What are the latest allegations against Sean ‘Diddy’ Combs as he’s arrested in New York?
Shocking video footage shows the music mogul attacking his then-girlfriend Cassie, as two more women come forward with allegations, reports Andrea Cavallier
Sean “Diddy” Combs, a rapper and music mogul credited with helping launch the careers of some of the biggest stars in recent years, could be facing more than 100 new lawsuits just two weeks after he was arrested by federal agents in New York.
The latest wave of legal filings was announced on October 1, The Los Angeles Times reported, as more than 100 people have planned to file lawsuits against Combs, alleging that he sexually abused and exploited them.
It comes just weeks after Combs was arrested in September on sex trafficking and racketeering charges with federal prosecutors alleging that Combs and his associates threatened, abused and coerced women and others around him “to fulfill his sexual desires” – which allegedly includes forcing victims into engaging in recorded sexual activity which he referred to as “Freak Offs.”
A lawyer for the hip-hop artist called Combs “an innocent man with nothing to hide.”
“We are disappointed with the decision to pursue what we believe is an unjust prosecution of Mr. Combs by the U.S. Attorney’s Office,” his attorney, Marc Agnifilo, told The Independent via email in the wake of his arrest.
On Thursday, a new federal judge was assigned to Combs’ case, according to court documents obtained by Business Insider.US District Judge Arun Subramanian is the same judge currently overseeing the Department of Justice antitrust case against Ticketmaster. A reason for the new judge was not provided.
Since his arrest, Combs has twice been denied bail on the charges despite offering his Miami mansion as collateral for a $50 million bond. The judges cited what federal prosecutors described as a serious risk that Combs could intimidate witnesses.
Combs is already appealing these bail denials. With the new judge seated, his lawyers will be argue for bail a third time.
Combs, formerly known as Puff Daddy, P. Diddy and a host of other names, has undergone a myriad of reinventions since the start of his career – but has since entered a new and unwelcome “era”.
Federal agents with US Homeland Security raided two of the rapper’s houses in Los Angeles and Miami on March 25 as part of an investigation into the allegations brought against him.
The music mogul was also recently hit with a $100 million default judgment on September 9 over an alleged sexual assault from a 1997 party against Derrick Lee Cardello-Smith.
Lenawee County Circuit Court Judge granted the award to Cardello-Smith, an inmate who filed the lawsuit against Combs, accusing him of drugging and sexually assaulting him at a party 30 years ago.
Combs, 54, has strongly denied all of the allegations against him. His attorneys have branded the lawsuits and their accusations as money grabs, “baseless” or “sickening.”
On May 17, surveillence footage captured at a hotel in Los Angeles in March 2016 showed Diddy chasing his then-girlfriend Cassie Ventura down the hallway before attacking her by the elevators. He then attempts to drag her back to his hotel room.
The following day, he shared an apology video to Instagram saying his behaviour was “inexcusable” and that he took “full responsibility for his actions in the video”.
The slew of allegations in lawsuits against Combs date as far back as the 1990s, when he founded his own record label, Bad Boy Records.
All the allegations against Sean ‘Diddy’ Combs:
Lawsuits against the rapper began on 16 November 2023 when he was sued by singer and dancer Cassie, his former partner, who alleged years of abuse.
It was filed under the New York Adult Survivors Act, just before it expired. This act offered a one-year window for adult victims of sexual assault to come forward with civil claims regardless of the statute of limitations.
Casandra ‘Cassie’ Ventura
R&B singer Cassie, whose full name is Casandra Ventura, filed a lawsuit in 2023 alleging that she was trafficked, raped and beaten by Combs on many occasions over 10 years.
Her lawsuit claimed that Combs brought the singer into his “ostentatious, fast-paced, and drug-fueled lifestyle” not long after she met him, and signed her to his label in 2005 when she was just 19 and he was 37.
Ventura said that the pattern of abuse began as soon as their relationship started and that, as she was trying to end it in 2018, he forced himself into her Los Angeles home and raped her.
