Detectives confirmed the suspect, Eric Holder, 29, was in custody.
Nipsey Hussle was fatally shot Sunday outside a store he co-owned in South Los Angeles. His death was met with grief and outrage by residents in the Crenshaw neighborhood where he grew up and by people across the music industry.
According to video evidence cited by the police, Holder reportedly walked up to the rapper and two other men who were with him several times before leaving and returning armed with a handgun. He fired several times before fleeing in a white Chevy Cruze that was driven by an unidentified woman.
“In this case as in every case, it’s the community’s involvement that makes us safer,” said the Los Angeles police chief, Michel Moore, at a news conference Tuesday.
Holder was arrested in Bellflower, California, shortly after 1 p.m. Tuesday after a member of the public called the police. Los Angeles sheriff’s deputies detained Holder and he was then taken into LAPD custody.
Moore did not reveal much information about the motive for the shooting but noted that Nipsey Hussle and Holder appeared engaged in a personal dispute.
Moore also said that a stampede at a vigil for the rapper Monday night, in which more than a dozen people were injured, was the result of a panic stemming from a struggle over a handgun that was pulled out but not fired. On Tuesday, in an effort to contain potential violence amid intense interest and heightened tensions, police officers cordoned off access to the memorial outside the store.
Nipsey Hussle, born Ermias Joseph Asghedom, was remembered by city officials Tuesday as a gifted artist and passionate advocate for the South Los Angeles community in which he was raised.
“He was working closely with the city to help save lives and transform lives, even as he was doing that for himself,” Mayor Eric Garcetti said at the news conference. “He was a tireless advocate for the young people of this city and of this world, to lift them up with the possibility of not being imprisoned by where you come from or past mistakes.”
This article originally appeared in The New York Times.