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Yahoo
18-05-2025
- Entertainment
- Yahoo
Hotel Security Guard Who Responded to Cassie Assault Details Diddy's ‘Devilish' Demeanor in Testimony
The first day of testimony in ' ongoing sex crimes trial kicked off with a hotel security guard called by prosecutors. In a New York City courtroom, Israel Florez — a former security guard at the InterContinental Hotel in Los Angeles — recalled an incident where the rapper assaulted on March 5, 2016. During his testimony, Florez recalled the moment he received a call that 'there was a woman in distress on the sixth floor.' Florez arrived to the area and saw Diddy 'in a robe and some colored socks.' As for Cassie, she was on the floor covering her face. Cassie Reportedly Set to Testify in Diddy Trial: Revisit Her Shocking Allegations While in court, Florez testified that Diddy was in a 'devilish state,' while Cassie allegedly looked 'scared.' During the incident, Florez recalled noticing a flower vase in the hallway that was destroyed. When he witnessed Diddy and Cassie fighting, he tried to escort them back to their rooms. According to Florez, Cassie was trying to escape and walk away, but Diddy allegedly told her, 'You're not going to leave.' At one point, Florez was allegedly 'bribed not to tell anybody' about the events after Diddy held a 'stash of money.' The security guard — who has been an LAPD officer since 2018 — told the music mogul, 'I don't want your money. Please go back to your room and stay in your room.' Florez said he eventually caught up to Cassie and started questioning her. He noted she had a 'purple eye.' Instead of getting police assistance, she allegedly told Florez, 'I just want to leave.' Security footage from the hotel began playing in the courtroom on Monday. Florez said he previously recorded portions of the video on his phone because he thought his wife wouldn't believe him when he got home from his shift. During cross-examination, Florez was questioned why he didn't include Diddy's alleged 'devilish state' in his report. Florez said he didn't include it because it's his opinion. Florez also testified that Diddy was acting 'cordial' and 'cooperative' during the incident. As for why the rapper offered financial support to Florez, the defense tried to paint a picture that the money offered was for the damage to the broken vase and not necessarily a bribe. Diddy, Sporting Gray Hair, Faces Judge in Courtroom Sketches From Federal Sex Trafficking Trial In May 2024, CNN first published a hotel video of Diddy that showed the rapper chasing Cassie through a Los Angeles hotel hallway, grabbing her by the neck, throwing her to the ground and kicking her multiple times. At another point, he picked up her belongings and hurled an object in her direction before walking away. The court presented portions of the original surveillance footage (not the edited version aired by CNN). Days after CNN published the hotel footage, Diddy apologized for his 'inexcusable' behavior captured in the video with a social media post. 'It's difficult to reflect on the darkest times in your life, sometimes you gotta do that,' he said, in part. 'I was f***ed up. I mean, I hit rock bottom but I make no excuses. My behavior on that video is inexcusable. I take full responsibility for my actions in that video. I'm disgusted.' Cassie and Diddy dated on and off from 2007 to 2018. Following their breakup, she accused him of abuse that allegedly occurred during their relationship. In November 2023, Cassie filed a lawsuit against Diddy where she alleged the music mogul raped and sexually abused her. One day after the singer filed her lawsuit, the exes settled out of court. Diddy denied all allegations in the suit. Cassie is expected to testify this month. How the Jury for Diddy's Trial Is Being Chosen — Even Though Everyone's Seen Cassie Footage Nearly one year later, Diddy was arrested in September 2024 and charged with sex trafficking, racketeering conspiracy and transportation to engage in prostitution. He pleaded not guilty to all charges and has denied all of the allegations against him. '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,' Diddy's attorney Marc Agnifilo said in a statement at the time. 'He is an imperfect person, but he is not a criminal. To his credit Mr. Combs has been nothing but cooperative with this investigation and he voluntarily relocated to New York last week in anticipation of these charges. Please reserve your judgment until you have all the facts. These are the acts of an innocent man with nothing to hide, and he looks forward to clearing his name in court.' Since his arrest, Diddy has been held at the Metropolitan Detention Center in Brooklyn. His four requests for bail were denied by Judge Arun Subramanian. If you or someone you know has been sexually assaulted, contact the National Sexual Assault Hotline at 1-800-656-HOPE (4673). If you or someone you know is experiencing domestic violence, please call the National Domestic Violence Hotline at 1-800-799-7233 for confidential support. If you or someone you know is a human trafficking victim, contact the National Human Trafficking Hotline at 1-888-373-7888.