On May 17, surveillance footage obtained by CNN showed an incident which appeared to corroborate parts of Ventura’s original complaint. The video from March 2016 showed Combs chasing her down the corridor of a Los Angeles hotel and proceeding to punch and kick her outside a set of elevators.
According to the complaint, which cited the altercation as occurring “around March 2016,” Combs became “extremely intoxicated and punched Ventura in the face, giving her a black eye.”
The surveillance footage showed Combs leaving Ventura then returning and shoving her into a corner. He is then seen hurling an object at her, which was also cited in her complaint.
On May 19, Combs released a video apologising for his actions in the video, calling his behaviour “inexcusable” and saying he “takes full responsibility for his actions in the video”.
The lawsuit against Combs was settled for an undisclosed amount of money a day after Ventura filed it.
Ventura told CNN she had chosen to “resolve this matter amicably,” while Combs’ attorney said the settlement was “in no way an admission of wrongdoing” and didn’t change his denial of the allegations.
Her accusations against Combs were brought through the New York Adult Survivors Act (ASA), which expired at midnight on November 23, 2023.
The act provided survivors a one-year window to pursue civil litigation regardless of when the abuse occurred, meaning incidents from decades were finally brought to light.
More than 2,500 cases were filed under the ASA before its expiry at midnight on November 23, 2023, court data sent to The Independent showed.
Survivors brought lawsuits against some of the state’s most powerful men, including major players in entertainment, such as Bill Cosby, Harvey Weinstein, Axl Rose, and Combs.
Derrick Lee Cardello-Smith
A lawsuit was filed by Derrick Lee Cardello-Smith, 51, an inmate who claims Combs drugged and sexually assaulted him at a party 30 years ago, ccording to court documents obtained by Detroit’s Metro Times.
On September 9, Cardello-Smith was awarded a $100 million default judgment after Combs failed to appear for a virtual hearing.
A Lenawee County Circuit Court judge set up a payment schedule of $10 million per month for Combs, slated to start on October 1.
The lawsuit claims that Cardello-Smith and Combs met while he was working at a Detroit-area restaurant in 1997. During a night of drinking and weed-smoking, they reportedly had sex with a group of women, according to the suit. Cardello-Smith said he felt a man’s hand, which he claims was Combs, touching him.
The suit also alleges that Combs served him a spiked drink that caused him to pass out. When he woke up, Combs was having sex with a woman and allegedly said to him, “I did this to you too.”
Combs’ attorney, Marc Agnifilo, disputed the judgment and Cardello-Smith’s account.
“This man is a convicted felon and sexual predator, who has been sentenced on 14 counts of sexual assault and kidnapping over the last 26 years,” he said.
Combs has moved to dimiss the suit.
Rodney ‘Lil Rod’ Jones
In the most recent lawsuit against Combs, filed on 26 February 2024 in New York, producer Rodney “Lil Rod” Jones, alleged he was “subjected to unwanted advances by associates of Diddy at his direction” and that he was forced to engage in relations with the sex workers Combs had hired.
The producer, who worked for Combs between September 2022 and November 2023 claimed Combs sexually harassed, drugged and threatened him for more than a year.
He said he has video and audio evidence of Combs, his staff and others “engaging in serious illegal activity.” The lawsuit identified Rapper 50 Cent‘s former girlfriend and the mother of one of his children, Daphne Joy, as one of the alleged sex workers.
The lawsuit also alleges that Combs regularly hosted “sex-trafficking parties” with underage women and illegal drugs, and implies record label executives who looked the other way financially benefited from access to celebrities and dignitaries, including the British royal Prince Harry.
Prince Harry is not accused of any wrongdoing or of attending parties himself.
Combs’s attorney told The Los Angeles Times that the lawsuit contains “reckless name-dropping about events that are pure fiction and simply did not” occur.
Ryan Mendelsohn, 20, who used to live in the area where Combs’ Los Angeles property was searched, told reporters he would see parties at the home and women outside until 6am, which was not usual.
