Masked and armed with a .22 calibre rifle, machete and Taser, Mustafa Alhassan and two others were lured by a belief Mr Habiyakare was keeping a huge pile of money in his suburban Melbourne home at Sunshine North.
There was no magical million dollars. The bungled theft resulted in Mr Habiyakare's death and Alhassan being sentenced to more than a decade in jail.
The rapper, who performed under the name Lyr1cure7, had friends over on the evening of August 24, 2021, when a knock came at the door.
As the victim approached the entrance, the then 18-year-old Alhassan burst through, smashing glass around them.
A scuffle ensued and Mr Habiyakare was pushed through the hallway and into the living room.
"Woah, woah, you're going to shoot me?" Mr Habiyakare said.
Pointing his sawn-off rifle at the rapper, Alhassan fired a single shot piercing his chest and leaving the rapper to bleed to death as the intruders fled.
On Thursday, Alhassan was jailed for 13 years with a non-parole period of eight years after pleading guilty to homicide by firearm and handling stolen goods.
Supreme Court Justice Christopher Beale said a fist fight had broken out at Mr Habiyakare's house three days before the planned home invasion.
"You learned of that incident and opportunistically planned a home invasion of his home (in the belief) that his associates would be blamed for the crime," he said.
Detectives would later find a locked safe inside Mr Habiyakare's home containing $41,000.
Three months after the killing, Alhassan was planning another home invasion but his accomplices were arrested before it could be executed.
Alhassan befriended two people who he thought were criminals offering work, but they were covert cops, to which he sold a sawn-off shotgun and confessed his involvement in the home invasion but said a co-offender fired the fatal shot.
"Not withstanding someone had died at your hands, you agreed to provide another gun," the judge said.
Alhassan later denied his admissions and then disputed he had gone to the rapper's home with the expectation he would be there.
"You expected him to be home and that's why you acted opportunistically ... That's why you and your co-offenders went armed to the teeth," Justice Beale said.
In his sentencing, the judge referred to character references from family portraying Alhassan as quiet, shy, non-violent and his offending as out of character, but questioned his remorse.
He baulked at a psychologist report's findings Alhassan was truly remorseful and had good prospects of rehabilitation, instead labelling his co-operation as "self-serving".
Mr Habiyakare's father Belthrand said the family had used their savings and personal loans to build a centre named after his son in their home of Burundi, in East Africa.
"I feel incomplete, weak and incompetent as a father because I'm constantly reminded I should've protected my son at all costs," he said in a statement previously read to the court.
He remains devastated by his son's death and suffers panic attacks, the judge added.
Alhassan stared straight ahead while Justice Beale handed down his sentence with his father Abdul and family members in court to support him.
Co-offenders Daniel Sisal and Mohamed Mohamed pleaded guilty to manslaughter and were jailed for four years and nine years, respectively.