Forbes
13-05-2025
- Forbes
Diddy Trial Day 2: Cassie Ventura Expected To Testify
Sean 'Diddy' Combs' ex-girlfriend, Cassie Ventura, is expected to take the witness stand Tuesday in a testimony that could be days long and central to Combs' sex trafficking trial, one day after the first witnesses testified about Combs' violent altercations with Ventura. (Combs has pleaded not guilty to all five federal charges). Ventura, whom Combs dated off-and-on between 2007 and 2018, will begin testimony Tuesday more than a year after she sued Combs accusing him of rape and domestic violence. On the trial's first day of testimony, Israel Florez, 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 Combs allegedly bribed him to keep silent about the incident and said he saw Ventura with a 'purple eye' after the altercation. Prosecutors played surveillance footage—including a video of the incident first published by CNN last year—and other videos captured by Florez for the jury. 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. Phillip also testified he saw Combs throw a bottle at Ventura, pull her by her hair and drag her into a room because she didn't come to him when he called her, and that on a separate occasion he told Ventura what was happening was 'not OK and you need to get help,' NBC News reported. Court ended during Phillip's cross-examination, which will continue Tuesday, The New York Times reported, and when he is done Ventura may begin what could be a days-long testimony. Prosecutors laid out their case against Combs in opening statements Monday, accusing the hip-hop star of running a 'criminal enterprise' that exploited women, including his ex-girlfriend Cassie Ventura, by using physical force and threats to coerce them into having sex with male escorts. In the defense's opening statement, Combs' lawyer Teny Geragos admitted Combs was physically violent, but she argued this is 'not evidence of sex trafficking' or his other charges, while defending his 'swinger' lifestyle and his sexual encounters as consensual. Florez testified he had responded to a call reporting a woman in distress on the hotel's sixth floor, where Ventura was 'in the corner, hood on, covered up' and appeared 'scared,' NBC News reported, and 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. Prosecutors showed the jury footage from the incident, including one video in which Combs is shown approaching Ventura in a hallway and knocking her to the floor before kicking her and dragging her back into their hotel room. Florez testified he did not call the police because Ventura did not answer his questions and repeatedly stated she wanted to leave, the New York Times reported. During cross-examination by Combs' lawyer Brian Steel, Steel asked Florez why he left out some information from an incident report he filed after the attack that he mentioned in his testimony, including a description of Ventura having a 'purple eye.' 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. Combs' lawyer, Marc Agnifilo, has indicated at pre-trial hearings he would portray the rap mogul as a 'swinger' in his defense, which he argues is not a crime. 'It's relevant to the defendant's intent that there's a lifestyle called swingers, call it whatever you will, that he was in, that he might have thought was appropriate,' Agnifilo said at a hearing in April. Agnifilo also said at a hearing he would portray Combs' relationship with Ventura, whom he dated off-and-on between 2007 and 2018, as mutually violent with 'hitting on both sides,' after the court allowed a hotel surveillance video that shows Combs attacking Ventura to be played during trial as evidence. Combs told the judge he rejected a plea deal in court earlier this month, though details of the deal are unknown. Combs had also attempted to delay the trial by two months so his legal team could have additional time to prepare, though Subramanian rejected his legal team's request. 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. 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. Combs has denied all allegations made against him. Federal agents raided Combs' homes in March 2024, and he was arrested by authorities in September 2024 after being indicted by a grand jury. 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)

The Herald
13-05-2025
- The Herald
Sean ‘Diddy' Combs grabbed and dragged then-girlfriend in NYC hotel, male stripper testifies
