logo
Inside Diddy's Bad Boy empire of threats, violence and bribes. What court revelations expose

Inside Diddy's Bad Boy empire of threats, violence and bribes. What court revelations expose

At its height, Sean 'Diddy' Combs's Bad Boy Entertainment was a show business powerhouse, mixing music, video, fashion, liquor and style into a business that made Combs a billionaire.
Combs won praise for his visionary growth and brand management.
But federal prosecutors have another word for Bad Boy: A racketeering enterprise.
The federal trial in New York City includes an allegation that Combs was involved in mob family-style racketeering with coercion, kidnapping, threats, and beatings done to cover up a pattern of sexual assaults, sex trafficking and prostitution.
The mogul has publicly and defiantly maintained his innocence even before his arrest last September.
The federal indictment alleges that Combs and his associates lured female victims, often under the pretense of a romantic relationship. Combs then allegedly used force, threats of force, coercion and controlled substances to get women to engage in sex acts with male prostitutes while he occasionally watched in gatherings that Combs referred to as 'freak-offs.' Combs gave the women ketamine, ecstasy and GHB to 'keep them obedient and compliant' during the performances, prosecutors say.
Combs' alleged 'criminal enterprise' threatened and abused women and utilized members of his enterprise to engage in sex trafficking, forced labor, interstate transportation for purposes of prostitution, coercion and enticement to engage in prostitution, narcotics offenses, kidnapping, arson, bribery and obstruction of justice, prosecutors said. In bringing so-called RICO charges, prosecutors in opening statements said Combs was helped by a cadre of company employees, security staff and aides. They allegedly helped organize the 'freak-offs' and then covered up the incidents. Thus far, Combs is the only one facing criminal charges related to the investigation.
Have prosecutors made the case?
Prosecutors have so far called nearly 30 witnesses to the stand in Manhattan and are expected to finish up with its witnesses this week.
They include three women who described graphic sexual assaults, including a woman the defense acknowledged was the key witness, Combs's onetime lover, Casandra 'Cassie' Ventura. It was Ventura's lawsuit in 2023 that set off the unraveling of the Combs enterprise with its details of sex, violence and freak-offs.
His last former girlfriend, referred to only as Jane in court, described how the freak-offs and coerced sex continued despite the lawsuit and a raid by Homeland Security Investigations until his arrest.
She texted Combs pages of Ventura's lawsuit immediately after it was filed.
'I've been crying for three days and am under stress from reading all of this. I keep having nightmares about forced nights and all the times I felt like I couldn't say no. I feel like I'm reading my own sexual trauma,' she wrote, according to Legal Affairs and Trials.
On another occasion, she said she texted his chief of staff about the threats he made, writing 'he just threatened me about my sex tapes that he has of me on two phones. He said that he would expose me and send them to my child's father.'
Jane is one of three women whose testimony is at the center of the trial. The others being Ventura and a former employee testifying under the pseudonym Mia, who also testified she was sexually assaulted.
Under the Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act, known as RICO, there are 35 specific offenses, including kidnapping, murder, bribery, and extortion and federal prosecutors need to show a pattern involving at least two overt acts as part of a criminal enterprise.
Neama Rahmani, a former federal prosecutor, said that to prove RICO, the prosecution must show the existence of not just criminal activity but an actual criminal enterprise.
People typically think of the mob, street gangs, or drug cartels. But any loose association of two or more people is enough, like Combs' entourage, she said.
They also have to show a pattern of racketeering or two or more RICO predicate acts over a 10-year period.
That's why the evidence of bribery, kidnapping, obstruction, witness tampering, and prostitution is important to the prosecution's case, she said.
