
How the case against Sean 'Diddy' Combs unfolded
The case against Combs started like this. Because millions around the world knew him as the producer, the rapper, the Bad Boy record label founder. A one-time self-made billionaire and flamboyant host of the hottest A-list parties.
Following his arrest last year, he was known by another label - inmate 37452-054 at the infamous Metropolitan Detention Centre in Brooklyn, New York. He has now been found guilty of transportation for prostitution in relation to his former girlfriends, Cassie Ventura and Jane*, along with male sex workers.
Cassie and Jane*, who testified under a pseudonym, alleged they were forced and coerced into these "freak off" sex sessions, but jurors have found Combs not guilty of the more serious charges of racketeering and sex trafficking.
He still faces up to 20 years in prison - but not life, which is the sentence those charges carry.
Over seven weeks, jurors tasked with deciding the fate of one of the most influential hip-hop producers of the last 30 years heard testimony from dozens of witnesses who spent time in his orbit, including former employees, police officers, male escorts, hotel staff, and fellow rapper and one-time love rival, Kid Cudi.
They also heard testimony from Cassie Ventura, the woman whose allegations against her former partner arguably lit the touchpaper that led Combs to the criminal courtroom.
In November 2023, just two months after Combs had been handed a "global icon" prize by MTV, and received the ceremonial key to New York by the city's mayor, Cassie filed a bombshell lawsuit.
In a 35-page document, the singer accused him of coercing and forcing her into drug-fuelled sex sessions with male escorts - now known to anyone who been following the trial as "freak offs" - during the majority of their on-off relationship between 2007 and 2018. He blackmailed her with video footage, she said, violently assaulted her on several occasions, and raped her when she told him she wanted to end things for good.
The lawsuit was settled within 24 hours, for a sum of $20m, it was revealed during his trial. But it wasn't the end. Four months later, in March 2024, federal agents raided properties belonging to the rapper in Miami and Los Angeles. In May 2024, CNN aired hotel security footage showing Combs punching and kicking Cassie and throwing her to the floor in 2016 - mirroring one of the allegations in her lawsuit.
"I was disgusted when I did it," Combs said in a public apology video after the CCTV was aired. But this time, there was no denying or getting around what everyone could see in the footage.
'Diddy was his own hobby'
Rob Shuter, a former publicist for Combs, admits it was an "incredible job" at times, and says the rapper had real charisma - echoing the sentiment of several witnesses who testified.
"There's something about Puff... He's one of the most charming people you will ever, ever meet."
Shuter, from Birmingham, worked with several A-list music artists, but says Combs was his first mega star. He recalls an "absolute workaholic" who would call in the early hours and late at night, and says the Diddy brand was the star's "own hobby".
"All he did 24 hours every day, every year," was think about the brand, he says. "And that's what made him a superstar."
Shuter is also candid about seeing excessive drinking and drugs - evidence of which was shown during the trial - and people "being oversexualised".
Over the last few years, as allegations mounted, Shuter says he has had to reckon with his past. "Did I let things slip because he's rich and famous and he paid me a lot of money?"
Cassie's testimony
1:29
In the months leading up to the trial, it was revealed that three alleged victims would give evidence. Two would be anonymous and use pseudonyms, but Victim 1 was prepared to testify under her own name.
After opening statements, a heavily pregnant Cassie Ventura took the stand.
"Within the first year of our relationship, Sean proposed to me this idea, this sexual encounter that he called voyeurism, where he would watch me… have intercourse and sexual activity with a third party, specifically another man."
During her first day of evidence, she gave graphic details of these drug and drink-fuelled encounters, saying Combs would watch and masturbate, and often film.
Combs abused and degraded her, Cassie said, and was "too frequently" violent. He "would mash me in the head, knock me over, drag me, kick me… stomp me in the head if I was down".
The freak offs could last for hours or even days - the longest for four days, she said. "Freak offs became a job where there was no space to do anything else but to recover and just try to feel normal again."
