logo
Sean 'Diddy' Combs accuser reveals her identity in lawsuit alleging 4-year 'pattern of abuse'

Sean 'Diddy' Combs accuser reveals her identity in lawsuit alleging 4-year 'pattern of abuse'

USA Today14-06-2025
Sean 'Diddy' Combs accuser reveals her identity in lawsuit alleging 4-year 'pattern of abuse'
Show Caption
Hide Caption
Witness details rocky relationship with Sean 'Diddy' Combs
A witness using the name Jane said Sean Combs dismissed her when she refused sex with other men, and threatened to stop paying her rent.
More than eight months after accusing Sean "Diddy" Combs of sexually abusing and manipulating her over a four-year period in a 2024 lawsuit, a woman has come forward to identify herself.
Chelsea Lovelace, described as a Florida business owner, entrepreneur, and model, on June 13 filed an amended complaint in the New York Supreme Court using her own name as plaintiff, replacing the anonymous name Jane Doe she'd used in her Sept. 27 filing.
She alleges that between 2021 and 2024, Combs pressured her to regularly travel to meet him, ingest "illicit substances," have sex with other men and women and otherwise do his bidding by leveraging the allowance he was paying her. The claims and timeline mirror testimony Combs' former partner gave on the stand in his criminal trial.
Lovelace's filing comes after Combs' legal team sought the court to issue a ruling that would compel her to use her legal name, Lovelace's attorney, Joseph L. Ciaccio, said in a statement to USA TODAY. "Before the Court made any decision on that, my client decided herself to come forward publicly on her own terms," Ciaccio said.
In response to Lovelace's amended complaint, Combs' team told USA TODAY in a statement reiterating, "Mr. Combs has full confidence in the facts and the integrity of the judicial process. In court, the truth will prevail: That Mr. Combs never sexually assaulted or trafficked anyone - man or woman, adult or minor."
Combs is on trial for charges of sex trafficking, transportation to engage in prostitution and racketeering and has pleaded not guilty to all charges. The Grammy-winning rapper and producer has faced a barrage of civil lawsuits – many of them from unnamed accusers – since November 2023, alleging sexual assault, abuse and trafficking dating back to the 1990s. Combs denies all misconduct claims.
Diddy on trial newsletter: Step inside the courtroom with our daily updates.
Chelsea Lovelace says alleged relationship with Diddy 'turned into manipulation, control and abuse'
He also shared a statement from Lovelace, who said of her alleged relationship with Combs, "There was a time I truly believed we shared something real. In my heart, for a time, I believed he genuinely cared about me. That we both cared for one another in a way that meant something.
"But over time, that illusion shattered. And with it, so did parts of me," Lovelace continued. "What I once thought was love and loyalty, quickly turned into manipulation, control and abuse. I was not seen as a person with a soul, but as a pawn in a much larger game. I didn't want to believe it. I wrestled with God, with my heart, with my own silence."
'Coercive control' and Diddy: You won't hear about this during the trial — here's why it's still important.
She clarified the lawsuit was "not an act of revenge," but rather "an act of release. Of standing in my truth. Of choosing healing over hiding." Lovelace added that eventually, "silence became too heavy to bear."
Lovelace concluded by saying she believes "that light exposes what needs to be healed. And I believe that the truth, even when it hurts, is the beginning of freedom." She also noted, "Today, I choose to walk forward with my head held high and my voice intact."
Chelsea Lovelace's lawsuit mirrors testimony from Diddy's ex, 'Jane'
Lovelace sued Combs for sexual assault, sexual battery and infliction of emotional distress.
She alleges she'd first met him on Nov. 5, 2020, on a three-day trip to Turks and Caicos for which he'd paid. (Lovelace's initial complaint did not specify this "overseas location.") She says he flew her back to his Miami estate via a private plane on Nov. 7, 2020, and sent her home Nov. 9. They started "seeing each other regularly" in early 2021, Lovelace alleges.
However, she claims her monthly trips with Combs, or to meet him, were "not of her own volition." Combs and his accomplices "would use coercive and harassing language to compel her to comply," Lovelace's lawsuit states. She went on to detail several alleged incidents, including forced and coerced sex with Combs as well as other people, blacking out from "alcohol and substances" various times and the realization that he was tracking her phone.
Lovelace also described Combs allegedly discouraging her from working and paying her an allowance that he would use as leverage "to control her."
Diddy trial recap: Diddy's ex, Jane, says she felt obligated to have sex with male escorts for him
The amended complaint includes details that have emerged throughout Combs' trial, which wrapped its sixth week in Manhattan federal court on June 13. Though Lovelace's September complaint included allegations about "City Girls" rapper Yung Miami, whose legal name is Caresha Brownlee, the new filing does not make mention of the musician, who is Combs' ex-girlfriend.
Lovelace's claims are reminiscent of testimony given by one of Combs' other ex-partners, who used the pseudonym Jane in federal court and alleged Combs took her on multiple trips to the islands and pressured her to do so-called "hotel nights" with sex workers. Jane also told jurors Combs allegedly paid her $10,000 per month rent but regularly threatened to revoke it if she didn't do his bidding.
They dated between 2021 and 2024, Jane said, at one point noting on the stand that while she was monogamous, Combs was not.
If you or someone you know has experienced sexual violence, RAINN's National Sexual Assault Hotline offers free, confidential, 24/7 support in English and Spanish via chat and at 800-656-4673.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Why Did Lorde Reference Tommy Lee and Pamela Anderson in 'Current Affairs'?
Why Did Lorde Reference Tommy Lee and Pamela Anderson in 'Current Affairs'?

