Sean “Diddy” Combs repeatedly contacted victims and witnesses in the months leading up to his arrest on sex trafficking and racketeering charges, according to prosecutors, with the Bad Boy Entertainment founder allegedly asking one victim for her continued “friendship and support,” while hinting that he would continue to pay her rent if she complied.
Days after Casandra “Cassie” Ventura filed an explosive sex trafficking and abuse lawsuit against Combs in November, the hip-hop mogul allegedly made two phone calls to an unnamed victim that he financially supported. In response to the calls, the woman allegedly texted Combs that reading Ventura’s lawsuit felt like she was “reading my own sexual trauma,” reported Inner City Press’ Matthew Russell Lee.
But Combs “gaslit” the woman on the recorded call and attempted to “convince her that she had willingly engaged in sex acts with him,” prosecutors said. Combs ensured “the victim that if she continues to be on his side and provide support and friendship, that she doesn’t have to worry about anything else which is just a thinly veiled reference to continuing that financial support,” court papers claim.
At another point in the conversation, Combs allegedly told the woman that if she continued to support him, that his “financial adviser should not make a mistake and not get that rent paid.”
Combs’ alleged witness tampering was a focal point of Southern District of New York prosecutors’ argument that he should remain in federal custody as the high-profile case heads to trial. The former billionaire’s “long history of obstruction and violence demonstrates that the defendant simply cannot overcome the presumption that no condition or combination of conditions can ensure the safety of the community,” prosecutors argued.
Although Combs’ attorney Marc Agnifilo presented a sizeable $50 million bail package, which included Combs submitting to weekly drug tests, banning any women who weren’t family members from visiting his house, and having no contact with known grand jury witnesses, a judge upheld the decision to not grant him bail on Wednesday afternoon.
In the months leading up to Combs’ indictment, prosecutors claim that Combs and his co-conspirators had “constant contact with witnesses” over several different methods — sometimes after the witnesses received subpoenas to testify in front of a grand jury.
“That contact has occurred prior to dates of testimony or meetings with the government, and in one case with an individual who hadn’t spoken to the defendant in years prior to this reach out,” prosecutors allege.
Most recently, prosecutors claimed, there were 128 phone contacts between Combs and Diddy-Dirty Money singer Kalenna Harper — 58 calls and texts directly from Combs — after Harper was named in bandmate Dawn Richard’s Sept. 10 lawsuit against Combs. After Harper released a statement distancing herself from Richard’s lawsuit, Combs did not contact Harper again, prosecutors stated.
In a statement provided to Rolling Stone, Richard’s attorney Lisa Bloom said they were “shocked but not surprised” by Combs’ contact with a “witness who then spoke out publicly” against Richard. “We will be demanding those text and phone messages in our litigation and if they show witness tampering, we will add that claim to our lawsuit and aggressively pursue it,” Bloom added.
Although Combs’ attorney claimed that the mogul was acting innocuously in contacting victims and witnesses, prosecutors referred to documentation showing Combs expressing concern that his calls and texts were being monitored. “I can’t be on these phones and shit like that … you feel me,” Combs allegedly told someone, according to court documents. “I can’t even talk on the phone. Like, please don’t send no texts or do nothing. People misread and shit.”