Cassie was 19 when she signed to the music mogul's label, Bad Boy, and 22 when, during the first year of their relationship, Combs first proposed a freak off. She told jurors her "stomach churned" but she wanted to please him at first.
Soon, she found herself trapped with no real career of her own anymore. She was fearful of violence, and the consequences should Combs ever release any of the explicit footage.
His lawyers argued this case was about money. But Cassie had already received her civil settlement.
"Cassie has already received her money," says attorney Lisa Bloom, who represents two accusers who have filed lawsuits against Combs - including singer Dawn Richard, who testified in the criminal trial.
"She [did] not have any financial motivation now to come forward… to testify against him in the criminal case, especially when she was [heavily] pregnant."
Towards the end of her second day of evidence, Cassie broke down in tears when asked why she had put herself through it. "I can't carry this anymore," she told the court. "I can't carry the shame, the guilt, the way he treated people like they were disposable. What's right is right, what's wrong is wrong. I came here to do the right thing."
'I was going to die with this'
The court also heard from other alleged victims - Jane*, who dated Combs after Cassie, from 2021 until his arrest in 2024, and Mia*, a former employee.
Jane's allegations were similar to Cassie's, regarding freak offs - referred to as "hotel nights", "debauchery" or "wild king nights" with her.
Mia, who did not date Combs, described being sexually assaulted by him on several occasions. This abuse by her boss was "the most traumatising, worst thing that's ever happened to me", she told the court.
Jurors heard she had never told anyone about it until the investigation. "I was going to die with this," she said, becoming tearful on the stand. "I didn't want anyone to know, ever."
During the trial, explicit footage of freak offs was shown to jurors, but not the media or any members of the public in court. Some looked visibly shocked at what they were watching.
The defence argued that while jurors may not approve of Combs's sexual proclivities, they did not make him a criminal, and that these were private moments never meant to be seen by anyone else. They also argued that the videos showed both Cassie and Jane were happy to take part.
While jurors found Diddy's crimes did not amount to sex trafficking, they believed he was guilty of the prostitution charges - and Cassie and Jane* were part of this.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Daily Mail
34 minutes ago
- Daily Mail
Keith David is overcome with emotion as he leads big names announced to be on Hollywood Walk Of Fame
It was one of actor Keith David's most emotional moments ever - and he wasn't even acting. The Emmy-winning entertainer, 69, was overjoyed Wednesday as he was announced as one of the next people to get a star on Hollywood Walk of Fame, sometime in 2026. David, who has been seen in films such as Crash, The Thing, and They Live, took to social media posting a clip of his reaction to the honor, which actor-comic Eugenio Derbez announced. When his name was announced as an honoree, David was seen with his mouth open, grabbing his chest at the happy surprise. 'What a surprise!' he said in a post on X. 'Being blessed to get to do this for a living is enough for me; to be recognized for my contribution to the arts is the cherry on top.' David added, 'Thank you, Hollywood Walk of Fame & Hollywood Chamber for this honor. This will be a wonderful birthday present next year.' He subsequently posted on TikTok: 'Thank you, #hollywoodwalkoffame & Hollywood Chamber for this honor.' David added: 'A special s/o to my wife, @Dionne Lea – my greatest supporter! This will be a wonderful birthday present next year.' In order to be eligible to receive a star, an entertainer has to be nominated for the honor and agree to it ahead of time. Other notable names who were announced as future star recipients included Miley Cyrus, Demi Moore, Timothée Chalamet, Shaquille O'Neal, Rami Malek, Emily Blunt, Noah Wyle, Rachel McAdams and late filmmaker Tony Scott. David's clip was a hit with users on the MadeMeSmile subreddit as fans flooded the thread with supportive comments of the actor and his vast archive of performances, both in live-action and voiceover roles. One user wrote of the venerated actor: 'Icon. Long overdue.' Another user, speaking to the latter point of the honor being overdue, added, 'Seriously! This man is in some of the biggest movies of the 80s and was a genuine box-office draw. 'I'm sort of surprised this is only happening now.' Said another Reddit user: 'He does, he scared and creeped the hell out of me in Requiem For A Dream, and it's funny seeing how warm and loving he is. That's always what I think of when I see him.'


