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Boosie Badazz Accuses Cassie And Her Husband Of 'Masterminding Diddy's Take Down'
Boosie Badazz Accuses Cassie And Her Husband Of 'Masterminding Diddy's Take Down'

Yahoo

time20-05-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Yahoo

Boosie Badazz Accuses Cassie And Her Husband Of 'Masterminding Diddy's Take Down'

Boosie Badazz has shared his latest conspiracy theory about Sean 'Diddy' Combs' ongoing federal sex trafficking trial — this time claiming that Cassie and her husband Alex Fine 'masterminded' an entire plan to 'take down' Diddy and cash in along the way. According to the Baton Rouge rapper, '[Cassie's] HUSBAND HAD BEEN TRYING TO GET HER TO DO THIS FOR YEARS TO DIDDY BUT SHE DIDNT WANT TO DO IT BECAUSE SHE KNEW WHAT WILL COME OUT.' He went on to suggest that financial pressure is what finally pushed them to act. 'THEN AS A COUPLE YALL [BECAME] BROKE,' he continued. He even dragged Yung Miami into it, claiming Cassie was jealous after seeing her publicly support Diddy at an awards show. 'NOW THE PLOT BECOMES REALER BY THE MONTH !! I THINK THE LAST STRAW WAS THE DIDDY N CARESHA REALTIONSHIP. WHEN SHE SAW CARESHA WITH THAT SIGN SUPPORTING HER MAN AT THAT AWARDS THAT DID IT. A WOMAN SCORNED IS A DANGEROUS EVIL MF #yeahisaidit.' Boosie's latest remarks follows Cassie revealing that she received $20,000,000 in a settlement from Diddy that was resolved 24 hours after announcing her lawsuit in 2023. She also admitted to receiving an additional $10,000,000 from InterContinental Hotel where the 2016 hotel hallway assault by Diddy took place. Her husband, Alex Fine, has been steadfastly by her side throughout the trial and all of the public scrutiny and backlash. In a recent public statement, he pushed back against the swirling narratives — particularly the notion that he 'saved' Cassie. 'I did not save Cassie, as some have said. To say that is an insult to the years of painful work my wife has done to save herself,' he wrote. 'She alone broke free from abuse, coercion, violence, and threats. She did the work of fighting the demons that only a demon himself could have done to her. All I have done is love her as she has loved me.' Scroll below to read his statement. After years of silence, Cassie, né Cassandra Ventura, recently testified against her ex-lover with harrowing accounts of abuse, control, and what she describes as being coerced into participating in 'freak-offs.' In emotional courtroom testimony, the singer and model — currently pregnant with her third child — revealed she was sometimes forced to take part in sex acts with escorts, even while battling UTIs and mouth sores. She also spoke on the constant physical abuse she received from Diddy for the most minuscule things. 'Sean would put his hands on me, he would push me down… kick me,' she told the courtroom. 'There were other times, if we were having a bad time or if I was scared of him, uncomfortable, typically I would leave and go out the back of the hotel. When we were having frequent 'freak-offs' — they were back to back — and sometimes I would do a 'freak-off' with the infection,' she added. 'I tried to flush it out with water. I got to the point where CIPRO (an antibiotic) didn't work anymore. It was a mess.' More from Cassie Shares Why She Cried The First Time Diddy Kissed Her On 21st Birthday Diddy's Former Assistant Testifies To Mogul's Armed Suge Knight Confrontation Sean "Diddy" Combs Trial Reveals Photos Of Alleged Sex Workers Hired For Freak-Offs

Diddy Trial Day 4: Cassie Returns To Stand For Cross-Examination
Diddy Trial Day 4: Cassie Returns To Stand For Cross-Examination

