Diddy's ex-assistant spills details on near-gunfight with Suge Knight
An armed Combs went after Knight after he was spotted at an LA diner, the man testified.
Combs faces federal charges, including sex trafficking and racketeering conspiracy.
With three guns on his lap, Sean "Diddy" Combs ordered his driver to "motherfucking go" as they lit out for a Los Angeles diner — itching to confront longtime rival Suge Knight, Combs' ex-personal assistant testified Tuesday.
David James, Combs' then-personal assistant, described the dramatic 2008 ordeal — in which an early morning cheeseburger run nearly escalated the notorious East Coast-West Coast rap feud— while on the stand at Combs' federal sex-trafficking trial.
"It was the first time I realized my life was in danger," James told the Manhattan jury during his second day of testimony.
Knight, the Death Row Records cofounder, had been spotted at Mel's Drive-In diner some 20 minutes prior, James testified. It was James who drove Combs and one of the hip-hop tycoon's trusted security guards back to the diner, guns at the ready.
"I remember complete silence" during the 10-minute drive from Combs' Hollywood Hills home to the diner, James testified, adding, "I remember thinking there are three guns and three people in this car" should anything happen.
James, who said he served as Combs' personal assistant from 2007 to 2009, told the jury that by the time Combs got to the diner, Knight had already left.
"We didn't see any black Escalades or black SUVs" in the lot by the time they returned, James said, referring to the four cars he said Knight had been traveling with.In the end, Combs just went home.
"We eventually drove back to his house in Hollywood Hills," James told the jury.
James said that Combs' human resources director tried to talk him into continuing to work for the rapper's Bad Boy companies. She offered him a job with the Sean John fashion line, or in marketing, he said.
"I told her no," he testified. "I just wanted to get out."
Last week, Combs' ex-girlfriend — star prosecution witness Cassie Ventura — described the Combs-Knight incident from her vantage point, back at the rapper's home.
On Tuesday, James described it from his own perspective, telling jurors what he heard and saw from behind the wheel.
It was 4 a.m., and Combs wanted cheeseburgers after a late-night recording session at his rented Hollywood Hills mansion.
James and one of Combs' security guards, Damian "D-Roc" Butler, were sent to Mel's, a popular all-night diner.
"I drove the staff truck, a silver Lincoln Navigator," James testified.
James had just pulled the Navigator into a parking spot at Mel's when Butler saw Knight at the wheel of an Escalade parked a few spots over.
"That's motherfucking Suge Knight!" Butler said, according to James.
James testified that the security guard walked up to Knight's car and said, "What's up? It's me D-Roc, Biggie's boy," referring to rapper Notorious B.I.G.
"Oh, what are you doing in my city?" Knight asked Butler, who replied, "I'm just here getting money, you know how it is," James testified.
"I know what it is," Knight responded.
The two men shook hands, and parted ways.
But as James and Butler were placing their order inside Mel's, they saw someone pass a gun to Knight — and saw four SUVs drive into position at different corners of the parking lot, James testified.
"We gotta' fucking go," Butler said, and they sped back to Combs' home, James testified.
Knight, who is serving a 28-year prison sentence in connection to a fatal 2015 hit-and-run, has recently commented on Combs' criminal case in interviews. An attorney for Knight did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
Outside of Combs' home that early morning, James told jurors he saw Combs arguing with Ventura.
"She was telling him not to go. She was very upset," James said of Ventura.
In her testimony last week about the situation, Ventura said that she had been involved in one of Combs' "freak off" sex performances at the time.
"I just remember we were kind of, like, just chilling at this point and D-Roc came in and he said that Suge was down at Mel's diner, which was just right down the hill," Ventura had testified. "And they quickly packed up and drove down there."
Ventura said she got upset.
"I was crying. I was screaming, like, please don't do anything stupid. I just was really nervous for them," Ventura testified. "I didn't know what it meant, what they were going to do."
Ventura testified that Combs and the other men put on black clothes, covered up their heads, went into a safe, and grabbed guns.
"And next thing I knew, they were in the SUV," she said.