“I drive by a lot, and I see that — a lot of girls, maybe five or six girls outside, some leaving, some not, some going in,” he said, according to NBC News.
“I never thought anything of it,” Mr Mendelsohn, who added that he did not know Combs lived there until Monday’s news broke. “But now, it’s crazy.”
Joie Dickerson-Neal
In November 2023, Joie Dickerson-Neal filed a lawsuit alleging that Combs drugged her, sexually assaulted her and secretly recorded the assault while she was a college student in 1991, NBC News reported, citing the filing.
She claimed that Combs pushed her to go to dinner with him and she agreed “reluctantly” on 3 January 1991, which is when she alleges she was drugged, “resulting in her being in a physical state where she could not independently stand or walk,” the BBC reported.
The suit also claims he recorded the assault and showed it to other people.
She later filed police reports in New York and New Jersey, spoke to prosecutors, but was told by colleagues they were “terrified that Combs would retaliate against them and that they would lose future business and music opportunities if they made a statement in support of” her, NBC News reported, citing the lawsuit.
More women come forward
Since November, several more women have come forward with lawsuits in the Southern District of New York alleging that they were sexually assaulted by Combs.
Two of the women said they were teenagers at the time of the alleged assaults.
Anonymous Plaintiff
In November, an anonymous plaintiff accused Combs and singer-songwriter Aaron Hall of raping her and a friend in 1990 or 1991 after meeting at an MCA Records event in New York, where the singers “were very flirtatious and handsy” and offered them drinks, Rolling Stone reported.
The suit alleges that Combs and Hall invited the women to Hall’s apartment for an afterparty where the plaintiff “was offered more drinks and was coerced into having sex with Combs,” and was “shocked and traumatized” afterwards, before “Hall barged into the room, pinned her down and forced Jane Doe to have sex with him,” according to Rolling Stone.
After she spoke to her friend, the plaintiff allegedly found out she had also “been forced to have sex with Combs and Hall in another room,” according to the suit.
A few days later, Combs allegedly visited the plaintiff and her friend at a home where they were staying, where he became “irate and began assaulting and choking Jane Doe to the point that she passed out,” the lawsuit alleges.
Unnamed Accuser ‘Jane Doe’
In December, Combs was hit with another lawsuit which claimed he had drugged and gang-raped a 17-year-old girl in 2003.
The plaintiff, identified as Jane Doe, accused Combs of plying her with drugs and alcohol at his New York studio and then raping her along with two associates.
The suit accused Combs of a “sex trafficking scheme,” in which Jane Doe was flown by private jet from her home in Michigan to New York.
In May, after the shocking CCTV footage of Combs attacking Venture was published, former model Crystal McKinney filed a new lawsuit claiming the rapper sexually assaulted her at his recording studio in New York City in 2003.
McKinney said she was a successful 22-year-old model when she met Combs at a restaurant during Men’s Fashion Week in Manhattan. Combs invited her to his recording studio later that night, according to the federal complaint filed in New York City.
The lawsuit alleged that McKinney arrived to find Combs drinking and smoking marijuana with several other men. She smoked some marijuana, which she “later came to understand” was laced with a narcotic or intoxicating substance, the lawsuit said.
She alleged that Combs led her to the bathroom where she was forced to perform oral sex on him.
Days after McKinney’s lawsuit was filed, April Lampros – who met Diddy while she was a student – claimed Diddy had sexually assaulted multiple times between 1995 and the early 2000s.
Lampros said she met the rapper in 1994 while she was a college student at the Fashion Institue of Technology in New York and interning at Arista, then the parent company of Diddy’s label Bad Boy Entertainment.
After meeting her at a bar in New York, she “succumbed to pressure” to drink alcohol after “delusional and violent outbursts”, according to the federal complaint filed in New York City.
Lampros claimed she began to feel like the “walls were closing in on her” after sipping her drink and Combs escorted her back to a hotel. The lawsuit alleged Combs forced himself on Lampros despite her protests. “Ms Lampros was being raped by Mr Combs, and she soon passed out,” it said.