The Guardian
an hour ago
- The Guardian
The Old Guard 2 review – Charlize Theron's delayed Netflix sequel is an incomplete mess
Even with our thick-of-Covid desperation for anything that felt big at a time when life felt too small, there was more to The Old Guard than the average churned out Netflix mockbuster. Released in the hell of July 2020, it came with the requisite boxes ticked (big star, international locations, franchisable setup) but felt closer to the real thing than most, proving to be a hit for those eager for escapism, scoring one of the streamer's biggest launches to date. But like many Netflix films, its cultural impact was negligible, popular for a weekend or three but failing to live on in any notable way after, consumed with speed and forgotten at a similar pace. A sequel was inevitable yet unnecessary, and while one was given a green light at the start of 2021 and started production in 2022, it's taken another three years to see the light of day. Not only does The Old Guard 2 bear the bruises of such a cursed post-production process but it's also weakened by such a distance from the first, forcing us to remember something most of us had resigned to the ether (it's telling that to promote the sequel, Netflix has recruited its stars to recap the first film). It's not as if we're dealing with a straightforward action flick either, the mythology of The Old Guard, based on Greg Rucka's comic book series, requires enough convoluted exposition for us to pull up the original's Wikipedia plot description to understand just what the hell is going on in the follow-up. Should something intended to be a summer lark really feel like such hard work? It's made mostly tolerable by Charlize Theron, an actor and a movie star we just don't see enough of and when we do, it's quite often not what we want to see her in. Theron, who gave us one of the greatest character studies of the 2010s in Jason Reitman's vastly underrated Young Adult, has decided to remain boringly unchallenged as of late, slumming it in flimsy franchise fodder (her last non-genre role was playing Megyn Kelly in 2019's dubious #MeToo dud Bombshell, although that could be conceivably classed as horror). She returns to play Andy, a once immortal warrior who (and I had to remind myself of this) was made mortal in the first film, a danger that should technically add suspenseful stakes to her extravagant fight sequences (but alas). This time around, an old comrade returns from centuries of punishment (Ngô Thanh Vân) and partners with a humanity-hating immortal (Uma Thurman) causing Andy and her team to take action. While it should, in an era of increasingly bloated runtimes, be a boon to have it all wrapped up in under 97 minutes (sans end credits, far shorter than the 125-minute original), The Old Guard 2 is a panicked rush to wrap things up, poorly developed and confusingly plotted, a swift and savage franchise-killer. Along with last week's M3gan 2.0, which bombed at the box office after a 2.5 year gap, it serves as a reminder to studios why speed and simplicity are both essential for sequels in an attention economy where films just don't have the same media footprint they once had. In the time it took to beat this one into shape, it seems like those involved have also forgotten what made the first one work, the replacement of director Gina Prince-Bythewood with Victoria Mahoney leading to a considerable drop in action sequence effectiveness while the original's rather groundbreaking queerness has now been almost entirely excised. The first film had a surprising, swooning kiss from immortal lovers played by Marwan Kenzari and Luca Marinelli, but this time around, their foreheads briefly touch instead. There's also a coy confusion over just what the relationship is between Andy and her one-time partner, who are gay in the comics, but are presented as, ahem, longtime companions here, the film acting as an amusingly abrupt end to Pride month. Theron is an actor who's tirelessly working even when the script isn't asking her to, but this is a waste of not only her but also a returning Chiwetel Ejiofor, as well as Thurman who has moments of slithering fun as the villain but she's used so sparingly, it's akin to a cameo role. The last act sets her up to be a bigger part in the third film but, slight snag here, there hasn't been any official confirmation of The Old Guard 3, something that might shock viewers given the baffling cliffhanger ending. It's not as if some b-plot threads are left dangling but instead, the entire film is left shoddily unfinished, a truly heinous decision that threatens to turn the series into the new Divergent (a cancelled fourth film leaves that franchise forever incomplete). Perhaps that might be for the best. The Old Guard 2 is now available on Netflix


