“THE NIGHT EVERYTHING CHANGED” — DJ WARRAS’ FINAL HOURS ARE STILL UNDER QUESTION 👀🕰️
Investigators have outlined a timeline leading up to DJ Warras’ de@th — but not everyone believes it tells the full story. CCTV was active, witnesses were nearby, yet certain minutes remain unexplained.
His family is focused on shielding his children from the noise, while online debates continue to grow.
If all the answers were clear, why are key details still being revisited?
👇 The moments people keep questioning are in the comments.
“The Night Everything Changed” — DJ Warras’ Final Hours Are Still Under Question
December 16, 2025 — South Africa’s Day of Reconciliation — began as a routine workday for Warrick “DJ Warras” Stock. The 40-year-old media personality and businessman arrived at Zambezi House (also known as Zambesi House), a hijacked building near Johannesburg’s Carlton Centre, to oversee security upgrades through his company, Imperium Ops. By afternoon, that day became the night everything changed: a brazen broad-daylight shooting that claimed his life and left lingering questions about his final hours.

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Investigators quickly outlined a timeline: Warras spent hours on site installing biometric access and new CCTV systems. After parking his vehicle, he was approached by three suspects. CCTV captured “collusion” beforehand — one suspect near his car, another possibly in disguise, and a short man with dreadlocks firing multiple shots as Warras fled across the street. Nothing was stolen; his firearm remained unused, pointing to a targeted hit tied to threats over building reclamation. He had secured five protection orders just weeks prior.

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Yet, as of December 31, 2025, not everyone accepts this as the full story. Active CCTV and nearby witnesses notwithstanding, unexplained minutes persist: exact interactions before the approach, why the alleged shooter returned to the scene, or gaps in coverage despite municipal and new installations. No full footage has been released, fueling debates over transparency.
Arrests on December 22 in Soweto brought partial breakthroughs: two South Africans detained, but charges against the female suspect were withdrawn. Only Victor Mthethwa Majola (44) appeared in court on December 24, facing premeditated murder and conspiracy. He alleged police assault, limped into the docket, and had his case postponed to January 6, 2026, for address verification and bail proceedings. Police continue seeking additional suspects — notably the dreadlocked gunman, who Majola does not resemble.
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This discrepancy has amplified online scrutiny: If CCTV clearly identifies a dreadlocked shooter, why the mismatch? Theories range from Majola as planner/lookout to potential investigative hurdles. Early xenophobic narratives blaming “illegal foreigners” were debunked by the arrests.
Warras’s family prioritizes shielding his three young children from the “noise.” His December 23 funeral in Rosebank was emotional, with tributes celebrating a devoted father, mentor, and activist against urban decay. Loved ones described him as their “heart and anchor,” urging focus on his legacy of joy and connection.

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If answers were clear, why revisit details? Warras’s death highlights Johannesburg’s hijacked buildings crisis — syndicates profiting from decay while private efforts like his fill voids at deadly risk. As 2026 approaches, his final hours remain under question, blending grief with demands for full truth.