LAS VEGAS -- A rapper with Oakland ties who was killed in a shooting and fiery crash Thursday on the Las Vegas Strip may have glorified the gangsta style in his videos, but family and associates said Ken Cherry was nothing like the image he portrayed.
Cherry, 27, who rapped under the name Kenny Clutch, died after someone in a black Range Rover shot at him about 4:20 a.m. Thursday on the Las Vegas Strip, police said.
"I can tell you this ... the world has lost a good man," said Cherry's 75-year-old aunt, Pat Sims of Oakland. "I'm not saying he didn't have his faults, but he was very kind, especially to older people.
Whatever happened in Vegas, I don't know about, but he was a very kind soul."
Cherry's
Screen shot from Kenny Clutch's Facebook page.
gray Maserati rapidly accelerated down Las Vegas Boulevard and through a red light after the shooting and struck a cab at the intersection of Flamingo Road. The cab burst into flames, killing the cabdriver and a passenger, police said. The coroner hasn't identified the taxi driver and his female passenger, but a family member identified the driver as Michael Boldon, 62, a Michigan native who moved to Vegas about a 1 1/2 years ago.The crumpled gray Maserati, which had no license plates, came to rest several feet away from the incinerated taxi. Cherry was pronounced dead at a hospital.
Police said bullets came from the black Range Rover as it raced with the Maserati toward a red light on the Vegas Strip.
Three more cars and
a utility truck collided at the crossroads, which is home to Bellagio, Caesars Palace and Bally's, leaving people six other injured as the Range Rover sped off, police said.Police continue to search for the Range Rover with dark tinted windows and custom rims that set off the fiery crash. Police said a passenger in the Maserati was cooperating with the investigation.
Sims said Friday that Cherry's parents were flying to Las Vegas to claim their 27-year-old son's body.
"Right now my heart is breaking," Sims said. "This has really been a tragedy. Kenny was just a delightful kid."
Sims, 75, said Cherry grew up in the Berkeley and Oakland area and attended two Catholic high schools there. He moved to Las Vegas in the last couple of years, though Sims said she didn't know her nephew was a rapper using the name Kenny Clutch. Cherry was particularly close with Sims' 106-year-old mother.
"I haven't been able to tell her," Sims said of Cherry's death.
Witnesses told police the shooting may have stemmed from a confrontation that Cherry had with an unknown number of men in the valet area of the Aria Resort and Casino, Clark County Sheriff Doug Gillespie said.
Such a violent ending was in stark
contrast to Cherry's personality, his attorney said."In my interaction with him, I can tell you that by the way he looked and what he put out there on his videos, he fit a certain stereotype," attorney Vicki Greco said. "But I also can tell you that away from that, he was anything but that kind of stereotype. He was honest. He was loyal. He was very dependable. Sometimes, he'd drop by my office just to say hello. He was a nice, nice kid."
Greco said she'd known Cherry for eight years and that "she considered him more of a friend than a client." She said she represented him in a civil case and two other cases "involving minor traffic tickets."
Two rap videos shot by Cherry and posted on YouTube each received a threatening comment from a user named 745Dolla but it was unclear how the user may have been tied to Cherry.
"He was into gangsta rap, but that's not who he was," Greco said. "He was doing it to make a living. He was a kid who was just trying to hustle and make it."
Law enforcement sources said Cherry had prior arrests in Oakland and Berkeley. He was convicted on a gun charge in 2007 stemming from an arrest in Berkeley, sources said, although details on that conviction weren't immediately available.
Several members of the Oakland rapping community have traveled to Las Vegas recently, sources said, for the filming of a rap video by another local rapper.
The dramatic predawn scene in Vegas that more than one tourist compared to something out of a violent action movie set off a frantic search for the occupants of the Range Rover. Sheahan said the Range Rover was last seen near the Venetian resort as it headed north from the shooting scene on Las Vegas Boulevard.
Sheahan said police have video from traffic cameras at the intersection and were checking hotel surveillance systems. The video will not be made public, he said.
"What happened will not be tolerated," Gillespie said.
Witnesses also told police the SUV and Maserati had come from the nearby CityCenter area, the home of Aria, just south of the site of the attack.
On the Strip, the fiery rampage shocked tourists.
"This doesn't happen where we come from, not on this scale," said Mark Thompson, who was visiting from Manchester, England, with his wife. "We get stabbings, and gang violence, but this is like something out of a movie. Like 'Die Hard' or something."
Las Vegas police officer Jose Hernandez said Friday that the Range Rover was being sought in Nevada and the neighboring states of California, Utah and Arizona. It had a car dealer's advertisement in place of a license plate.
Carolyn Jean Trimble, the older sister of the killed cab driver, said Boldon was a father and grandfather who was born and raised in Michigan and had been driving taxis since he moved to Las Vegas about 1 1/2 years ago. Boldon loved watching car races and drove a Mercedes when he wasn't in a cab.
"Everybody just loved him," Trimble said. "When that car hit that cab, Mike had to be in there talking and laughing."
The area near the scene has been the site of high-profile violence in the past.
Rapper Tupac Shakur was killed in a drive-by in 1996 about a block away under similar circumstances, as assailants opened fire on his luxury sedan from a vehicle on Flamingo Road. The killing has never been solved.
