November 6, 2025, marks the somber fifth anniversary of King Von’s death, a loss that reverberated through the music world like a gunshot in the night, leaving fans devastated and the Chicago drill scene forever scarred. Dayvon Daquan Bennett, known as King Von, was just 26 when he was fatally shot outside Monaco Hookah Lounge in Atlanta on November 6, 2020, a confrontation that escalated from a parking lot brawl into a deadly exchange involving off-duty police, claiming Von’s life and wounding others in a frenzy that exposed the volatile intersections of fame, rivalry, and street justice.

Von’s rise was meteoric: signed to Lil Durk’s Only the Family (OTF) label in 2018, his raw storytelling on tracks like “Crazy Story” and Welcome to O’Block (2020) painted vivid portraits of Chicago’s South Side struggles, earning 1 billion streams and a loyal following that mourned him as a voice cut short. The night began as a celebration—Von, fresh off his album release, partied with friends—but tensions boiled over around 3:20 a.m. when a dispute with Quando Rondo’s crew, affiliated with rival rapper Timothy “Lul Timm” Leeks, turned physical. Surveillance footage, later released, shows fists flying before gunfire erupted, with Atlanta PD confirming off-duty officers intervened, firing 20+ rounds.

The chaos claimed Von, shot multiple times, and two others, while Leeks—charged with murder but later claiming self-defense—was acquitted in 2023. Von’s death, ruled homicide, fueled conspiracy theories: some blame police overreach, others point to OTF vs. O’Block feuds rooted in Chicago’s gang wars. Lil Durk’s tribute album The Voice (2020) honored him, but the pain lingers—Von’s mother, Taesha, founded the Von Foundation for youth violence prevention, raising $500k.

Five years on, Von’s legacy endures: 2 billion posthumous streams, murals in Chicago, and a Netflix doc in development. Fans gather annually at his grave, sharing stories of a “king” whose life mirrored his lyrics—raw, real, relentless. As Durk posted today, “5 years without my brother—Von forever.” In hip-hop’s hall of fallen stars, Von’s story isn’t just tragedy—it’s a warning: talent thrives, but the streets reclaim.