Cosmopolitan

time28 minutes ago

  • Cosmopolitan

Why Did Lorde Reference Tommy Lee and Pamela Anderson in 'Current Affairs'?

Lorde's highly anticipated fourth album, Virgin, is finally here to soundtrack our summer. Along with praise from critics and longtime fans, the Grammy winner's latest record has faced some backlash for one of the references she laced into the project. On the sixth track, 'Current Affairs,' Lorde sings about intimate, private moments being affected by public perception. In the song's second verse, she references Pamela Anderson and Tommy Lee's sex tape that was wrongfully distributed against their wishes in the '90s as she muses, 'All alone in my room / Watching the tape of their honeymoon / On the boat, it was pure and true / Then the film came out.' She previously teased the reference during her Rolling Stone cover story interview in May, when she revealed she had watched the infamous video after her second round of psychedelic therapy. 'I found it to be so beautiful. And maybe it's fucked up that I watched it, but I saw two people that were so in love with each other, and there was this purity,' Lorde explained. 'They were jumping off this big were like children. They were so free. And I just was like, 'Whoa. Being this free comes with danger.'' When the interview initially dropped, she was met with criticism from fans online, as they found she was 'glorifying' the revenge porn scandal. In a subreddit, one wrote, 'This seems like such an odd [thing] to fixate on lmao wtf is happening here.' Another person on social media pointed out that The Last Showgirl has continously expressed how hurt she felt by her private video leaking in the '90s, writing, 'Pamela has spoken out so many times about how violated she felt and still feels about it but I guess that doesn't matter because it's beautiful to lorde..?' In 1995, a 54-minute home video from Tommy and Pam's honeymoon—which contained 8 minutes of them having sex—was stolen from their home in Malibu. A contractor who was reportedly owed $20,000 after being fired from renovating the former couple's home released the video without their consent as an act of revenge. In her 2023 documentary, Pamela, A Love Story, the actor opened up about the incident after nearly three decades. 'If anyone watches it, if anyone buys it, if anyone sells it, it's just pathetic. You can't put a monetary number on the amount of pain and suffering it caused,' she said. Tommy Lee and Pamela Anderson have yet to respond to Lorde's references, if at all.

