}} On Wednesday, October 30, 2002 at 7:30 pm, Mizell was fatally shot in New York City in his recording studio on
Merrick Boulevard in
Jamaica, Queens. Another person in the room, 25-year-old Uriel Rincon, was shot in the ankle and survived. Following Mizell's death, several artists expressed their grief for the loss in the hip hop community and remembered him for his influence on music and the genre. A funeral service was held at Allen Cathedral. Mizell was buried at
Ferncliff Cemetery and Mausoleum in
Hartsdale, New York. In 2003,
Kenneth McGriff, a convicted drug dealer and longtime friend of
Murder Inc. Records founders Irving "
Irv Gotti" Lorenzo and his older brother Christopher, were investigated for targeting Mizell because he defied an industry blacklist of rapper
50 Cent that was imposed because of "
Ghetto Qu'ran", a song 50 Cent wrote about McGriff's drug history. In December 2003,
Playboy magazine published an article by investigative journalist Frank Owen, "The Last Days of Jam Master Jay", which traced the murder to a drug deal gone bad. Owen said he uncovered evidence that Mizell, not normally involved in crime as an adult, had turned to
cocaine distribution to pay mounting bills. Mizell owed substantial debts to the
Internal Revenue Service, among others, after his music career stalled in the late 1990s. According to Owen, several sources indicated Mizell traveled to Washington, D.C. on July 31, 2002 to obtain of cocaine valued at about a quarter-million dollars from a trafficker known as "Uncle". Mizell reportedly agreed to pay for the drugs in about a week. However, Mizell failed to repay Uncle, who allegedly arranged to have Mizell murdered. In April 2007, federal prosecutors named Ronald Washington as an accomplice in the murder. Washington also is a suspect in the 1995 murder of
Randy "Stretch" Walker, a former close associate of rapper
Tupac Shakur, who was also murdered. In 2018,
Netflix released a documentary analyzing the circumstances of his murder.
ReMastered: Who Killed Jam Master Jay?, the third episode of Netflix's
ReMastered music documentary series, interviews several of Mizell's friends, family members and acquaintances who share stories they have heard regarding suspects in his murder. The documentary does not come to a conclusion about who killed Mizell. Also in 2018, former prosecutor
Marcia Clark featured Jam Master Jay's murder in an episode of her series
Marcia Clark Investigates The First 48 on
A&E where she examined several scenarios and suspects for the murder. She spoke to former Run DMC road manager Darren "Big D" Jordan, who denied allegations of involvement made against him by Ronald Washington. Clark further interviewed Owen, who stood by his 2003 article as largely accurate and stated he did not know who shot Mizell but believed the murder was facilitated by Mizell's close friend Ronald Washington. Both Washington and his accomplice Karl Jordan Jr. are believed to have entered the recording studio while armed with handguns. A third man, Jay Bryant, was accused of unlocking the fire escape from which Washington and Jordan Jr. entered the studio.
2020 arrests and trial In 2020, Ronald Washington and Karl Jordan Jr. were indicted for Mizell's murder. The indictment alleged that Mizell had recently acquired of cocaine from a distributor based in Maryland. Mizell, Washington, and Jordan had an agreement to sell the cocaine on consignment but Mizell cut the two men out after a dealer objected to Washington's participation. Prosecutors asserted that Jordan Jr. admitted to the crime in a conversation. Washington had been considered a suspect very early in the investigation, and Jordan had been charged in August 2003 with attempted murder after shooting Mizell's nephew, Rodney Jones, in the leg. Washington and Jordan Jr. pleaded not guilty. In November 2021, it was announced that federal prosecutors would seek
life imprisonment without the possibility of
parole rather than the
death penalty. In October 2022, the trial was scheduled to begin on February 20, 2023. However, after Jay Bryant was also charged in May 2023, the trial was rescheduled to January 2024. Jury selection for Washington and Jordan Jr.'s trial began on January 22, 2024. The trial itself began on January 29, 2024, with Jordan Jr. and Washington entering not guilty pleas and the jury hearing opening statements. On February 27, 2024, Washington and Jordan were convicted on charges of murder while engaged in a narcotics trafficking conspiracy and firearm-related murder. On December 19, 2025, Jordan's conviction would be overturned, by U.S. District Judge
LaShann DeArcy Hall, who sided with defense argument that there was insufficient evidence to prove prosecution claims that he had a motive that was drug-related. When overturning Jordan's conviction, Hall would also grant Jordan an
acquittal and, conditionally, denied a request for a
retrial. Bryant was already in custody for drug-related charges. In October 2023, it was ruled that Bryant would get a separate trial from Mizell's other two accused murderers, Ronald Washington and Karl Jordan Jr. with his trial at this point in time scheduled to begin in January 2026. On April 27, 2026, Jay Bryant became the first suspect to publicly admit to orchestrating the murder, saying he "helped them kill" Mizell. Bryant had also claimed he was the shooter, though prosecutors still considered Jordan Jr. to be the killer. == References ==