It will be up to jurors to determine if federal prosecutors proved the RICO charge.
R&B singer Cassandra 'Cassie' Ventura, who had a long relationship with Combs, was an early key witness in the prosecution's case.
Ventura testified she felt 'trapped' in a cycle of physical and sexual abuse by him, and that the relationship involved 11 years of alleged beatings, sexual blackmail and a rape.
She claimed Combs threatened to leak videos of her sexual encounters with numerous male sex workers while drug-intoxicated and glistening with baby oil as he watched and orchestrated the freak-offs.
One of those freak-offs led to an infamous hotel beating, Ventura testified. Video footage from that March 2016 night shows Combs punching and kicking Ventura as she cowers and tries to protect herself in front of an L.A. hotel elevator bank. He then drags her down the hall by her hooded sweatshirt toward their hotel room.
A second angle from another camera captures Combs throwing a vase toward her. She suffered bruising to her eye, a fat lip, and a bruise that prosecutors showed was still visible during a movie premiere two days later, where she donned sunglasses and heavy makeup on the red carpet.
A cover-up then ensued, according to prosecutors. Ventura stated that the police visited her apartment. She answered a few of their questions, but told the jury she still wanted to protect Combs at the time.
'I would not say who I was talking about,' she told the jury. 'In that moment, I did not want to hurt him in that way. There was too much going on. It was a lot.'
Eddie Garcia, the Intercontinental Hotel security guard, testified that Combs gave him a brown paper bag containing $100,000 in cash for the video.
Garcia said after his supervisor agreed to sell the video recording, he met with Combs, Combs' chief of staff Kristina Khorram and a bodyguard. After Garcia raised concerns about the police, he said Combs called Ventura on FaceTime, handed him the phone and told Ventura to tell Garcia that she also wanted the video 'to go away.' After that, Garcia said he took the money and split it with coworkers.
Capricorn Clark, a former assistant to Combs, recalled a 2011 violent incident with Combs.
Clark told jurors Combs forced her from her apartment at gunpoint to go with him to musician Kid Cudi's home in December 2011. Once there, Combs and Clark entered the empty house, and then Cudi, whose real name is Scott Mescudi, showed up. To avoid getting law enforcement involved, Clark testified, Combs ordered her to call Ventura, who was at that time Combs' ex-girlfirend, and said they need to convince Cudi not to snitch to the cops. 'If you guys don't convince him of that, I'll kill all you m....,' Clark quoted Combs saying.
Cudi testified that his Porsche was later firebombed in his driveway with a Molotov cocktail.
Ventura wasn't Combs' only alleged sex crime victim. Mia, an assistant testifying under that name, described years of sexual abuse, rape and threats. Combs, she said, first sexually assaulted her at his 40th birthday party in New York in 2009, shortly after she began working for him. In the year that followed, she slept in a bedroom at his home, where she was not allowed to lock the door. Through tears she testified he raped her. 'I was frozen. I didn't react. I was terrified and confused and ashamed and scared.' Another alleged attack occurred in a bedroom closet where she said Combs grabbed her head and forced her to perform oral sex on him.
Under cross-examination, she said she did not initially tell federal prosecutors that Combs sexually assaulted her and acknowledged sending Combs loving messages in the years after the alleged attacks.
Jane, his most recent ex-girlfriend described how she endured drug-fueled sex marathons right up until the hip-hop titan's arrest.
Bryana Bongolan, a friend of Ventura, testified that Combs dangled her over a 17-story balcony and tossed her onto balcony furniture in September 2016.
'I will never forget him holding me on that balcony,' she said as a defense lawyer challenged the date she provided with evidence of Combs's being elsewhere at a hotel across the country.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Fat Joe accused of coercion, intimidation, sex with minors in ex-hype man's lawsuit
Fat Joe accused of coercion, intimidation, sex with minors in ex-hype man's lawsuit