Prosecutors said Combs lured women into romantic relationships, forced them to take part in days of drug-fuelled sex parties and then blackmailed them with videos he recorded of the encounters. Combs 'viciously attacked' women when they resisted taking part in the parties, known as 'Freak Offs', or otherwise upset him, prosecutor Emily Johnson said during her opening statement. Before Phillip's testimony, jurors viewed a 2016 video in which Combs assaulted Ventura, threw her to the ground in the hallway of a Los Angeles area hotel and kicked her as she tried to enter an elevator. Combs, wearing only a towel, is then seen grabbing Ventura's belongings and dragging her into the hallway. He leaves Ventura behind. She lies motionless on the ground for a moment before getting up and walking to a hotel phone mounted on the wall. Combs apologised after the video first aired on CNN last year. The prosecution's first witness, Israel Florez, a former security guard, testified he received a call for help during the incident in 2016. 'Scared,' Florez replied when asked by a prosecutor to describe Ventura's demeanour. Florez said Combs offered him a stack of cash, which he understood to be a bribe to keep the incident quiet. Florez declined the offer, he told the jury. Johnson told jurors they would hear testimony from victims who said Combs routinely beat them and exploded with rage at the smallest slights. The case has drawn intense media coverage because of Combs' fame. 'They will tell you about some of the most painful experiences of their lives. The days they spent in hotel rooms, high on drugs, dressed in costumes to perform the defendant's sexual fantasies,' Johnson said. Defence lawyer Teny Geragos said in her opening statement prosecutors were trying to twist Combs' romantic relationships into a racketeering and sex trafficking case.

Al Arabiya
13-05-2025
- Entertainment
- Al Arabiya
‘Unlimited power': Testimony against Sean Combs tells of lurid violence
The courtroom fell eerily silent as the footage of Sean 'Diddy' Combs beating, kicking, and dragging his then-girlfriend began — a video already seen worldwide but which took on new gravity played before the jurors who will determine his future. Prosecutors played the footage repeatedly throughout their questioning of Israel Florez, a police officer who in 2016 was the security guard during an encounter with Combs that could prove pivotal during the fallen music mogul's federal racketeering and sex trafficking trial. Combs's family, including his 18-year-old twin daughters, watched stoically on Monday as prosecutors played the harrowing footage again and again. 'She just kept saying she wanted to leave,' Florez said of Casandra 'Cassie' Ventura, the singer who was dating Combs at the time and is expected to testify in the trial as early as Tuesday. Visibly tense but intensely alert, Combs watched as the security guard described the artist's attempts to bribe him with a wad of bills to stay quiet over the incident at a Los Angeles hotel. The immensely wealthy mogul, who was a key figure in 1990s and 2000s-era hip hop, is accused of running a criminal sex ring that enforced its power with arson, kidnapping, bribery, and forced labor. 'He sometimes called himself the king,' said prosecutor Emily Johnson during opening statements. 'And he expected to be treated like one.' Combs denies all charges, and his defense team says the sex acts were consensual. CNN released the security footage of the hotel encounter involving Combs and Ventura last year, and a number of jurors said during selection they were acquainted with it. But Monday's testimony included fresh details, like photos of a smashed vase of flowers Florez said he found Ventura huddled next to. Florez said Combs had a 'devilish stare' when the security guard arrived at the scene. He added that he offered to call the police but didn't because Ventura, who he described as having a 'purple' eye, insisted multiple times she simply wanted to go. Florez's testimony was followed by that of Daniel Phillip, a now 41-year-old who ran a 'male revue' show in New York. He said he first met Ventura and Combs in 2012, after he was called to perform at a bachelorette party. He arrived at Manhattan's Gramercy Hotel expecting to do a quick striptease for a group of partying women, he said. But instead Ventura, wearing red lace lingerie paired with high heels, a red wig, and dark sunglasses, answered the door. Thus began Phillip's relationship with the famous pair, an encounter that began with the dancer giving Ventura a massage with baby oil and ended with sex while a masked Combs watched in the corner. Phillip would routinely receive payment from the couple anywhere from 700 to 6,000 dollars, he told jurors. Throughout Phillip's at times intensely lurid testimony, members of Combs's family, including his 18-year-old twin daughters, left the room. Phillip said his enthusiasm for the relationship — which involved Combs directing sexual acts and sometimes filming them — waned after the first time he witnessed Combs strike and drag Ventura by the hair. 'I was shocked,' Phillip said. 'It came out of nowhere. I was terrified.' Phillip said he urged Ventura to get out — but that she insisted she would be alright. After witnessing Combs's abuse, Phillip said he began to find it difficult to perform sexually in front of him. Asked why he didn't call the police, Phillip said that 'this was someone with unlimited power.' Combs had already previously taken a photo of Phillip's identification card 'just for insurance,' the dancer said. 'I understood it to be he was threatening me.'