They returned to the house in about half an hour, Ventura testified.
Prosecutors say that for two decades, Combs led a "criminal enterprise" that involved the sex trafficking of Ventura and another woman. Combs is accused of coercing those women, plus two additional women, into sex through a pattern of threats, manipulation, and violence.
Combs and his associates also committed other crimes, including forced labor, kidnapping, arson, bribery, drug offenses, and obstruction of justice, prosecutors allege.
If convicted on the sex trafficking and racketeering conspiracy charges against him, Combs could spend the rest of his life behind bars.
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New York Times
7 hours ago
- New York Times
Talking Past Each Other in Israel
Most Saturday evenings, my wife and I join a silent vigil in Tel Aviv where each participant holds a photograph of a Gazan child killed in recent Israeli Defense Force attacks. There are a lot of them. We stand for an hour. Some passers-by stop to look at the pictures and read the children's names; others throw out a curse and keep walking. Strangely, unlike at many antigovernment protests I attend, where I feel a bit pointless, at this vigil I do feel of some use. It's not much, but I am creating an encounter between a dead child and the gaze of a person who didn't know that child existed. On a recent Saturday, the vigil was more charged than usual. Hamas had just released a monstrous video showing the skeletal Israeli hostage Evyatar David digging his own grave upon his captors' orders. A few people stopped as they walked past us. A man wearing swim shorts stared at me and asked me if I had seen the video: 'He's your people. It's his picture you should be holding. His!' Another woman stopped and yelled at us: 'It's all Hamas propaganda! Don't you get it? Those kids — It's all A.I. They're not real!' It would have been easy for me to argue, to find myself condescending to these people's claims. But because the vigil is silent, I was forced to just look at them and keep quiet. I've never been very good at keeping quiet. In some ways I'm like the running commentary on a director's cut, with an answer or explanation for everything. I used to feel like the only one who did that, but now that social media is everywhere, it seems the whole world has become like me. The man in the swim shorts tried to get a verbal response out of me, and when he failed, he quickly recalibrated and realized he could keep talking unhindered. His attempt to stir up an argument soon turned into a peculiar blend of internal monologue and Facebook post. He spoke about loss, and enemies, and this country of ours and what the hell has become of it, and about the hostages and his reserve duty and his nephew who's serving in Gaza. Want all of The Times? Subscribe.
Yahoo
8 hours ago
- Yahoo
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"Subject to regulatory approval, we intend to refresh our Powerball game with a price change enabling increased prizes across all divisions," The Lottery Corporation Managing Director and CEO Sue van der Merwe said. "This will enhance Powerball as Australia's most popular premium jackpot game." The price of one game will rise from $1.20 to $1.40 and is planned for November. The Lottery Corporation says it will lead to larger prizes offered to players and bigger commissions for retailers. The Lottery Corporation said performance across its games has been resilient for 2024 and participation remained healthy despite spending constraints for Australians. Last year, Powerball offered three separate $100 million jackpots. Lottery bosses have revealed they plan on hiking the price it costs to play the Powerball. "Subject to regulatory approval, we intend to refresh our Powerball game with a price change enabling increased prizes across all divisions," The Lottery Corporation Managing Director and CEO Sue van der Merwe said. "This will enhance Powerball as Australia's most popular premium jackpot game." The price of one game will rise from $1.20 to $1.40 and is planned for November. The Lottery Corporation says it will lead to larger prizes offered to players and bigger commissions for retailers. The Lottery Corporation said performance across its games has been resilient for 2024 and participation remained healthy despite spending constraints for Australians. Last year, Powerball offered three separate $100 million jackpots. Twist after Daryl Murphy sentenced to jail Former MP Daryl Maguire was earlier sentenced for misleading a corruption probe about potential profits from a major property deal, but has now been released on bail about an hour later. Best known for his secret relationship