Los Angeles Times

time2 hours ago

  • Los Angeles Times

Fat Joe accused of coercion, intimidation, sex with minors in ex-hype man's lawsuit

Terrance 'T.A.' Dixon, once a hype man to rapper Fat Joe, has sued his former employer for $20 million, making some allegations that might blend right in at Sean 'Diddy' Combs' RICO and sex-trafficking trial. The federal lawsuit, filed Thursday in U.S. District Court in the Southern District of New York and reviewed by The Times, alleges that the rapper underpaid Dixon, cut him out of promised pay for contributing to album tracks, defrauded authorities about his income, ditched Dixon in foreign countries without money or transportation home and is running a criminal organization built on intimidation and violence. The lawsuit alleges that Fat Joe forced the hype man — a sort of backing vocalist who pumps up the audience — into approximately 4,000 sex acts with women in front of him and his crew. The 54-year-old rapper, born Joseph Antonio Cartagena, is also accused of having sexual relationships with girls who were 15 and 16. The allegations go back to when the rapper was in his late 30s, the lawsuit says. Fat Joe's song 'She's My Mama,' which has graphically sexual lyrics, was based on what is alleged to have happened with him and one of the girls in real life, the lawsuit says. The lawsuit states that Dixon's role over about 16 years was more than that of the usual hype man. He 'consistently' had duties that included co-writing lyrics, structuring hooks, recording background vocals, performing at more than 200 live shows as Fat Joe's primary onstage counterpart and managing travel logistics, including equipment transport, security and emergency arrangements. The complaint alleges that Dixon also acted as Joe's bodyguard and handler during tours. According to the filing, Dixon wrote or co-wrote tracks including 'Congratulations,' 'Money Over Bitches,' 'Ice Cream,' 'Cupcake,' 'Blackout,' 'Dirty Diana,' 'Porn Star,' 'Okay Okay,''No Problems,' a version of 'All the Way Up,' '300 Brolic,' 'All I Do Is Win (Remix verse),' 'Red Café (Remix),' 'Winding on Me,' 'Cocababy' and 'Get It for Life.' The complaint alleges that Dixon was not properly paid for his efforts, even though he says he was promised certain ownership percentages and documented credit on songs that Fat Joe released commercially. Dixon, who left Fat Joe's team in 2020, was unable to obtain certain evidence of wrongdoing until a person named as 'Accountant Doe' came forward last year with information, the lawsuit says. Fat Joe 'exercised sole control over contracts, budgets, tour management, licensing, and credit attribution and intentionally omitted Plaintiff's name from liner notes, publishing registrations, and royalty structures, despite Plaintiff's direct contributions to these works' creative and commercial success,' the complaint says. Joe Tacopina, an attorney for Fat Joe, called the lawsuit 'a blatant attack of retaliation' and labeled the allegations 'complete fabrications' that his client denies in a statement to Variety. Retaliation referred to the slander lawsuit that the rapper filed against Dixon in April after the former hype man accused him on social media of flying a 16-year-old across state lines for sex. Dixon's attorney, Tyrone Blackburn, is also representing producer Lil Rod (Rodney Jones) in his $30-million federal lawsuit filed last year against Sean 'Diddy' Combs and others in Combs' orbit, in which Lil Rod alleged sexual harassment and sexual assault. A judge tossed out a majority of Lil Rod's allegations against Combs in late March. Both lawsuits include trigger warnings in bright red type ahead of the allegations — something not often seen in such documents. 'Fat Joe is Sean Combs minus the Tusi [pink cocaine],' Blackburn said in a statement to the Independent. 'He learned nothing from his 2013 federal conviction,' the attorney added, referencing Fat Joe's four-month sentence and $15,000 fine in a plea deal for failure to file a tax return in multiple years on more than $3.3 million in income. In addition to Fat Joe, defendants in the new lawsuit include Peter 'Pistol Pete' Torres, Richard 'Rich Player' Jospitre, Erica Juliana Moreira and several companies —including Roc Nation — that are affiliated with the rapper. Dixon is asking for a jury trial.

Diddy beat one criminal trial after testifying. Will he make the same gamble again?
Diddy beat one criminal trial after testifying. Will he make the same gamble again?

Yahoo

time4 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Diddy beat one criminal trial after testifying. Will he make the same gamble again?

