Craig Mack’s ex-wife alleges that the rapper was intentionally infected with HIV as part of a conspiracy
Roxanne Alexis Hill-Johnson asserts that the legendary bad boy was “poisoned” while working in the music business.
Following a string of startling allegations made by his ex-wife, Craig Mack’s legacy is once again in the public eye.
In a recent interview with The Art of Dialogue, Roxanne Alexis Hill Johnson expressed her opinion that the rapper of “Flava In Ya Ear” was targeted rather than unintentionally acquiring AIDS.
At the age of 47, Mack, the first big star of Diddy’s Bad Boy Records in the early 1990s, passed away in March 2018.
Although HIV and AIDS issues were ultimately cited as the official reason of his death, Hill Johnson contends that a far darker conspiracy was at work behind the scenes in the music business.
Hill Johnson claims that until two weeks before the rapper passed away, she and her two kids were unaware of the rapper’s actual physical condition. She said, “The kids knew he had been sick, but no one told them what was wrong.” A coroner later told her that Mack had probably been fighting the illness for a full ten years.
According to Hill Johnson’s calculations, he would have been back in New York during the onset of his symptoms. During this time, he lived in the city that was home to Bad Boy’s headquarters. The label is currently under increased scrutiny because its founder is still behind bars on charges of sex trafficking and racketeering.
Hill Johnson was adamant that the rumors that surfaced after Mack’s diagnosis was made public did not fit his lifestyle.
When she was interviewed, she said, “I think he got sick on purpose.” She rejected any rumors about the rapper’s sexual orientation and characterized him as a “very heterosexual man” who relished the company of ladies. “He wasn’t gay.” She accused someone of getting to him, suggesting that the virus was used against him.
She even remembered the terrifying advice Mack once offered to another male performer, telling him to “be careful” because people in the business would want to “poison” him with an STD.
Mack publicly condemned his rap career during his latter years in a South Carolina religious colony, which was also discussed in the interview.
According to Hill Johnson, Mack either neglected to tell his family about his therapy during those years or refused to take medication for his illness.
Mack’s death certificate stated HIV/AIDS problems, but his family first honored his wishes by informing the world that he had congestive heart failure, according to a Rolling Stone story last year.
Given these fresh accusations, it appears that the mystery surrounding the hip-hop pioneer’s passing is still very much open.