with Gladys Berejiklian while she was NSW premier, Maguire was sentenced to a non-parole period of five months on Wednesday. The former NSW MP was found guilty of giving misleading evidence at an Independent Commission Against Corruption inquiry into a Sydney council in 2018. But Maguire was granted bail about an hour after being taken into custody on Wednesday. An appeal has been launched against his conviction and the sentence imposed. Read more from AAP here. Former MP Daryl Maguire was earlier sentenced for misleading a corruption probe about potential profits from a major property deal, but has now been released on bail about an hour later. Best known for his secret relationship with Gladys Berejiklian while she was NSW premier, Maguire was sentenced to a non-parole period of five months on Wednesday. The former NSW MP was found guilty of giving misleading evidence at an Independent Commission Against Corruption inquiry into a Sydney council in 2018. But Maguire was granted bail about an hour after being taken into custody on Wednesday. An appeal has been launched against his conviction and the sentence imposed. Read more from AAP here. Methanol tragedy survivor now blind One of the survivors of the mass methanol poisoning in Laos last year that claimed the lives of two Australian teens has revealed he's blind The tragedy in November 2024 left six people dead and made headlines around the world. Holly Bowles and Bianca Jones, two best friends from Melbourne, were among those who lost their lives. Brit Calum Macdonald was one of the hostel guests to drink free shots in the party town of Vang Vieng. A day later arriving in Vietnam, he knew something was seriously wrong. "We were sitting in the hotel room, my friends and I, and I said to them: 'Why are we sitting in the dark? Someone should turn a light on.'" The lights were already on," he told the BBC. Calum, like other survivors, is now pushing for increased awareness about methanol poisoning, which can occur when corners are cut in the production of spirits. One of the survivors of the mass methanol poisoning in Laos last year that claimed the lives of two Australian teens has revealed he's blind The tragedy in November 2024 left six people dead and made headlines around the world. Holly Bowles and Bianca Jones, two best friends from Melbourne, were among those who lost their lives. Brit Calum Macdonald was one of the hostel guests to drink free shots in the party town of Vang Vieng. A day later arriving in Vietnam, he knew something was seriously wrong. "We were sitting in the hotel room, my friends and I, and I said to them: 'Why are we sitting in the dark? Someone should turn a light on.'" The lights were already on," he told the BBC. Calum, like other survivors, is now pushing for increased awareness about methanol poisoning, which can occur when corners are cut in the production of spirits. Queensland considering licence change for learners The Queensland government is weighing up changes to how young people in the state obtain their driver's licence, saying the 100-hour supervised driving rule is leaving some at a disadvantage. "Many young people are disadvantaged because they don't have access to be able to do those 100 hours. We're looking at that piece of work at the moment," Transport Minister Brent Mickelberg said, the ABC reported. Drivers under 25 are required to complete 100 hours of supervised driving before they obtain their provisional licence. With fulfilling the requirement reliant on someone's access to a vehicle, Mickelberg said the government was keen to ensure everyone who wants a licence had a viable path to do so. The Queensland government is weighing up changes to how young people in the state obtain their driver's licence, saying the 100-hour supervised driving rule is leaving some at a disadvantage. "Many young people are disadvantaged because they don't have access to be able to do those 100 hours. We're looking at that piece of work at the moment," Transport Minister Brent Mickelberg said, the ABC reported. Drivers under 25 are required to complete 100 hours of supervised driving before they obtain their provisional licence. With fulfilling the requirement reliant on someone's access to a vehicle, Mickelberg said the government was keen to ensure everyone who wants a licence had a viable path to do so. Daryl Maguire jailed over misleading evidence at inquiry Disgraced ex-MP Daryl Maguire has been jailed after he was found guilty of giving misleading evidence to ICAC. Maguire, 66, appeared at Sydney Central District Court on Wednesday after he was in June found guilty by a magistrate of one count of giving false or misleading evidence at a public inquiry. The former Wagga Wagga MP had pleaded not guilty to the charge, which related to his evidence before the Independent Commission Against Corruption (ICAC) in July 2018. On Wednesday, Magistrate Clare Farnan sentenced him to a 10-month jail term. He was soon put in handcuffs and taken into custody. He will be eligible for parole in January. In sentencing, Ms Farnan told the court the misleading evidence given by Maguire concerned his dealings with a multimillion-dollar property development. 