Lawyers for Sean "Diddy" Combs haven't said if he will testify at his federal sex-trafficking trial. Legal experts warn that testifying could open him to damaging cross-examination. Combs took the stand at his 2001 guns and bribery trial and was acquitted. Sean "Diddy" Combs made a bold move when he testified at his Manhattan gun and bribery trial more than two decades ago. Combs, who was facing up to 15 years in prison on state charges related to a 1999 Times Square nightclub shooting, ultimately walked away a free man. "I thought I was being shot at," Combs, then 31, told jurors, turning the tables by playing the victim rather than the aggressor. "My hands were up." Back then, the jury believed the hip-hop mogul, listening to his life story, laughing at his jokes, and ultimately awarding him a full acquittal. "God has blessed me," the rap entrepreneur told jurors. "She's my mother — it's like a full-time job," he said when asked to name Janice Combs' profession, eliciting warm laughs from female jurors. If Combs decides to testify in his Manhattan federal sex-trafficking and racketeering trial, now in its sixth week, he might not be as lucky. Combs' team of attorneys has yet to hint at whether the graying, now-55-year-old will take the witness stand. But lawyers who are not involved in Combs' case told Business Insider that testifying could backfire badly and expose the onetime near-billionaire to potentially damaging cross-examination from the prosecution. "It's a very risky move," attorney and former federal prosecutor Mark Chutkow said, adding that it would likely have to be a last resort, "Hail Mary situation" for the defense to put Combs on the stand. Chutkow, who has handled racketeering and sex trafficking cases during his time leading the criminal division of the US attorney's office in Detroit, called it "very rare" for a criminal defendant "to succeed in the way they envision when they testify." If Combs does take the stand, damaging new information may emerge, and prosecutors will surely revisit the most damning evidence presented so far, including the infamous hotel-beatdown video showing him kicking and dragging R&B singer Cassie Ventura, said Chutkow. "That videotape of him beating Cassie Ventura will be one of the first items that they will cross-examine him with," Chutkow said. "And how does one explain that away? You can't really explain it away, and if you even try, you're going to only dig yourself deeper into a hole." Defense attorney Michael Bachner, who was part of Combs' legal team during the music tycoon's 2001 Manhattan trial, told BI that he'd be "shocked" if Combs took the stand again. Combs' lawyers have already "done a good enough job raising doubts" among the eight-man, four-woman jury, said Bachner, a former prosecutor. The rapper's defense attorneys have tried to use their cross-examinations of his two sex-trafficking accusers — Ventura, the prosecution's star witness, and another ex-girlfriend who testified under the pseudonym "Jane" — as jealous at the time and financially motivated now. Combs' attorneys have argued that the sex he engaged in with the women was consensual. While Ventura and Jane both testified about being beaten and forced into dayslong, drug-fueled sex performances with male escorts referred to as "freak offs" or "hotel nights," Combs' defense has pointed to affectionate message exchanges with him. "Their defense is, 'Ladies and gentlemen, Sean Combs has already told you what this is about. You saw his emails and texts. You saw what he was saying contemporaneously, what was being said back and forth,'" Bachner said. "So there's no reason for him to take the stand here." Spencer Kuvin, an attorney who has represented multiple accusers of late convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein, agreed that by testifying, Combs risks damaging his case. "The pro of testifying is that he will be able to humanize himself with the jury and possibly be able to try and convince the jury about the consensual nature of his actions," Kuvin said. "The downside of testifying is the ability of cross-examination beyond the limited testimony he will try to offer." The defense does not need Combs to take the witness stand in order to pursue their argument that while Combs was, at times, a violent drug user with an unconventional sex life, he was not involved in sex trafficking or racketeering, said former Manhattan federal prosecutor Sarah Krissoff. "The defense was able to get this narrative in during the cross-examination of the government's witnesses," Krissoff, a white-collar defense attorney. Still, Krissoff said, "At the end of the day, it is Combs' decision whether or not he wants to testify." "The court will make sure that Combs understands that it is his decision, not his lawyer's decision," she said. Attorneys for Combs did not respond to a request for comment regarding whether he will take the witness stand. Prosecutors will soon rest their case after they called more than thirty witnesses over the course of six weeks to testify against Combs. The defense is expected to start presenting its side to the jury next week. The defense plans to call two employees of Combs Global, his lifestyle and music empire, to testify next week on his behalf, lead attorney Marc Agnifilo told the judge Monday. A forensic psychiatrist is also on deck to testify as an expert witness for the defense. "His children might be introduced because they can introduce him and show that he's not the monster that has been portrayed by the prosecution, but is a devoted, caring, loving father," said Chutkow. "Oftentimes that kind of character evidence comes in without a lot of searing cross-examination," he said. "So it's a safer way for the defense to soften the portrayal that the prosecution had earlier made." If convicted of the top charges of sex trafficking and racketeering conspiracy, Combs faces up to life in prison. Read the original article on Business Insider

Diddy Assistant Claims He Was Fired For Forgetting Mogul's Fanny Pack
Diddy Assistant Claims He Was Fired For Forgetting Mogul's Fanny Pack

Yahoo

time6 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Diddy Assistant Claims He Was Fired For Forgetting Mogul's Fanny Pack

