With a sprinkle of conspiracy theory, Tupac's father also cast doubt on Orlando as the shooter, asserting that the government killed his son and used Keefe as a pawn in the process.