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Tipsheet

Oops: Rapper Confesses to 1993 Shooting Without Realizing His Victim Died, Now Faces Life in Prison

A bizarre, Law & Order-style story:

The guilt-ridden rapper who confessed to a 17-year-old murder told The Post yesterday he didn't know his victim had died when he decided to come clean on the cold case.

Trevell Coleman -- whose rap name is G-Dep -- said cops dropped the bombshell after he went into the 25th Precinct station house Wednesday to admit to the Oct. 19, 1993, shooting of John Henkel.

"I was surprised -- for some reason, I really didn't think that he died," the bald and bearded Coleman said in a jailhouse interview.  "When they told me, I was like, 'Oh, I'm not going home after this.' "

Manhattan DA spokeswoman Erin Duggan said Coleman, 36, has now been charged with murder in the case. He faces life in prison.

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The NY Post report explains that Coleman has not exactly been a smooth criminal throughout his career, but he's admirably decided to "make things right" with his conscience and his creator:

Coleman's criminal record includes nearly 30 arrests, a law-enforcement source said.

"This guy had particularly bad luck with getting caught," the source said, noting his most recent bust in November for trespassing with drugs on city-housing property.  "I haven't been living right," Coleman told The Post. "I always had people around me that were good people, but I was doing the wrong thing."

Though he said his confession confounds everyone -- "People in [jail] don't understand how you can confess," he said -- to Coleman, it makes perfect sense.  "I'm just trying to get right with God," he said.

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