Forbes

time15-05-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Forbes

Diddy Trial Day 4: Cassie Returns To Stand For Cross-Examination

Cassie Ventura will return to the witness stand Thursday for cross-examination by Sean 'Diddy' Combs' lawyers, her third straight day of testimony after previously telling the court Combs had coerced her into 'hundreds' of 'freak off' sexual encounters, which he took videos of and blackmailed her with (Combs has pleaded not guilty to all five federal charges). Ventura, whom Combs dated off-and-on between 2007 and 2018, testified all day in court on Tuesday and Wednesday, and her testimony is expected to last the rest of the week as the prosecution's key witness in Combs' sex trafficking and racketeering trial. Combs' defense lawyers will cross-examine Ventura Thursday, and it's not yet clear how they will question her, but in their opening statements, the defense portrayed Combs as a violent man—but not a sex trafficker—who had a 'swinger' lifestyle and that Ventura was a consenting adult in their sex life. The defense attorneys may seek to question her financial motives, credibility and whether the drugs Ventura was on during the 'freak-offs' affected her memory, NBC News reported. On Wednesday, Ventura described how Combs coerced her to perform in as many as 'hundreds' of 'freak offs'—his term for sexual encounters, which could be days long, in which Ventura would have sex with a male escort while Combs watched and choreographed the entire encounter. Ventura said Combs threatened to blackmail her with videos he recorded of Ventura performing during freak-offs if she upset him: "I would have to answer to my mother," she said, according to the BBC, stating the videos "make me look like a slut.' Combs' legal issues began with a lawsuit filed by Ventura in November 2023, in which she alleged he raped her and subjected her to years of physical abuse; she testified Wednesday that she settled that suit for $20 million, the Associated Press reported. On the witness stand Tuesday, Ventura testified she and Combs would have 'violent arguments' throughout their decade-long relationship, in which he would 'too frequently' subject her to physical abuse: 'He would smash me in my head, knock me over, drag me, kick me, stomp me in the head if I was down,' CNN reported. The court was once again shown footage of Combs attacking Ventura in a Los Angeles hotel in 2016, and Ventura testified she attended a movie premiere for 'The Perfect Match,' a rom-com she starred in, with sunglasses to hide bruises Combs had given her. Ventura detailed another altercation in which Combs 'knocked me around' in a car in 2007 or 2008, and Ventura said Combs had instructed her to stay in a hotel for a week so her wounds could heal, the New York Times reported. Ventura also detailed the physical and emotional toll of 'freak-offs,' stating she would suffer urinary tract infections after performing in back-to-back freak-offs to the point that CIPRO, a common UTI antibiotic, no longer worked for her, NBC News reported. Combs subjected her to freak offs 'weekly for a consistent amount of years,' the Washington Post reported. 'I felt pretty horrible about myself. I felt disgusting. I felt humiliated,' Ventura said of the freak offs, adding she 'couldn't talk to anyone about it.' Combs also controlled Ventura's singing career, she testified, stating he called 'all of the shots' after he signed her to his Bad Boy Records when she was 19 years old, NBC News reported, and he controlled her image and physical appearance. Ventura testified while nearly nine months pregnant with her third child with her husband Alex Fine. Fine was present in the courtroom after a judge partially rejected the defense's request to bar him from watching Ventura's testimony (Fine must leave when Ventura testifies about her alleged 2018 rape by Combs, the judge ruled). Throughout her testimony, Ventura occasionally dabbed her eyes and nose with a tissue, and became emotional and choked back tears while talking about the freak-offs, the Washington Post reported. She spoke softly while testifying, and her voice at times became hoarse, the Post reported. Combs arrived at the courthouse Wednesday morning wearing a cream sweater and gray pants, and he watched Ventura as she arrived while she stared straight ahead, the New York Times reported. The Post reported Combs appeared nervous before Ventura's testimony began, adjusting his clothes and refraining from smiling at his supporters in the courtroom, as he has done previously. Israel Florez, then a security guard at the Los Angeles hotel where Combs attacked ex-girlfriend Cassie Ventura in 2016 in an incident captured on surveillance cameras, testified first at the trial. He said Venture appeared 'scared' after the altercation, NBC News reported, and testified that Combs was sitting in a towel with a 'devilish stare.' Florez said Combs approached him with a stack of money, telling him: 'Don't tell nobody,' but Florez rejected the apparent bribe, AP reported. Also on day one, Daniel Phillip, a male escort, was the second to take the stand, testifying he was paid by Ventura to have sex with her at a hotel in 2012 while Combs watched in the corner and masturbated, the New York Times reported, and then repeated the service multiple times with the couple at various hotels. Geragos denied Combs' violent behavior constitutes acts of sex trafficking or other federal crimes. 