'The evidence there was nothing in it for him was misleading … and he was to receive a commission if the property was to be sold,' she said. Ms Farnan said Maguire was 'clearly trying to protect his reputation among other things'. 'The community is entitled to expect that those who hold power will conduct themselves with integrity,' she said. Read more from NewsWire here. Disgraced ex-MP Daryl Maguire has been jailed after he was found guilty of giving misleading evidence to ICAC. Maguire, 66, appeared at Sydney Central District Court on Wednesday after he was in June found guilty by a magistrate of one count of giving false or misleading evidence at a public inquiry. The former Wagga Wagga MP had pleaded not guilty to the charge, which related to his evidence before the Independent Commission Against Corruption (ICAC) in July 2018. On Wednesday, Magistrate Clare Farnan sentenced him to a 10-month jail term. He was soon put in handcuffs and taken into custody. He will be eligible for parole in January. In sentencing, Ms Farnan told the court the misleading evidence given by Maguire concerned his dealings with a multimillion-dollar property development. 'The evidence there was nothing in it for him was misleading … and he was to receive a commission if the property was to be sold,' she said. Ms Farnan said Maguire was 'clearly trying to protect his reputation among other things'. 'The community is entitled to expect that those who hold power will conduct themselves with integrity,' she said. Read more from NewsWire here. WA Police defends attempts to catch criminals by leaving e-scooters around WA Police has defended placing e-scooters at shopping centres as part of an operation to catch thieves. A police spokesperson told the ABC the e-scooters were previously seized or forfeited, and that the tactic in Perth was "lawful". "WA Police use a range of lawful tactics to deter and detect crime through covert and overt means aimed at reducing theft and keeping the community safe," they said. But human rights law expert Dr Hannah McGlade said the operation was "very questionable policing practice". "Why would the police be trying to encourage people to actually commit an offence of stealing?" she asked when speaking with the public broadcaster. WA Police has defended placing e-scooters at shopping centres as part of an operation to catch thieves. A police spokesperson told the ABC the e-scooters were previously seized or forfeited, and that the tactic in Perth was "lawful". "WA Police use a range of lawful tactics to deter and detect crime through covert and overt means aimed at reducing theft and keeping the community safe," they said. But human rights law expert Dr Hannah McGlade said the operation was "very questionable policing practice". "Why would the police be trying to encourage people to actually commit an offence of stealing?" she asked when speaking with the public broadcaster. Australia hits back at scathing Netanyahu attack Home Affairs and Immigration Minister Tony Burke has unleashed on Benjamin Netanyahu after the Israeli leader called Anthony Albanese a 'weak politician who betrayed Israel and abandoned Australia's Jews'. Burke, who is at the centre of the diplomatic stoush, was one of the first senior government officials to front media on Wednesday. He said that Netanyahu's definition of 'weak' was off. 'Strength is not measured by how many people you can blow up or how many children you can leave hungry,' Burke told the ABC. 'Strength is much better measured by exactly what Prime Minister Anthony Albanese has done, which is when there's a decision that we know Israel won't like, he goes straight to Benjamin Netanyahu. 'He has the conversation.' The 'conversation' Mr Burke referred to was a phone call the Prime Minister had with his Israeli counterpart before announcing he would recognise Palestinian statehood. The call did little to soften the blow, with the Israeli government saying the decision 'rewarded' Hamas — the Palestinian Islamist group that runs Gaza. - NewsWire Home Affairs and Immigration Minister Tony Burke has unleashed on Benjamin Netanyahu after the Israeli leader called Anthony Albanese a 'weak politician who betrayed Israel and abandoned Australia's Jews'. Burke, who is at the centre of the diplomatic stoush, was one of the first senior government officials to front media on Wednesday. He said that Netanyahu's definition of 'weak' was off. 