Jimmy Henchman

James "Jimmy Henchman" Rosemond is the CEO of Czar Entertainment, a record management company for musicians including Game and Sean Kingston.

On June 5, 2012, he was convicted of drug trafficking, obstruction of justice, firearms violations and other financial crimes associated with his being the head of a multi-million dollar transnational cocaine selling organization. He was indicted in 2011 on federal charges of drug trafficking, money laundering, obstruction, and weapons charges. In February 2012, he was arrested for the murder-for-hire of Lodi Mack, an associate of rapper 50 Cent.

A 2008 LA Times article by Chuck Philips implicated Jimmy Henchman in the 1994 attack of Tupac Shakur at the Quad. The article said that Jimmy Henchman aka James Rosemond ordered three thugs to ambush Tupac. That article was later withdrawn by the LA Times since they believed it was based upon fabrications. It was corroborated in 2011 when Dexter Isaac confessed to attacking Tupac on Jimmy Henchman's orders. Following Isaac’s public confession, Chuck Philips corroborated Isaac as one (among five) of his key unnamed sources.

According to prosecutors, Jimmy Henchman admitted to setting up Tupac's ambush during one of nine "Queen For A Day" proffer sessions with the government in autumn of 2011. The original prosecutor transcripts are available in Village Voice author Chuck Philips article. The confession was also picked up by the Huffington Post among many other newspapers.

Tupac himself named Henchman in a song about the ambush at the Quad called Against All Odds, Tupac rapped:

"Jimmy Henchman,... [You] Set me up, wet me up,...stuck me up Heard the guns bust but you tricks never shut me up"