Originally appeared on E! Online Brendan Paul has entered the witness box. Sean 'Diddy' Combs' former assistant revealed he was fired multiple times during 'intense' workdays, according to NBC News reporters in the courtroom. 'In late Oct 2023, I forgot his Lululemon fanny pack,' Paul—who worked for Combs for 18 months from 2022 to 2024—told the jurors June 20. 'He said, 'I don't want to see your face. Call Kristina Khorram [Combs' former Chief of Staff] and say you are fired.' He was disappointed, and his tone was angry.' He recalled Khorram telling him to 'lay low' for some time and that 'everything will be fine.' A few days later, he testified, the Bad Boys Records founder saw him and said, 'Hey.' Similar to other former employees, Paul admitted he was often sleep-deprived as he worked for Combs. 'I was young, so I was able to handle it,' the 29-year-old shared. 'I would take Adderall and rare use of cocaine.' More from E! Online What Happened to Dallas Cowboys Cheerleader Chandi Dayle? Americas Sweethearts Bahamas Scandal Explained Tech Founder Pledges to Leave $17 Billion Fortune to All 106 of His Children Machine Gun Kelly Reveals Why He and Megan Fox Named Their Daughter Saga Blade 'A lot to get done, but we managed,' he continued. 'We would make sure he was happy. He does not take no for an answer. He said he wants us to move like Seal Team 6, nothing taken by surprise.' Following Paul's testimony on day 27, Homeland Security Investigations Special Agent Joseph Cerciello will be a summary witness for the prosecution. It's been a tense few days in court as Juror No. 6 was removed June 16 —despite the defense's concerns over eliminating one of two Black individuals on the jury—which was followed by worries that another male juror may have spoken improperly with a former colleague about the case. Combs has pleaded not guilty to sex trafficking, racketeering conspiracy, sex trafficking by force, fraud, or coercion, as well as transportation to engage in prostitution. For more live updates on Combs' trial, keep reading. (E! News and NBC News are part of the NBCUniversal family.) Judge Cancels Court on Day 26 of Sean 'Diddy' Combs Trial Over Sick JurorSecond Sean 'Diddy' Combs Jury Member Faces Possible DismissalKanye West Supports Sean 'Diddy' Combs With Courthouse VisitSean 'Diddy' Combs' Ex Says Mogul Was Upset After She Attended Another Man's 'Freak Off'Prosecutors Seek Removal of Juror in Sean 'Diddy' Combs' TrialSean 'Diddy' Combs' Ex Has Heated Exchange With Defense Team During Cross-ExaminationSean 'Diddy' Combs' Ex Says She Wondered What Was 'Driving Him' SexuallySean 'Diddy' Combs' Ex Mentions Koby Bryant, Shaquille O'Neil and Michael Jordan During TestimonySean 'Diddy' Combs' Ex Says Mogul's Chief of Staff 'Influenced a Great Deal' of Their RomanceJudge Denies Sean 'Diddy' Combs' Defense Team's Second Motion for a MistrialSean 'Diddy' Combs' Ex Details Hourslong 2024 BeatingSean 'Diddy' Combs' Ex Says Attack By Rapper Left Her 'Golfball-sized' WeltsSean 'Diddy' Combs' Ex Details Homeland Security Raid at Her HomeSean 'Diddy' Combs' Ex Says He Threatened To Release Sex TapesSean 'Diddy' Combs' Ex Says She Fainted After Reading Cassie Ventura's LawsuitSean 'Diddy' Combs' Ex Says She Threw Up 3 Times During 'Hotel Night' Without DrugsSean 'Diddy' Combs' Legal Team Makes Second Request For MistrialSean 'Diddy' Combs' Ex Says He Is Still Paying Her RentSean 'Diddy' Combs' Ex Testifies About Physical Toll of 'Hotel Nights'Sean 'Diddy' Combs' Ex Says He Surprised Her With an Escort On Her BirthdaySean 'Diddy' Combs' Ex Details Alleged Birthday 'Hotel Night' Session in Emotional TestimonySean 'Diddy' Combs' Ex Says Longest 'Hotel Night' Lasted Over Three DaysSean 'Diddy' Combs' Ex Says He Didn't Want to Use Protection During 'Hotel Nights'Sean 'Diddy' Combs' Ex Says Her First 'Freak Off' Opened 'Pandora's Box' For the latest breaking news updates, click here to download the E! News App

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store