'Strength is not measured by how many people you can blow up or how many children you can leave hungry,' Burke told the ABC. 'Strength is much better measured by exactly what Prime Minister Anthony Albanese has done, which is when there's a decision that we know Israel won't like, he goes straight to Benjamin Netanyahu. 'He has the conversation.' The 'conversation' Mr Burke referred to was a phone call the Prime Minister had with his Israeli counterpart before announcing he would recognise Palestinian statehood. The call did little to soften the blow, with the Israeli government saying the decision 'rewarded' Hamas — the Palestinian Islamist group that runs Gaza. - NewsWire Fans' one big question as Lynne McGranger farewelled Home and Away bid farewell to one of its most beloved characters in Tuesday night's episode as Irene Roberts, played by Lynne McGranger, left Summer Bay for good. But after 33 years on the show, some viewers were left feeling a little underwhelmed, suggesting more big names should have turned up in the final episode. 'Is it just me, or are others disappointed in who was there to say goodbye. I thought a lot more of the cast would have been included. Lot of strange faces but not a lot of Irene's friends,' one person wrote. Read more from Yahoo's Lachlan Guertin here. View this post on Instagram A post shared by Ada Nicodemou (@adanicodemou) Home and Away bid farewell to one of its most beloved characters in Tuesday night's episode as Irene Roberts, played by Lynne McGranger, left Summer Bay for good. But after 33 years on the show, some viewers were left feeling a little underwhelmed, suggesting more big names should have turned up in the final episode. 'Is it just me, or are others disappointed in who was there to say goodbye. I thought a lot more of the cast would have been included. Lot of strange faces but not a lot of Irene's friends,' one person wrote. Read more from Yahoo's Lachlan Guertin here. View this post on Instagram A post shared by Ada Nicodemou (@adanicodemou) BoM 'concerned' by amount of rain Well its another wet morning for millions across Australia's east coast. And the Bureau of Meteorology says its "concerned" by the sheer amount of rain falling in some parts. Senior meteorologist Dean Narramore said increasing rain across parts of NSW and Queensland would become more widespread over the coming days as weather systems combined. 'That is two to three days of rainfall in areas that are already wet and saturated,' he said. 'We can see widespread falls across much of northern NSW in that 50 to 100mm range, with isolated falls in excess of 150mm which is why we're concerned." Well its another wet morning for millions across Australia's east coast. And the Bureau of Meteorology says its "concerned" by the sheer amount of rain falling in some parts. Senior meteorologist Dean Narramore said increasing rain across parts of NSW and Queensland would become more widespread over the coming days as weather systems combined. 'That is two to three days of rainfall in areas that are already wet and saturated,' he said. 'We can see widespread falls across much of northern NSW in that 50 to 100mm range, with isolated falls in excess of 150mm which is why we're concerned." Netanyahu blasts Albanese as 'weak' Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has escalated tensions with Australia by branding Anthony Albanese a "weak politician". It comes after Albanese declared Australia would recognise a Palestinian state in response to large-scale civilian suffering in Gaza which he said needed to end. "History will remember Albanese for what he is: A weak politician who betrayed Israel and abandoned Australia's Jews," Netanyahu said in a scathing attack on the prime minister. While not the first criticism of Albanese's decision from Israel, it is a significant blow to rapidly-deteriorating ties between the two countries. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has escalated tensions with Australia by branding Anthony Albanese a "weak politician". It comes after Albanese declared Australia would recognise a Palestinian state in response to large-scale civilian suffering in Gaza which he said needed to end. "History will remember Albanese for what he is: A weak politician who betrayed Israel and abandoned Australia's Jews," Netanyahu said in a scathing attack on the prime minister. While not the first criticism of Albanese's decision from Israel, it is a significant blow to rapidly-deteriorating ties between the two countries.


