They warned him five times.

Five formal protection orders.
Five documented threats.
Five chances for the system to intervene.

On the morning of December 16, 2025, DJ Warrick Stock — widely known as DJ Warras — stepped into Johannesburg’s CBD believing he was going to a routine meeting. He never made it back out.

Within minutes, he was dead.

Shot in broad daylight.
In a busy city centre.
With witnesses nearby.
And CCTV cameras rolling.

This was not a mugging gone wrong. This was not a crime of opportunity. According to sources close to the investigation, nothing was stolen. The shooters moved with precision. One detail has stunned South Africa more than any other: one of the suspects was wearing what appeared to be a security uniform.

An execution — not a robbery.

A Man Who Knew Too Much

DJ Warras wasn’t just a beloved media personality. Off air, he was deeply involved in the operations of JT VIP, a private security company that had begun targeting one of Johannesburg’s most dangerous underground economies: hijacked buildings.

More than 200 buildings in the city are believed to be under the control of criminal syndicates — structures illegally occupied, rented out, and used as cash machines for organized crime. The money fuels drugs, weapons, and corruption. And for years, almost no one dared interfere.

DJ Warras did.

According to insiders, JT VIP’s work was hitting syndicates where it hurt most — their income. Evictions. Securing properties. Cutting off access points. Naming names.

That’s when the threats started.

Calls. Messages. Warnings.
“You’re crossing a line.”
“Walk away.”
“You won’t be protected forever.”

DJ Warras didn’t ignore them. He did everything “right.” He went to the courts. He obtained five protection orders against individuals believed to be connected to these syndicates.

But protection on paper didn’t translate to protection on the street.

The Phone Call That Sealed His Fate

Investigators are now focused on a single phone call made hours before the killing.

Sources say DJ Warras was lured to the location under the pretext of a legitimate security-related meeting. Whoever called him knew his routine. Knew his movements. Knew he would come alone.

CCTV footage reportedly shows him arriving calmly — then being approached. Seconds later, shots rang out.

The gunmen fled.

No arrests.
No suspects named.
Three days later — silence.

A Uniform Meant to Protect

Perhaps the most disturbing detail is the alleged involvement of a man wearing a security uniform during the hit.

In a country already battling distrust in private and public security, the image of an execution carried out by someone dressed as a protector has shaken the public.

Was it a disguise?
Or something far more sinister?

If the uniform was real, it raises terrifying questions about infiltration — and how deeply criminal networks may have embedded themselves into legitimate security structures.

A Pattern That Can’t Be Ignored

DJ Warras is not the first DJ to die violently in South Africa. Over the past few years, several high-profile figures in the music and entertainment industry have been murdered under suspicious circumstances.

Different cities.
Different stories.
But the same unanswered questions.

Some had business interests. Some had community influence. Some were outspoken.

All are now dead.

Is this coincidence — or a pattern?

The Shadow of City Hall

Even darker allegations are beginning to surface: possible connections between syndicates controlling hijacked buildings and corrupt city officials.

Activists and insiders have long claimed that illegal occupations could not operate at this scale without protection — whether through bribes, silence, or deliberate inaction.

If DJ Warras was threatening that ecosystem, then his death wasn’t just personal — it was strategic.

Remove the man. Send the message.

A Family Left With Questions

At his memorial, DJ Warras was remembered as a son, a father, a mentor, and a man who believed in doing the right thing — even when it became dangerous.

“My father was my hero,” a family member said through tears. “He believed the law would protect him.”

It didn’t.

Now his family is left with grief — and a growing fear that justice may never come.

The Loud Silence

Three days after the assassination, there were still no arrests.

No public suspects.
No press conference explaining failures.
No reassurance that those responsible will be caught.

Just a growing sense that DJ Warras knew too much — and paid the ultimate price for it.

South Africans are asking the same question over and over:

If a man with five protection orders can be executed in broad daylight, what protection does anyone really have?

Until that question is answered, DJ Warras’ death will not just be a tragedy — it will be a warning.