The Independent
an hour ago
- The Independent
Man charged with killing former Minnesota House speaker is due back in court after delay
The man charged with killing former Minnesota House Speaker Melissa Hortman and her husband, and wounding a state senator and his wife, is due back in federal court Thursday for a hearing that was put on hold after his lawyer said his client had been unable to sleep while on suicide watch. The hearing is expected to address whether Vance Boelter should remain in custody without bail and affirm that there is probable cause to proceed with the case. He's not expected to enter a plea. Prosecutors need to secure a grand jury indictment first, before his arraignment, which is when a plea is normally entered. An unshaven Boelter, 57, of Green Isle, was wearing a green padded suicide prevention suit and orange slippers when he was brought into court last Friday. Federal defender Manny Atwal then asked Magistrate Judge Douglas Micko to continue the hearing. She said Boelter had been sleep deprived due to harsh conditions in the Sherburne County Jail, making it difficult for them to communicate. 'Your honor, I haven't really slept in about 12 to 14 days,' Boelter told the judge then. And he denied being suicidal. 'I've never been suicidal and I am not suicidal now.' Sherburne County Sheriff Joel Brott, whose jail houses both county and federal prisoners, rejected Boelter's claims of poor conditions as absurd. 'He is not in a hotel. He's in jail, where a person belongs when they commit the heinous crimes he is accused of committing," Brott said in a statement Friday. Boelter faces separate cases in federal and state court on charges of murder and attempted murder for what the state's chief federal prosecutor, Acting U.S. Attorney Joe Thompson, has called 'a political assassination' and 'a chilling attack on our democracy.' The feds are going first. Authorities say Hortman and her husband, Mark, were shot to death in their home in the Minneapolis suburb of Brooklyn Park in the early hours of June 14 by a man disguised as a police officer who was driving a fake squad car. Boelter also allegedly shot and seriously wounded state Sen. John Hoffman, and his wife, Yvette, earlier that morning at their home in nearby Champlin. The Hoffmans are recovering, but Hortman's golden retriever, Gilbert, was seriously injured and had to be euthanized. Boelter surrendered near his home the night of June 15 after what authorities called the largest search in Minnesota history, a hunt of around 40 hours. Atwal told the court last week that Boelter had been kept in what's known as a 'Gumby suit,' without undergarments, ever since his first court appearance June 16. She said the lights were on in his area 24 hours a day, doors slammed frequently, the inmate in the next cell would spread feces on the walls, and the smell would drift to Boelter's cell. The attorney said transferring him to segregation instead, and giving him a normal jail uniform, would let him get some sleep, restore some dignity, and let him communicate better. The judge granted the delay. Boelter's lawyers have declined to comment on the charges themselves, which could carry the federal death penalty. Thompson has said no decision has been made whether to seek it. Minnesota abolished its death penalty in 1911. But Attorney General Pam Bondi has said from the start that the Trump administration will be more aggressive in seeking capital punishment. Prosecutors allege Boelter also stopped at the homes of two other Democratic lawmakers. They also say he listed dozens of other Democrats as potential targets, including officials in other states. Friends described Boelter as an evangelical Christian with politically conservative views. But prosecutors have declined so far to speculate on a motive. Former President Joe Biden and former Vice President Kamala Harris joined the mourners at the Hortmans' funeral last Saturday. Gov. Tim Walz, Harris's running mate on the 2024 Democratic presidential ticket, eulogized Hortman as 'the most consequential speaker in Minnesota history.' Hortman served as speaker from 2019 until January. She then yielded the post to a Republican in a power-sharing deal after the House became tied in the 2024 elections, and became speaker emerita.