In 2002, Jason Akeil Johnson said he knew he was always destined for fame.
“Everyone knew it was going to happen. I just wanted to be like all the boys I saw on the corner,โ he said. โThe gold teeth and the fancy cars.”
Twenty years ago last week, the hip-hop artist from Savannahโs Hitch Village was gunned down outside of his West 37th Street recording studio, Pure Pain Records. The shooting took place at roughly 4:30 p.m. on Monday, May 19, 2003 while the 21-year-old walked the sidewalk with his toddler son, Yadon Moultrie. Later that evening, Camoflauge was pronounced dead at Memorial Health University Medical Center. His son was unharmed.
Savannahโs most beloved rapper was well on his way to stardom and fame, just as he predicted. But that was the day it all ended. Twenty years later, his murder is still unsolved.
His debut came in 1999 with the Crime Affiliates collaboration, Crime Pays. Camoflauge’s first solo album, I Represent, was released in 2000 and it climbed to as high as No. 58 on Billboardโs Hip-Hop chart. The album put him, Pure Pain Records and the City of Savannah squarely on the rap map. Universal signed him for his follow-up album, Strictly 4 Da Streets: Sex, Drugs and Violence, Vol. 1. But the major label dropped the rapper after his arrest in Savannah on drug charges that were eventually dropped.
In 2002, his final album, Keepin It Real was released and the single โCut Friendsโ is still one of the most popular southern rap tracks of the era. Other popular Camoflauge tracks include โHot Grits,โ โLayinโ My Stunt Down,โ โMurder Was The Caseโ and โDown By The Water.โ Almost all of his songs included Savannah references, often dealing with themes like poverty, crime and yes, drugs.
It was his unwavering loyalty to Savannah and the people in the cityโs hoods that made him a hero to many.
โI could come out on the street and see him rapping. He felt so relaxed. He didnโt even have bodyguards around him,โ Jeanne Bryan told local reporter Anne Hart after the murder.
Hart sent me a text this week when I asked her for her memories of covering the events.
โI remember the overwhelming sadness displayed by the people who lived and worked in the neighborhood where the shooting happened, where Camoflaugeโs studio was,โ she said. โThe fact that this local musical star was shot and killed in the very town that helped form him was jarring to say the least.โ
โI also remember his packed, barely any standing-room funeral where his life and musical talents were celebrated. That was a mournful day for Savannah.โ
His legacy had long been cemented in Savannah, but over the last few months, Camoflauge has been revived in a sense, his music now expanding well beyond Savannah thanks in large part to a daughter he never got to meet.
When Camoflauge was killed, Kia Jones was pregnant with his daughter. That afternoon in May of 2003, the girlโs life was altered before it ever began.
FlauโJae Johnson (born FlauโJae Jones) just won a NCAA Womenโs Basketball National Championship as a key part of the backcourt for the LSU Tigers. Just a freshman, FlauโJae averaged 11.0 points, 5.9 rebounds, 1.9 assists and 1.2 steals per game. She is also a hip-hop artist with talent aplenty. She has a distribution deal with Roc Nation, the label of hip-hop icon Jay-Z. As a child, she appeared on TV several times, doing well in popular competition shows like American Idol, Americaโs Got Talent and Lifetimeโs The Rap Game.
FlauโJae and Kia moved to Atlanta when the girl was eight because she was determined to pick up where her dad left off. She went to pursue hip-hop in the rap capital of the world. Turns out, she was pretty good at both basketball and rapping. Doing more than her dad could have ever dreamed of.
โWhen I hear his voice in his songs, I get chills,โ she told ESPNโs Maya Jones in April of 2023. โI think about my dad everyday just about. Heโs the reason I picked up the mic. Sometimes I think, โDang, I wish he could see what Iโm doing. I know heโs proud of me, but I wish he could see it all.โ
As far as the status of his unsolved murder case, Camoflaugeโs killer has yet to be identified, for now. When reached by email on May 19, 2023, Savannah Police Cold Case Unit Commander Lt. Zachary Burdette said that his team was in the process of โpulling the (Camoflauge) case file โฆ to review it and see what all is there.โ
This article appears in 2023 Best of Savannah Issue.