'He is physical, he is a drug user, you may know of his love of baby oil. Is that a federal crime? No,' Geragos told the jury, NBC News reported. Geragos addressed the hotel surveillance footage of Combs attacking Ventura, calling his actions 'indefensible,' 'dehumanizing' and 'virtually every bad word you can think of,' but said it is 'not evidence of sex trafficking,' CNN reported. Geragos argued Ventura was a 'willing participant in their sex life' while with Combs and claimed Ventura left Combs on her own terms when she realized she would 'never be his wife, never be his love of his life,' CNN reported. Geragos said Ventura was 'jealous' of the relationship between Combs and his late ex-girlfriend, Kim Porter, with whom Combs had three children. Geragos also portrayed Combs' other sexual partners as consenting adults and denied they were victims of trafficking. Attorney Emily A. Johnson delivered the opening statement for the prosecution, accusing Combs of running 'a criminal enterprise.' Johnson described one night in which Combs allegedly learned Ventura was seeing another man while they were together, so he enlisted an employee to break into the man's house, the New York Times reported, though the employee did not find the man. Instead, Combs allegedly beat Ventura 'brutally.' Johnson described Combs' 'freak-off' parties, which she says were also referred to as 'wild king nights' or 'hotel nights,' alleging Combs' company would pay for parties and hotel rooms in which Combs would allegedly force women to take drugs and have sex with male escorts in encounters Combs sometimes recorded, the AP reported. Johnson described multiple alleged incidents of Combs committing acts of violence, including an incident in 2009 in which he allegedly stomped on Ventura's face, and another in which Combs grabbed an unnamed woman in a chokehold and kicked her to the ground before drugging her and coercing her into participating in a freak-off, the Times reported. The 12 jurors are composed of eight men and four women, the New York Times reported, with six alternates composed of four men and two women. Defense attorneys representing Combs protested some of the struck jurors to the judge, alleging the prosecutors struck seven prospective Black jurors, amounting to a pattern, the AP reported. Subramanian rejected the defense's claim, stating the prosecution gave 'race neutral reasons' for why each juror was struck and that the defense did not give evidence of discrimination. The jurors range in age from their 30s to their 70s, span jobs including a scientist, massage therapist, deli clerk and investment analyst, and they hail from Manhattan, the Bronx and Westchester County, the Times reported. Some of the jurors said they have seen a video of Combs attacking ex-girlfriend Ventura in a Los Angeles hotel, which is expected to be shown at trial. The defense previously struck a juror who said the video made Combs look like an 'angry, hostile person,' the Times reported. Combs arrived at the courthouse sporting gray hair, which is no longer black as he does not have access to hair dye in jail. He is wearing a light gray sweater and a white collared shirt with khaki pants, the Washington Post reported, and he blew kisses to his family, who are seated in the second row behind him, while walking into the courthouse. Throughout the jury selection process, Combs has donned black-framed glasses and has been actively flipping through a blue notebook and whispering with his defense attorneys, the Post reported. Combs faces five federal charges: two counts of sex trafficking, two counts of transportation to engage in prostitution and one count of racketeering conspiracy. The fourth and fifth charges, one additional count each of sex trafficking and transportation to engage in prostitution, were added by prosecutors in April in a superseding indictment concerning an alleged unnamed victim, referred to as 'Victim-2.' Combs has pleaded not guilty to all charges and rejected a plea deal earlier this month. Federal agents raided Combs' homes in March 2024, and he was arrested by authorities in September 2024 after being indicted by a grand jury. While awaiting trial, Combs has been held at the Metropolitan Detention Center in Brooklyn, a jail known for poor conditions that has also housed disgraced crypto executive Sam Bankman-Fried and currently houses Luigi Mangione, accused of the killing of UnitedHealth CEO Brian Thompson. Sean 'Diddy' Combs Trial Underway: Here's What To Know About His Federal Charges (Forbes) Sean Combs Sued For Human Trafficking By Man Who Says He Was Sexually Assaulted In 2015: Here Are All The Major Accusations Against Diddy (Forbes)