New York Post
16 hours ago
- New York Post
Trump weaponization czar urged NY AG Letitia James to resign over mortgage probe in ‘act of good faith'
President Donald Trump's political weaponization czar sent a letter urging New York Attorney General Letitia James to resign from office 'as an act of good faith' four days after starting his mortgage fraud investigation of her. Then he showed up outside her house. Ed Martin, the director of the Justice Department's Weaponization Working Group, told James' lawyer on Aug. 12 the Democrat would best serve the 'good of the state and nation' by resigning and ending his probe into alleged paperwork discrepancies on her Brooklyn townhouse and a Virginia home. 3 President Donald Trump's political weaponization czar, Ed Martin, sent a letter telling New York Attorney General Letitia James to step down 'as an act of good faith.' Kyle Mazza/NurPhoto/Shutterstock 'Her resignation from office would give the people of New York and America more peace than proceeding,' Martin wrote. 'I would take this as an act of good faith.' Then last Friday, Martin turned up outside James' Brooklyn townhouse in a 'Columbo'-esque trench coat, accompanied by an aide and New York Post journalists. He didn't meet with James or go inside the building. A Post writer saw him tell a neighbor: 'I'm just looking at houses, interesting houses. It's an important house.' James' lawyer Abbe Lowell shot back on Monday, telling Martin in a letter his blunt request for James' resignation defied Justice Department standards and codes of professional responsibility and legal ethics. The Justice Department 'has firm policies against using investigations and against using prosecutorial power for achieving political ends,' Lowell wrote. 'This is ever more the case when that demand is made to seek political revenge against a public official in the opposite party.' 3 Martin visited James's Brooklyn residence days after he started investigating her for mortgage fraud. New York Post 'Let me be clear: that will not happen here,' Lowell added. Lowell also blasted Martin's visit to James' home as a 'truly bizarre, made-for-media stunt' and said it was 'outside the bounds' of Justice Department rules. He included an image from security camera footage showing Martin, in his trench coat, posing for a photo in front of James' townhouse. He said Martin looked as if he were on a 'visit to a tourist attraction.' The Associated Press obtained copies of both letters on Tuesday. A message seeking comment was left for Martin's spokesperson. 3 Abbe Lowell, the attorney for the James, criticized Martin's visit and said his appearance was nothing more than a 'made-for-media stunt.' Gregory P. Mango James' office declined to comment. The letters were the latest salvos in a monthslong drama involving Trump's retribution campaign against James and others who've battled him in court and fought his policies. James has sued the Republican president and his administration dozens of times and last year won a $454 million judgment against Trump and his companies in a lawsuit alleging he lied about the value of his assets on financial statements given to banks. An appeals court has yet to rule on Trump's bid to overturn that verdict. Earlier this month, the AP reported, the Justice Department subpoenaed James for records related to the civil fraud lawsuit and a lawsuit she filed against the National Rifle Association. Martin's investigation stems from a letter Federal Housing Finance Agency Director William Pulte sent to Attorney General Pam Bondi in April asking her to investigate and consider prosecuting James, alleging she had 'falsified bank documents and property records.' Pulte, whose agency regulates mortgage financiers Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, cited 'media reports' claiming James had falsely listed a Virginia home as her principal residence, and he suggested she may have been trying to avoid higher interest rates that often apply to second homes. Records show James was listed as a co-borrower on a house her niece was buying in 2023. Lowell said records and correspondence easily disproved Pulte's allegation. While James signed a power-of-attorney form that, Lowell said, 'mistakenly stated the property to be Ms. James' principal residence,' she sent an email to her mortgage loan broker around the same time that made clear the property 'WILL NOT be my primary residence.' Pulte also accused James of lying in property records about the number of apartments in the Brooklyn townhouse she has owned since 2001. A certificate of occupancy issued to a previous owner authorized up to five units in the building, where James lives and has rented out apartments. Other city records show the townhouse has four units, a number James has listed in building permit applications and mortgage documents. On Aug. 8, Bondi appointed Martin, a former Republican political operative, to investigate. Martin, the current U.S. pardon attorney and former acting U.S. attorney for Washington, D.C., is also investigating mortgage fraud allegations against Sen. Adam Schiff, D-Calif. Schiff's lawyer called the allegations 'transparently false, stale, and long debunked.' Lowell said it appears the working group Martin leads 'is aptly named as it is 'weaponizing'' the Justice Department 'to carry out the President's and Attorney General's threats.'