Forbes
12-05-2025
- Forbes
Diddy Trial: Here Are The Biggest Revelations From Day 1
Sean 'Diddy' Combs' sex parties and his altercation with ex-girlfriend Cassie Ventura dominated witness testimony on the first day of his sex trafficking trial, as prosecutors laid out allegations of a 'criminal enterprise' and the defense argued Combs was merely a 'swinger' with a 'bad temper.' (Combs has pleaded not guilty to all five federal charges). Israel Florez, 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 Combs' sex trafficking and racketeering trial Monday. Florez testified Combs allegedly bribed him to keep silent about the incident and said he saw Ventura with a 'purple eye' after the altercation, and prosecutors played surveillance footage—including a video of the incident first published by CNN last year—and other videos captured by Florez for the jury. 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. Phillip also testified he saw Combs throw a bottle at Ventura, pull her by her hair and drag her into a room because she didn't come to him when he called her, and that on a separate occasion he told Ventura what was happening was 'not OK and you need to get help,' NBC News reported. Court ended during Phillip's cross-examination, which will continue Tuesday, The New York Times reported, and when he is done Ventura may begin what could be a days-long testimony. Prosecutors laid out their case against Combs in opening statements Monday, accusing the hip-hop star of running a 'criminal enterprise' that exploited women, including his ex-girlfriend Cassie Ventura, by using physical force and threats to coerce them into having sex with male escorts. In the defense's opening statement, Combs' lawyer Teny Geragos admitted Combs was physically violent, but she argued this is 'not evidence of sex trafficking' or his other charges, while defending his 'swinger' lifestyle and his sexual encounters as consensual. Florez testified he had responded to a call reporting a woman in distress on the hotel's sixth floor, where Ventura was 'in the corner, hood on, covered up' and appeared 'scared,' NBC News reported, and 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. Prosecutors showed the jury footage from the incident, including one video in which Combs is shown approaching Ventura in a hallway and knocking her to the floor before kicking her and dragging her back into their hotel room. Florez testified he did not call the police because Ventura did not answer his questions and repeatedly stated she wanted to leave, the New York Times reported. During cross-examination by Combs' lawyer Brian Steel, Steel asked Florez why he left out some information from an incident report he filed after the attack that he mentioned in his testimony, including a description of Ventura having a 'purple eye.' 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. Combs' lawyer, Marc Agnifilo, has indicated at pre-trial hearings he would portray the rap mogul as a 'swinger' in his defense, which he argues is not a crime. 'It's relevant to the defendant's intent that there's a lifestyle called swingers, call it whatever you will, that he was in, that he might have thought was appropriate,' Agnifilo said at a hearing in April. Agnifilo also said at a hearing he would portray Combs' relationship with Ventura, whom he dated off-and-on between 2007 and 2018, as mutually violent with 'hitting on both sides,' after the court allowed a hotel surveillance video that shows Combs attacking Ventura to be played during trial as evidence. Combs told the judge he rejected a plea deal in court earlier this month, though details of the deal are unknown. Combs had also attempted to delay the trial by two months so his legal team could have additional time to prepare, though Subramanian rejected his legal team's request. 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. 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. Combs has denied all allegations made against him. Federal agents raided Combs' homes in March 2024, and he was arrested by authorities in September 2024 after being indicted by a grand jury. 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)