Diddy Trial Day 3: Cassie Ventura Says Combs Blackmailed Her With ‘Freak-Off' Videos
Diddy Trial Day 3: Cassie Ventura Says Combs Blackmailed Her With ‘Freak-Off' Videos

Forbes

time14-05-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Forbes

Diddy Trial Day 3: Cassie Ventura Says Combs Blackmailed Her With ‘Freak-Off' Videos

Sean 'Diddy' Combs' ex-girlfriend, Cassie Ventura, testified Wednesday for the second day in a row as the prosecution's key witness, alleging Combs blackmailed her with videos he recorded that depicted her performing in 'freak off' sexual interactions with male escorts (Combs has pleaded not guilty to all five federal charges). Sean "Diddy" Combs pleaded not guilty to five federal charges. (Photo by Shareif Ziyadat/Getty ... More Images for Sean "Diddy" Combs) Ventura, whom Combs dated off-and-on between 2007 and 2018, gave an hours-long testimony Wednesday, the second day in what could be nearly a week on the witness stand. Like on her first day of testimony, Ventura described how Combs coerced her to perform in 'freak offs'—his term for sexual encounters, which could be days long, in which Ventura would have sex with a male escort while Combs watched and choreographed the entire encounter. On Wednesday, Ventura said Combs threatened to blackmail her with videos he recorded of Ventura performing during freak-offs if she upset him: "I would have to answer to my mother," she said, according to the BBC, stating the videos "make me look like a slut.' Ventura said she would suffer urinary tract infections after performing in back-to-back freak-offs to the point that CIPRO, a common UTI antibiotic, no longer worked for her, NBC News reported. The court was once again shown footage of Combs attacking Ventura in a Los Angeles hotel in 2016, and Ventura testified she attended a movie premiere for 'The Perfect Match,' a rom-com she starred in, with sunglasses to hide bruises Combs had given her. Ventura detailed another altercation in which Combs 'knocked me around' in a car in 2007 or 2008, and Ventura said Combs had instructed her to stay in a hotel for a week so her wounds could heal, the New York Times reported. Combs' legal issues began with a lawsuit filed by Ventura in November 2023, in which she alleged he raped her and subjected her to years of physical abuse. The suit was settled the next day for an undisclosed amount, though Ventura's lawsuit kicked off a barrage of suits filed against Combs, many of which alleged sexual assault and sex trafficking. On the witness stand Tuesday, Ventura testified she and Combs would have 'violent arguments' throughout their decade-long relationship, in which he would 'too frequently' subject her to physical abuse: 'He would smash me in my head, knock me over, drag me, kick me, stomp me in the head if I was down,' CNN reported. Ventura said Combs first introduced the idea of 'voyeurism' to her between about six months to a year into the couple dating, stating Combs had told her he wanted to watch her having sex with another man. Ventura said the idea 'shocked' her, and the idea of participating in freak offs made her 'confused' and 'nervous.' Much of her time was spent recovering from freak offs, Ventura testified, which often lasted at least one or two days, including one that she said lasted more than four days. Ventura said the freak offs were 'very choreographed' by Combs, who provided drugs and directed assistants to stock rooms with baby oil. Combs subjected her to freak offs 'weekly for a consistent amount of years,' the Washington Post reported. 'I felt pretty horrible about myself. I felt disgusting. I felt humiliated,' Ventura said of the freak offs, adding she 'couldn't talk to anyone about it.' Combs also controlled Ventura's singing career, she testified, stating he called 'all of the shots' after he signed her to his Bad Boy Records when she was 19 years old, NBC News reported, and he controlled her image and physical appearance. Ventura is testifying while nearly nine months pregnant with her third child with her husband Alex Fine. Fine is present in the courtroom after a judge partially rejected the defense's request to bar him from watching Ventura's testimony (Fine must leave when Ventura testifies about her alleged 2018 rape by Combs, the judge ruled). Throughout her testimony, Ventura has occasionally dabbed her eyes and nose with a tissue, and she became emotional and choked back tears while talking about the freak offs, the Washington Post reported. She has spoken softly while testifying, and her voice at times became hoarse, the Post reported. Combs arrived at the courthouse Wednesday morning wearing a cream sweater and gray pants, and he watched Ventura as she arrived while she stared straight ahead, the New York Times reported. The Post reported Combs appeared nervous before Ventura's testimony began, adjusting his clothes and refraining from smiling at his supporters in the courtroom, as he has done previously. Israel Florez, then a security guard at the Los Angeles hotel where Combs attacked ex-girlfriend Cassie Ventura in 2016 in an incident captured on surveillance cameras, testified first at the trial. He said Venture appeared 'scared' after the altercation, NBC News reported, and testified that Combs was sitting in a towel with a 'devilish stare.' Florez said Combs approached him with a stack of money, telling him: 'Don't tell nobody,' but Florez rejected the apparent bribe, AP reported. Also on day one, Daniel Phillip, a male escort, was the second to take the stand, testifying he was paid by Ventura to have sex with her at a hotel in 2012 while Combs watched in the corner and masturbated, the New York Times reported, and then repeated the service multiple times with the couple at various hotels. Geragos denied Combs' violent behavior constitutes acts of sex trafficking or other federal crimes. 