Chief Keef has finally addressed long-standing rumors surrounding one of the most controversial and painful chapters in Chicago drill history, reigniting intense debate across the hip-hop community.

In a raw and emotional interview clip that has quickly gone viral, Keef spoke on the unresolved 2014 killing of his cousin, Blood Money, a case that has fueled speculation and street rumors for years — particularly in relation to the late rapper King Von.

For nearly a decade, fans and online observers have attempted to piece together connections between O-Block tensions, ongoing rivalries, and the tragic cycle of violence that has defined Chicago’s drill scene. After King Von’s death in 2020, those theories intensified, with some suggesting deeper links between past conflicts and unresolved street beefs.

However, Keef’s latest comments neither confirm nor directly accuse. Instead, they paint a more complicated and emotionally charged picture.

“Blood Money was family… that hurt deep,” Keef said, reflecting on the personal loss that has followed him for years. “But Von? We had our issues, street politics got crazy — loyalty, opps, all that. I ain’t pointing fingers no more, but y’all know how Chicago move.”

While carefully worded, his statement carries significant emotional weight. Keef stopped short of naming anyone responsible, instead framing the situation within what he described as “street politics” — a term often used to describe the complex and often violent dynamics of loyalty, retaliation, and territorial conflict within Chicago’s drill culture.

He added a final, more cryptic reflection: “Some things stay in the streets… rest in peace to both.”

The comment has sparked immediate reaction online, with fans dissecting every word. Some interpret it as a form of closure, while others believe it reinforces long-standing unresolved tension between different factions within the Chicago rap scene.

The origins of this broader conflict trace back to 2014, when Chief Keef officially rebranded his collective from Glory Boys Entertainment (GBE) to Glow Gang, marking a shift in identity but not necessarily easing underlying tensions within the Chicago scene.

Despite the name change, friction between Glow Gang and O’Block continued to escalate. According to accounts previously shared by Tay600, internal disputes reportedly existed between figures such as Boss Top from O’Block and Blood Money, including a dispute involving a borrowed watch — a seemingly minor issue that allegedly contributed to growing mistrust and division between circles.

By early 2014, tensions were further inflamed when Glow Gang member Ballout publicly posted criticism aimed at Lil Durk and the OTF collective on Facebook. The post reignited old rivalries and added fuel to already fragile relationships between Chicago rap factions.

These overlapping incidents, both personal and public, have long been cited as part of the broader backdrop of conflict that shaped the drill era — a period marked by loyalty, retaliation, and escalating cycles of violence.

Now, with Chief Keef revisiting these events years later, the conversation around that era has resurfaced once again. His remarks do not provide new accusations, but they do reopen emotional wounds tied to loss, rivalry, and unresolved history.

For many fans, the statement has become more than just an interview clip — it is a reminder of how deeply intertwined music, street life, and real-world consequences were during the rise of Chicago drill.

As reactions continue to pour in, one question remains at the center of discussion: is this a step toward closure, or simply another chapter in a story that never truly ended?