Staff writers Katie Nelson and the Associated Press contributed to this report.
Cherry, 27, who rapped under the name Kenny Clutch, died after someone in a black Range Rover shot at him about 4:20 a.m. Thursday on the Las Vegas Strip, police said.
"I can tell you this ... the world has lost a good man," said Cherry's 75-year-old aunt, Pat Sims of Oakland. "I'm not saying he didn't have his faults, but he was very kind, especially to older people.
Whatever happened in Vegas, I don't know about, but he was a very kind soul."
Cherry's
Screen shot from Kenny Clutch's Facebook page.gray Maserati rapidly accelerated down Las Vegas Boulevard and through a red light after the shooting and struck a cab at the intersection of Flamingo Road. The cab burst into flames, killing the cabdriver and a passenger, police said. The coroner hasn't identified the taxi driver and his female passenger, but a family member identified the driver as Michael Boldon, 62, a Michigan native who moved to Vegas about a 1 1/2 years ago.The crumpled gray Maserati, which had no license plates, came to rest several feet away from the incinerated taxi. Cherry was pronounced dead at a hospital.
Police said bullets came from the black Range Rover as it raced with the Maserati toward a red light on the Vegas Strip.
Three more cars and
a utility truck collided at the crossroads, which is home to Bellagio, Caesars Palace and Bally's, leaving people six other injured as the Range Rover sped off, police said.Police continue to search for the Range Rover with dark tinted windows and custom rims that set off the fiery crash. Police said a passenger in the Maserati was cooperating with the investigation.
Sims said Friday that Cherry's parents were flying to Las Vegas to claim their 27-year-old son's body.
"Right now my heart is breaking," Sims said. "This has really been a tragedy. Kenny was just a delightful kid."
Sims, 75, said Cherry grew up in the Berkeley and Oakland area and attended two Catholic high schools there. He moved to Las Vegas in the last couple of years, though Sims said she didn't know her nephew was a rapper using the name Kenny Clutch. Cherry was particularly close with Sims' 106-year-old mother.
"I haven't been able to tell her," Sims said of Cherry's death.
Witnesses told police the shooting may have stemmed from a confrontation that Cherry had with an unknown number of men in the valet area of the Aria Resort and Casino, Clark County Sheriff Doug Gillespie said.
Such a violent ending was in stark
contrast to Cherry's personality, his attorney said."In my interaction with him, I can tell you that by the way he looked and what he put out there on his videos, he fit a certain stereotype," attorney Vicki Greco said. "But I also can tell you that away from that, he was anything but that kind of stereotype. He was honest. He was loyal. He was very dependable. Sometimes, he'd drop by my office just to say hello. He was a nice, nice kid."
Greco said she'd known Cherry for eight years and that "she considered him more of a friend than a client." She said she represented him in a civil case and two other cases "involving minor traffic tickets."
Two rap videos shot by Cherry and posted on YouTube each received a threatening comment from a user named 745Dolla but it was unclear how the user may have been tied to Cherry.
"He was into gangsta rap, but that's not who he was," Greco said. "He was doing it to make a living. He was a kid who was just trying to hustle and make it."
Law enforcement sources said Cherry had prior arrests in Oakland and Berkeley. He was convicted on a gun charge in 2007 stemming from an arrest in Berkeley, sources said, although details on that conviction weren't immediately available.
Several members of the Oakland rapping community have traveled to Las Vegas recently, sources said, for the filming of a rap video by another local rapper.
The dramatic predawn scene in Vegas that more than one tourist compared to something out of a violent action movie set off a frantic search for the occupants of the Range Rover. Sheahan said the Range Rover was last seen near the Venetian resort as it headed north from the shooting scene on Las Vegas Boulevard.
Sheahan said police have video from traffic cameras at the intersection and were checking hotel surveillance systems. The video will not be made public, he said.
"What happened will not be tolerated," Gillespie said.
Witnesses also told police the SUV and Maserati had come from the nearby CityCenter area, the home of Aria, just south of the site of the attack.
On the Strip, the fiery rampage shocked tourists.
"This doesn't happen where we come from, not on this scale," said Mark Thompson, who was visiting from Manchester, England, with his wife. "We get stabbings, and gang violence, but this is like something out of a movie. Like 'Die Hard' or something."
Las Vegas police officer Jose Hernandez said Friday that the Range Rover was being sought in Nevada and the neighboring states of California, Utah and Arizona. It had a car dealer's advertisement in place of a license plate.
Carolyn Jean Trimble, the older sister of the killed cab driver, said Boldon was a father and grandfather who was born and raised in Michigan and had been driving taxis since he moved to Las Vegas about 1 1/2 years ago. Boldon loved watching car races and drove a Mercedes when he wasn't in a cab.
"Everybody just loved him," Trimble said. "When that car hit that cab, Mike had to be in there talking and laughing."
The area near the scene has been the site of high-profile violence in the past.
Rapper Tupac Shakur was killed in a drive-by in 1996 about a block away under similar circumstances, as assailants opened fire on his luxury sedan from a vehicle on Flamingo Road. The killing has never been solved.
Staff writers Katie Nelson and the Associated Press contributed to this report.