'He is physical, he is a drug user, you may know of his love of baby oil. Is that a federal crime? No,' Geragos told the jury, NBC News reported. Geragos addressed the hotel surveillance footage of Combs attacking Ventura, calling his actions 'indefensible,' 'dehumanizing' and 'virtually every bad word you can think of,' but said it is 'not evidence of sex trafficking,' CNN reported. Geragos argued Ventura was a 'willing participant in their sex life' while with Combs and claimed Ventura left Combs on her own terms when she realized she would 'never be his wife, never be his love of his life,' CNN reported. Geragos said Ventura was 'jealous' of the relationship between Combs and his late ex-girlfriend, Kim Porter, with whom Combs had three children. Geragos also portrayed Combs' other sexual partners as consenting adults and denied they were victims of trafficking. Attorney Emily A. Johnson delivered the opening statement for the prosecution, accusing Combs of running 'a criminal enterprise.' Johnson described one night in which Combs allegedly learned Ventura was seeing another man while they were together, so he enlisted an employee to break into the man's house, the New York Times reported, though the employee did not find the man. Instead, Combs allegedly beat Ventura 'brutally.' Johnson described Combs' 'freak off' parties, which she says were also referred to as 'wild king nights' or 'hotel nights,' alleging Combs' company would pay for parties and hotel rooms in which Combs would allegedly force women to take drugs and have sex with male escorts in encounters Combs sometimes recorded, the AP reported. Johnson described multiple alleged incidents of Combs committing acts of violence, including an incident in 2009 in which he allegedly stomped on Ventura's face, and another in which Combs grabbed an unnamed woman in a chokehold and kicked her to the ground before drugging her and coercing her into participating in a freak-off, the Times reported. The 12 jurors are composed of eight men and four women, the New York Times reported, with six alternates composed of four men and two women. Defense attorneys representing Combs protested some of the struck jurors to the judge, alleging the prosecutors struck seven prospective Black jurors, amounting to a pattern, the AP reported. Subramanian rejected the defense's claim, stating the prosecution gave 'race neutral reasons' for why each juror was struck and that the defense did not give evidence of discrimination. The jurors range in age from their 30s to their 70s, span jobs including a scientist, massage therapist, deli clerk and investment analyst, and they hail from Manhattan, the Bronx and Westchester County, the Times reported. Some of the jurors said they have seen a video of Combs attacking ex-girlfriend Ventura in a Los Angeles hotel, which is expected to be shown at trial. The defense previously struck a juror who said the video made Combs look like an 'angry, hostile person,' the Times reported. Combs arrived at the courthouse sporting gray hair, which is no longer black as he does not have access to hair dye in jail. He is wearing a light gray sweater and a white collared shirt with khaki pants, the Washington Post reported, and he blew kisses to his family, who are seated in the second row behind him, while walking into the courthouse. Throughout the jury selection process, Combs has donned black-framed glasses and has been actively flipping through a blue notebook and whispering with his defense attorneys, the Post reported. Combs faces five federal charges: two counts of sex trafficking, two counts of transportation to engage in prostitution and one count of racketeering conspiracy. The fourth and fifth charges, one additional count each of sex trafficking and transportation to engage in prostitution, were added by prosecutors in April in a superseding indictment concerning an alleged unnamed victim, referred to as 'Victim-2.' Combs has pleaded not guilty to all charges and rejected a plea deal earlier this month. Federal agents raided Combs' homes in March 2024, and he was arrested by authorities in September 2024 after being indicted by a grand jury. While awaiting trial, Combs has been held at the Metropolitan Detention Center in Brooklyn, a jail known for poor conditions that has also housed disgraced crypto executive Sam Bankman-Fried and currently houses Luigi Mangione, accused of the killing of UnitedHealth CEO Brian Thompson. Sean 'Diddy' Combs Trial Underway: Here's What To Know About His Federal Charges (Forbes) Sean Combs Sued For Human Trafficking By Man Who Says He Was Sexually Assaulted In 2015: Here Are All The Major Accusations Against Diddy (Forbes)

