Tens of thousands remember slain rapper Nipsey Hussle
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Thousands of people streamed into a public memorial in Los Angeles on Thursday for slain rapper Nipsey Hussle, who was gunned down in the city last month.
Free tickets were all snapped up this week for the two-hour event at the 21,000-capacity Staples Center, a popular sports and pop concert venue. Performers have not been announced.
Fans, many wearing T-shirts bearing Hussle's face, or carrying flowers, lined up early to get into the downtown venue, watched by dozens of police in cars, on motorcycles and on bicycles.
The memorial will be livestreamed on Black Entertainment Television (BET) and followed by a 25-mile long procession through the streets of south Los Angeles where the musician was raised and shot dead on March 31.
Mourners begin to arrive at Staples Center ahead of a memorial for rapper Nipsey Hussle, Los Angeles, April 11, 2019. /Reuters Photo

Mourners begin to arrive at Staples Center ahead of a memorial for rapper Nipsey Hussle, Los Angeles, April 11, 2019. /Reuters Photo

Security was tight in and around the Staples Center because of Hussle's former connections with some notorious Los Angeles street gangs. A stampede erupted at a local vigil for Hussle last week after reports of a gunman in the crowd.
More recently Hussle, 33, had parlayed his fame into a role as a community organizer and activist combating gang violence. He was shot outside a clothing store he owned in south Los Angeles.
Los Angeles police last week arrested a 29-year-old man who has pleaded not guilty to murder charges. Police said the shooting was motivated by a personal dispute between Hussle and the suspect, Eric Ronald Holder, although they said it took place against a surge in gang-related violence and shootings in south Los Angeles in March.
Hussle, whose real name was Ermias Asghedom, was Grammy-nominated earlier this year for his debut studio album "Victory Lap." 
(Cover image: Fans fill the intersection while waiting for the funeral procession, Los Angeles, April 11, 2019. /Reuters Photo)
Source(s): Reuters