
In a stunning twist to one of Detroit's longest-running mysteries -- 'Who Killed Strawberry?' -- Tamara' Greene's middle daughter posted a video to kick off the New Year that has racked up more than 3 million views.
In it, Ashly, Greene's daughter, claims her mother was killed by Detroit cops after she was caught 'having an affair' with former Detroit Mayor Kwame Kilpatrick. See the video HERE.
"Instead of paying my mother hush money, the mayor decided to pay off cops in the city to murder my mother," Ashly says in the video, which has also generated hundreds of comments on various social media platform.
Ashly did not respond immediately to WWJ's request for comment, nor did the Detroit Police Department. But note that Kilpatrick has never been charged with anything related to Greene's death, nor has any evidence ever surfaced that they even knew each other personally.
And no one has ever specially named a cop as a suspect in her death. The connection, as far as anyone knows, begins and ends with the fact the bullets fired at Greene were from the kind of gun commonly carried by police.
The focus of the podcast 'Who Killed Strawberry,' Greene was killed in a drive-by while sitting with her drug dealer boyfriend in a car parked on Detroit's northwest side, after a shift at a popular local strip club. Investigators got several tips that Greene had danced at a party at the Manoogian Mansion for then-Mayor Kwame Kilpatrick and had been attacked by his wife Carlita when she walked in on her on her husband's lap.
The story spiraled when Kilpatrick and his chief of staff Christine Beatty, with whom he was having an affair, fired the then-police chief and other investigators after they put the party rumor in reports and started investigating it.
In the end, Kilpatrick went to jail for financial crimes until he was pardoned by former President Donald Trump.
And no one was ever charged with killing Greene, although several investigators pointed fingers at a rival drug dealer of her then-boyfriend.
For his part, Kilpatrick is now remarried with a new baby and runs a virtual church. He also works for a charity that seeks to free those wrongfully incarcerated.