“HIJACKED BUILDINGS…” — A MYSTERIOUS CLUE in the Inciden@ That Left DJ Warras Struggling for Survival
The father of three has fallen into eternal de@th. His family faces a heartbreak they never saw coming…
Sources reveal that tensions around illegally occupied buildings may have played a role, with whispers of long-standing disputes. As investigators piece together the final moments, one chilling question remains: Could one small choice have changed everything?👇👇
“Hijacked Buildings”: The Deadly Clue in the Tragic Murder of DJ Warras
On December 16, 2025, Johannesburg’s bustling Central Business District (CBD) became the scene of a brazen daylight assassination that shocked South Africa. Warrick Stock, better known as DJ Warras—a beloved radio personality, podcaster, and club DJ—was gunned down outside the Zambezi House building near the Carlton Centre. The 40-year-old father of three had just spent hours overseeing the installation of biometric access systems and CCTV cameras when he was approached by assailants and shot execution-style. Eyewitness accounts and CCTV footage described a short man with dreadlocks firing the fatal shots, with another suspect in a security uniform lurking nearby. DJ Warras died at the scene, leaving behind a grieving family and a nation grappling with yet another senseless loss to violence.
DJ Warras was no ordinary entertainer. Born in Durban, he built a multifaceted career that spanned radio stations like 5FM and Y FM, digital platforms such as CliffCentral, and co-hosting the popular Shady PHodcast with DJ PH. Known for his candid social commentary, infectious energy, and mentorship of emerging artists, he was a staple in South Africa’s music and media landscape. Beyond the spotlight, Warras was an entrepreneur who founded Imperium Ops, a private security company specializing in VIP protection, event security, and—crucially—property management in high-risk urban areas. It was this latter role that appears to have sealed his fate.
Investigators and city officials quickly linked the murder to Johannesburg’s entrenched crisis of “hijacked buildings”—derelict properties illegally occupied and controlled by criminal syndicates. Zambezi House (also referred to as Zambesi House in some reports), an eight-story structure housing around 250 occupants, was the focal point. Warras had been contracted by the building’s lawful owners, through their attorneys, to audit and secure the property earlier in 2025. His team discovered alarming conditions: severe overcrowding, health and safety violations, alleged brothels, and even machinery suspected of being used for small-scale drug manufacturing, including mandrax paraphernalia. Reports also surfaced of recent serious crimes within the building, including the rape of a child.
These findings ruffled feathers in the underworld. Warras received multiple death threats, prompting him to seek legal protection. Just days before his death—on December 12—he was granted protection orders against at least five (and possibly six) individuals linked to the building, including non-paying tenants and a woman described by some as a potential “kingpin.” Johannesburg’s Member of the Mayoral Committee (MMC) for Public Safety, Dr. Mgcini Tshwaku, confirmed that Warras had been vocal about threats to burn the building or harm him directly. Preliminary police theories suggest the hit was orchestrated to protect illicit profits, with some speculating mistaken identity—assailants may have believed Warras was the owner, a common target in such disputes.
The murder has thrust Johannesburg’s hijacked buildings crisis into the national spotlight, exposing a multibillion-rand shadow economy fueled by organised crime. Experts estimate over 1,100 hijacked buildings in the Johannesburg CBD alone, part of a nationwide figure exceeding 5,000. These structures, often abandoned due to municipal failures, unpaid rates, or owner disputes, are seized by syndicates who install “committees” to collect rent from desperate occupants. A single building can generate hundreds of thousands of rand monthly in untaxed cash, with rooms subdivided into cramped partitions housing far more people than intended—sometimes seven in a space meant for one.
This illicit industry thrives at the intersection of urban decay, housing shortages, and inequality. Illegal electricity connections, blocked fire escapes, and collapsed sanitation systems create hazardous living conditions, yet syndicates profit immensely while infrastructure crumbles. Organised crime investigator Chad Thomas has described the phenomenon as a core revenue stream for syndicates since the late 1990s, often involving violence to maintain control. Arrests rarely reach the masterminds, targeting only low-level enforcers.
Gauteng Transport MEC Kenny Kunene captured the escalating danger, declaring, “We are at war with hijackers of buildings.” He warned that Warras’s death signaled a “full-blown war” over inner-city properties. Politicians across the spectrum echoed this sentiment. ActionSA leader Herman Mashaba, praised by Warras for past efforts in reclaiming buildings, condemned the killing as a declaration of war on law-abiding citizens. Sports, Arts and Culture Minister Gayton McKenzie lamented the loss of a patriot, hinting at involvement of illegal immigrants in some hijackings—a politically charged claim that has fueled debate.
In the immediate aftermath, authorities acted swiftly. On December 18, a multi-agency raid led by MMC Tshwaku targeted Zambezi House. Dozens of non-paying tenants were identified, and four to six persons of interest—linked to Warras’s protection orders—were questioned by the Johannesburg Metropolitan Police Department’s tactical unit. Raids extended to other hijacked properties, uncovering further evidence of criminality. While no arrests in the murder have been confirmed as of late December 2025, police are pursuing leads from CCTV and tenant intelligence.
Warras’s close associate, Nicole Nelson, revealed he was developing a “blueprint” to systematically address hijacked buildings—installing biometrics, ensuring lawful tenancy, and coordinating with authorities. His vision for a revitalized Johannesburg, where families could safely raise children, was cut short. Tributes poured in from fans, colleagues, and leaders like Build One SA’s Mmusi Maimane, who called the murder a “shock for all South Africans.”
The Stock family, devastated, described Warras as the “heart” of their lives—a man who brought “light, laughter, and strength” everywhere. They leave behind three young children, his mother, and siblings, struggling to imagine a world without him. Funeral details were pending at the time of reporting, with the family requesting privacy amid their grief.
DJ Warras’s death raises chilling questions: Could heightened security or faster enforcement of his protection orders have prevented this tragedy? One small choice—perhaps avoiding the site that day—might have altered the outcome. More profoundly, it underscores systemic failures. Johannesburg loses billions in potential revenue and investment to this criminal economy, while residents endure danger and decay.
As investigations continue, Warras’s killing serves as a grim wakeup call. His efforts to reclaim one building exposed a vast network of exploitation and violence. South Africa must confront this crisis decisively—through coordinated law enforcement, political will, and urban renewal—or risk more lives lost to the shadows of hijacked buildings. DJ Warras fought for a better city; his legacy demands that the fight continues.