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Craig Mack's Ex Wife Claims Someone Purposely Infected Him With AIDS

Roxanne Alexis Hill-Johnson told "The Art Of Dialogue" that she and Craig Mack's kids didn't know his diagnosis until right before he passed.

By Skyler SaundersPublished 13 days ago 3 min read

Ever since the death of Eazy-E, the hip hip world has been shaken. With Craig Mack’s death also from complications from HIV/AIDS. However, Craig Mack’s former spouse holds that he was injected with the virus.

While she has no proof or evidence, she just suspects that the cardiac arrest had been brought on by the fact he’d refused treatment prior to his demise.

When he had trouble in the industry, he had retreated to a faith-based group. Whether it was shame or some kind of feeling towards the disease, he never disclosed the fact he had the monster.

It had been the idea that he was gay or caught the virus from a streetwalker. All of that is hearsay. He didn’t want his family to know while he was still alive.

What came after was a period of unawareness and then a revelation. Roxanne Alexis Hill-Johnson has declared that her late husband was poisoned.

No one can tell her anything about Mac’s last days in existence. While Diddy is never mentioned in her words, she is pushing the narrative that Mack had been stuck with a needle full of HIV.

His story is a largely personal and tragic one. The understanding of his particular case spells out the circumstances of what led to the way he departed from this life.

To be angry about the way he died back in 2018, is totally justified. Hill-Jackson may be still going through the process of seeing what residuals are available to her and two children.

Why Craig never said anything about his condition is anyone’s guess. In a world where the "environment" has taken over the spotlight instead of HIV/AIDS, people say “oh there’s drugs you can take, you’ll be alright.”

Such was not the case for Mr. Mack.

It’s still pretty messy as a result of the publishing and master recordings that may or may not have been released to Hill-Johnson.

If she takes on in the same way that Eric Wright had been stuck with a needle as well, she could open up a case.

In the thought that she should reap the benefits of his labor, she could at the same time be leading the charge to discover the facts about her fallen ex-husband.

The sorrow that exists in his widow is what should drive her to keep going on despite the difficulty of knowing that Mack may have struggled with this illness.

From the point of view of a woman who is attempting to get the goods from what Mack worked for, she shows that she is adamant about the care of her and her children.

What’s most important here is the fact she seeks to get justice for a horrific disease that claimed Mack’s life.

If Hill-Johnson better comprehends her role as someone who can explore the possibilities of the depths of the virus, she might get a benevolent outcome.

The version of the story doesn’t need to end on a flat note. It can rise in a crescendo and show that her efforts will one day pay off and bring her commitment full circle.

Instead of indulging her pity and anger, she can extend to the medical community and reap information on this matter. Mack might have wanted it this way. As a fervent convert to an alternative version of Christianity, he had in him a passion for gospel music. He had a sense of connecting with his faith and to his family.

Without being macabre, it is a way for Mack to be frank from the grave. The help he could offer is to be exhumed and see if the medical professionals can ascertain anything of worth. That might bring not closure, but healing.

grief

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Skyler Saunders

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