At 53, Katt Williams CONFIRMS It Wasn’t an Accident – Malcolm Was Targeted

Katt Williams has always been the firecracker in the room. Unapologetic, sharp-tongued, and fearless. From Hollywood’s dark corners to the hypocrisy in politics, he’s called it out—raw and unfiltered. But no one expected what he’d say next.

In a recent podcast episode titled “Uncensored Truths”, the 53-year-old comedian didn’t laugh. He didn’t joke. He leaned into the mic, took a breath, and dropped a bombshell that left the room in stunned silence.

“Malcolm didn’t die by accident. That man was targeted. And I’m not talking theory. I’m talking fact.”

For years, theories swirled around the assassination of Malcolm X. The government. The Nation of Islam. The NYPD. Conspiracies were whispered, never proven. But Katt wasn’t whispering.

He was shouting.

A Voice from the Outside Who Dared to Look In

“I ain’t no historian,” Katt said, eyes focused, voice steady. “But I read. I listen. I pay attention. And I know when something smells foul.”

Katt admitted he started questioning Malcolm X’s assassination during the pandemic, when he had time to dig through unsealed FBI files, declassified CIA reports, and interviews buried in archives.

“What I found?” he said. “It wasn’t a puzzle. It was a map. They left the trail right there. And no one wanted to follow it.”

The Night That Changed Everything

February 21, 1965. The Audubon Ballroom. Malcolm X was preparing to speak when gunshots rang out. Chaos erupted. Within minutes, he was dead—shot 21 times in front of his wife and children.

“They called it an act of betrayal,” Katt said. “They blamed it on infighting. Black-on-Black violence. But who let it happen? Who left the door open?”

He pointed to recently unsealed FBI documents revealing surveillance placed on Malcolm X weeks before his death—yet somehow, on that exact day, his usual police protection vanished.

“You really think that’s coincidence?” Katt asked, his voice rising. “The most watched Black man in America… and no cops show up that day?”

“They Watched Him Die”

Katt doesn’t mince words.

“They knew. They let it happen. They wanted it to happen.”

He claims several intelligence agencies had infiltrated both the Nation of Islam and Malcolm’s own organization, the Organization of Afro-American Unity.

“They had moles in every room. They knew who was mad at Malcolm. They knew who felt threatened by his rise. And instead of stopping it—they stirred the pot.”

Katt cited a chilling excerpt from an old COINTELPRO memo: “Create distrust, encourage conflict, isolate the target.

“That’s not a theory,” Katt said. “That’s government strategy.”

More Dangerous Than Ever

According to Katt, Malcolm X’s most dangerous moment wasn’t when he was speaking in Harlem or criticizing the Nation of Islam. It was when he changed.

“They feared Malcolm most when he became global,” he explained. “When he stopped talking just about race and started talking about human rights. When he went to Africa. When he talked to the UN. That’s when he became a problem no bullet could erase.”

Katt believes Malcolm’s shift toward Pan-Africanism and international solidarity is what sealed his fate.

“You can kill a man. But you can’t kill an idea. Unless you make sure nobody hears it.”

Why Katt Is Speaking Now

The question came quickly: why now? Why would a comedian, known for jokes and wild interviews, step into the darkest corner of American history?

Katt looked straight into the camera.

“Because if they could do that to Malcolm,” he said, “what makes you think they ain’t doing it now? What makes you think they ever stopped?”

He went on to say that the same tactics—discredit, divide, distract—are still being used on today’s leaders. Artists. Activists. Anyone who dares to speak too loud, too raw, too real.

“They just use different tools now. Social media. Cancel culture. Mental health narratives. But it’s the same game.”

Reaction Was Immediate—and Polarizing

Within hours of the podcast release, the internet lit up. Hashtags like #MalcolmWasTargeted and #KattWasRight trended on X (formerly Twitter). Some praised Katt as brave and visionary. Others dismissed him as reckless.

Civil rights scholars called for a closer look. Conspiracy theorists said it confirmed everything. But one reaction hit harder than the rest.

Ilyasah Shabazz, Malcolm X’s daughter, shared a clip of Katt’s statement with just three words:

“We’ve always known.”

That single post sent chills through the online community. It wasn’t a denial. It wasn’t a defense. It was a confirmation, softly spoken by the bloodline of the man at the center of it all.

Hollywood Tries to Distance Itself

Some media outlets tried to brush off Katt’s claims as “entertainment.” But insiders say private phone calls were being made. Studios that once worked with Katt grew silent. Scheduled appearances were “rescheduled.” Sponsors pulled back.

But Katt? He didn’t care.

“They already tried to silence me before,” he laughed. “They took money. They killed opportunities. But they couldn’t kill the truth.”

A Final Warning

Toward the end of the podcast, Katt made a chilling prediction:

“Mark my words. The more we learn about our past, the more they’ll try to keep us quiet. But we ain’t going back to sleep.”

He leaned forward, eyes piercing the lens.

“Malcolm was targeted. Not just with bullets—but with betrayal, manipulation, and silence. And we gotta make sure that never happens again.”

History, Rewritten in Real Time

Katt Williams may not wear a scholar’s robe. He doesn’t need to. In a single 45-minute interview, he cracked open a wound America never truly healed. He reminded the world that some truths, no matter how old, still burn when spoken out loud.

Because history isn’t just what we’re taught.

It’s what we dare to uncover.

And Katt just uncovered something that can’t be buried again.