The rapper allegedly then “love-bombed her” and his advances later “manifested into an aggressive, coercive and abusive relationship based on sex”.
The lawsuit claimed Combs assaulted Lampros a second time by physically forcing her to perform oral sex in a garage near his apartment in Manhattan. When the student attempted to distance herself from the rapper following the assault he allegedly gave her “gifts and empty promises” before turning “angry, threatening and forceful” and claiming he would destroy her career.
In 1996, Combs sexually assaulted Lampros for a third time when he forced her and his ex-girlfriend Kim Porter to take ecstasy and have sex together, the lawsuit alleged. Combs masturbated while he watched the women together before assaulting Lampros, the filing claimed.
Lampros says she ended her relationship with Combs two years later. However, when she saw him at an event at the Rockefeller Center in the early 2000s he begged to see her again and she allowed him to come to her apartment where he kissed and touched her against her will, the lawsuit alleged.
In 2023, Lampros alleges an unidentified man approached her partner at the time and said he had seen a sexual video of Lampros and Combs years earlier. Lampros was informed “Mr Combs apparently recorded them having sex without her knowing and showed it to multiple people,” the filing claimed.
In September of this year, Dawn Richard, a former bandmate, accused the music mogul of carrying out years of physical and sexual abuse against her and others while the two worked together, according to a lawsuit filed in New York federal court, describing allegations dating back to 2009.
She accuses Combs of withholding payment for work on albums, groping her, making lewd coments, attempting to strike her, throwing household items at her, hosting parties where inebriated young girls were sexually violated, withholding food and other basic necessities during recording, and making death threats when Richard tried to intervene in alleged abuse against Combs’s longtime girlfriend, the singer Cassie.
“For nearly a decade, Mr. Combs manipulated Ms. Richard with mantras that submission to his depraved demands was necessary for career advancement, instilling in her the belief that such abuse and exploitation were required for female artists to succeed in the music industry,” the complaint reads.
An attorney for Combs toldThe Independent the suit was “false” and an attempt to “rewrite history.”
On September 27, Combs was hit with a 10th lawsuit by an anonymous woman who claims Combs abused her, physically and sexually, for four straight years. In her suit, “Jane Doe” says she more than once woke up in Combs’s bed, badly injured, after blacking out the night before — with no memory of what had happened.
Doe says in the suit that she met Combs in the fall of 2020 “at an overseas location.” He paid for her to travel there, and the two began seeing each other “regularly” after that, according to the suit.
They met up roughly once a month, and Combs would often drug her against her will, then sexually abuse her, Doe claims, in the lawsuit.
“On one morning she woke up and her feet were purple and bruised and she had a bite mark on her heel,” it says. “Jane Doe did not know how she sustained the injuries.”
Doe later learned she had been unwittingly dosed with ketamine, according to the lawsuit.
On October 14 and then again on October 20, attorney Tony Buzbee filed a total of 13 lawsuits against Combs. The lawsuits represent men and women who claim Combs sexually assaulted them, with cases spanning from 2000 to 2022. Buzbee said in a statement that he would continue to file lawsuits “weekly” as he gathers more evidence from alleged victims.
The plaintifss in those cases have not been named, but at least one alleged victim said she was 13-years-old when Combs allegedly raped her at an MTV VMA after-party.
Another plaintiff accused Combs of allegedly drugging him using Rohypnol that had been mixed into baby oil.
Two new lawsuits filed on 28 October accused the rapper of drugging and sexually assaulting a 10-year-old boy in 2005 and a 17-year-old reality show aspirant in 2008.
Combs’s response to allegations
Sean Combs has strongly denied all the accusations against him and vowed to “fight for my name, my family and for the truth.”
In a statement in December, following the lawsuit brought by Jane Doe, he called the claims “sickening” and said his accusers were “looking for a quick payday”.