Cassie Compared Diddy To Ike Turner, Says 'Freak-Offs' Often Turned Violent
Cassie Compared Diddy To Ike Turner, Says 'Freak-Offs' Often Turned Violent

Yahoo

time14-05-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Yahoo

Cassie Compared Diddy To Ike Turner, Says 'Freak-Offs' Often Turned Violent

Cassie Ventura's second day on the witness stand in Sean 'Diddy' Combs' sex trafficking trial found the R&B singer recalling the physical abuse she suffered at his hands, saying at one point, she texted Combs comparing him to Ike Turner, who infamously abused wife and rock music icon, Tina Turner, for years. During her Wednesday (May 14) testimony, NBC News reports Cassie read a text message she sent to Combs after an abusive episode aloud, saying, 'You treat me like Ike Turner.' She went on to say on the stand, 'He was abusive and controlling, he was physically abusive, he put me down a lot as much as I would be built up, the sheer embarrassment, how he treated me in front of other people.' She also testified to being injured during 'freak-offs' due to Diddy becoming violent if things didn't go exactly as he wanted. 'Sean would put his hands on me, he would push me down … kick me,' she told the courtroom. 'There were other times, if we were having a bad time or if I was scared of him, uncomfortable, typically I would leave and go out the back of the hotel.' When asked by prosecutors how often Combs would injure her during the 'freak-offs,' she replied, 'Too often.' She also says the frequency of the freak-offs led to urinary tract infections, mouth sores and gastrointestinal issues. 'When we were having frequent 'freak offs' — they were back to back — and sometimes I would do a 'freak off' with the infection,' she said. 'I tried to flush it out with water. I got to the point where CIPRO (an antibiotic) didn't work anymore. It was a mess.' She added that the mouth sores were a result of constantly performing oral sex with lubricant. The 'Long Way 2 Go' artist also recalled fighting Combs off at one point and gashing her face in the process, testifying, 'Sean came in. I was asleep. He was trying to attack me. We went into the master bedroom. My friends were jumping on his back trying to stop him. I cut my eyebrow on the corner of the bed. Sean threw me onto the bed frame. I had a significant gash. I didn't go to the ER; it was a Sunday. Sean had security take me to a plastic surgeon in Beverly Hills.' After the incident, she texted Combs a photo of her injury captioned, 'so you can remember.' The Bad Boy founder then responded, 'You dont know when to stop, you have pushed it too far.' 'Just say sorry,' she replied. 'I dont know why i deserve that, you could care less if i was ok.' More from Soulja Boy Wants To "Beat The F**k" Out Of DDG Over Halle Bailey Cassie Claims Diddy Insisted On Being Called This "Weird, Disrespectful" Familial Nickname During "Freak-Offs" Boosie Badazz Questions Cassie's Stance On "Freak-Offs," Believes It "Was A Lifestyle"

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