“Let me be absolutely clear: I did not do any of the awful things being alleged,” he said in a statement. “I will fight for my name, my family and for the truth.”
Combs’ lawyer, Shawn Holley, branded the events described in the lawsuit as “pure fiction”.
“We have overwhelming, indisputable proof that his claims are complete lies,” he said. “We will address these outlandish allegations in court and take all appropriate action against those who make them.”
Following the settlement with Ventura, Ben Brafman, another attorney for Combs, told The Independent: “Just so we’re clear, a decision to settle a lawsuit, especially in 2023, is in no way an admission of wrongdoing.
“Mr. Combs’ decision to settle the lawsuit does not in any way undermine his flat-out denial of the claims.
“He is happy they got to a mutual settlement and wishes Ms Ventura the best.”
Shortly after the release of footage that shows Combs attacking Ms Ventura in a hotel hallway, Combs condemned his own actions and apologised in a video posted to social media.
In the clip, Combs refers to the incident as “one of the darkest times in his life”, saying that he was “f***ed up” and is “disgusted by his actions”.
Criminal Charges Against Diddy
For nearly a year, Combs has faced a series of civil lawsuits that accuse him of sexual abuse, rape and misconduct. Now, federal prosecutors have brought criminal charges against him.
Combs has been charged with sex trafficking and transportation to engage in prostitution after a federal grand jury in New York chose to bring an indictment against him.
He is accused of running a criminal enterprise that consisted of his associates, employees and the influence of his business empire to coerce, control and abuse female victims. That includes “sex trafficking, forced labor, kidnapping, arson, bribery and obstruction of justice” according to the indictment.
In an indictment unsealed on Tuesday morning, federal prosecutors allege Combs and his associates threatened, abused and coerced women and others around him “to fulfill his sexual desires”.
That allegedly includes forcing victims into engaging in recorded sexual activity which he referred to as “Freak Offs.”
”During Freak Offs, Combs distributed a variety of controlled substances to victims, in part to keep the victims obedient and compliant,” prosecutors said in the document. “After Freak Offs, Combs and the victims typically received IV fluids to recover from the physical exertion and drug use.”
Comedian Jeff Wittek claimed on an episode of his show Jeff FM that when he was 20 years old, he went to one of Combs' alleged “Freak Off” parties where he saw people having sex at a mansion in Miami, E! News reported.
“It was like eight stories high and it just kept going up,” Wittek said. “And the higher you went, the weirder s--t was going on.”
In 2010, he said he went to a “lingerie sex party” after getting an invite through an acquaintance, who had filmed a music video with Combs.
“She's like, ‘Oh, he's having a Diddy party,’” he said. “These Diddy parties are f---ing crazy. They're the best parties, like, people wanted to go to them.”
While Wittek wore a polo shirt, expecting a normal party, another friend wore lingerie where “their nipples are showing through.”
“And I'm like, ‘You guys are going like that?’” Wittek recalled. “They're like, ‘You don't understand about these parties.’ And I did not understand 'cause I saw live sex happen that night.”
“That's the first time I saw that happen ever in my life. And did I partake? No, but I got f---ing drunk there,” he added. “It's just crazy. I was literally there. I lived through it.”
Combs was arrested at a Manhattan hotel on September 16 about six months after federal agents raided two of the musician’s homes in Los Angeles and Miami as part of the investigation.
The federal investigation coincides with a series of civil lawsuits accusing him of sexual misconduct and sexual abuse over the last year.
Marc Agnifilio, a lawyer for Combs, called his client “an innocent man with nothing to hide.”
He said the musician has been cooperating with federal authorities and voluntarily relocated to New York last week in anticipation of the arrest.
“We are disappointed with the decision to pursue what we believe is an unjust prosecution of Mr. Combs by the U.S. Attorney’s Office,” Agnifilo said in a statement.
“Please reserve your judgment until you have all the facts,” Agnifilo told reporters outside the courthouse on September 17. “He looks forward to clearing his name in court.”
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