Lorde and Jim-E Stack Spark Dating Rumors at Glastonbury Music Festival
Lorde and Jim-E Stack Spark Dating Rumors at Glastonbury Music Festival

Elle

time34 minutes ago

  • Elle

Lorde and Jim-E Stack Spark Dating Rumors at Glastonbury Music Festival

Lorde is stepping into a bold new chapter, both musically and personally. The Grammy-winning singer just released her album Virgin and gave a surprise Glastonbury performance. While at the British music festival, she also sparked rumors that she is dating producer and collaborator Jim-E Stack. The Sun ran photos of Stark and Lorde cuddling in the crowd. On June 30, Daily Mail added more fuel to the speculation by publishing photos of them arriving together at London Heliport. Stack had his arm around Lorde's shoulder. Neither Lorde nor Stack has confirmed the relationship, but fans are buzzing about the possibility. So, who exactly is Jim-E Stack? From his prolific music career to his yearslong creative partnership with Lorde, here's everything to know. Stack isn't just Lorde's rumored boyfriend; he's also her main creative partner on Virgin, the singer's fourth studio album that came out on June 27, 2025. He co-wrote and co-produced some of the project with Lorde (real name: Ella Yelich-O'Connor). In a June 27 Instagram post, Stack described their collaboration as something deeper than just studio work: 'Ella & I met and made some songs in 2022 before an album was on either of our minds,' he wrote. 'A year and a half later we had [an] album. There's no one I'd rather be in the trenches with. Eternally grateful for the journey together. Love you forever, Ella.' In a May 2025 British GQ interview, Stack elaborated on how the project came together: 'Finishing the album was amazing, but you get so close and familiar with it,' he said. 'It was basically just Ella and myself making and producing the whole [song, 'What Was That']; my close friend Dan [Nigro] helped me somewhat with the production. Sometimes you get in this zone where you're like, 'Okay, we love this; is anybody else gonna care?' Seeing people go nuts for it made us both feel we're not crazy.' While it isn't known exactly when they met or potentially began dating, Stack revealed their creative partnership began in early 2022. 'She hit me up in 2022 right before she was about to start rehearsing for the Solar Power Tour,' he told British GQ. 'I think she was eyeing what would be next for her creatively. We hung and got along super well, and then after a leg of the tour, she came to my studio, and we spent a week cranking out ideas.' 'Then in summer 2023, she had some festivals booked and asked for me to help put together some remix versions of Solar Power songs for her live show. There were also a couple songs we did, [like] 'Silver Moon,' that she wanted play live. And I think once she finished that festival run, she was feeling creatively energized, though also in a scary new phase of her life—she had just gone through a breakup of a very long-term, significant felt very true to where she was at personally—this new era, living alone in New York for the first time, and things just feeling fresh and new.' Born James Harmon Stack, the 33-year-old San Francisco native has spent over a decade quietly shaping some of the most experimental pop and indie records of the 2010s and 2020s. His collaborators include Bon Iver, Charli XCX, Caroline Polachek, HAIM, Empress Of, and Diplo, among others. In an April 2021 Interview conversation with Kacy Hill, Stack described the core of his production approach: 'When I'm working on someone else's stuff and there are decisions to be made in the production and writing of which I'm unsure, I can always defer to the person whose song it is to make that decision, and I don't have to make a big call.' Stack began playing drums at age 11 and started making beats as a teenager using a friend's old Mac. 'My beats were some collision of rap and grime,' he told Fader in 2014, describing them as 'really, really terrible' in the beginning. 'That's kind of the beauty of it: there was no vision whatsoever. It's just trying to make some shit.' He credits growing up in San Francisco with shaping his sound: 'Growing up in the city [when I did] meant exposure to different cultures,' he said. In Rolling Stone's May 2025 cover story, Lorde described how working with Stack helped her unlock a new phase in both her music and identity. She recalled a moment during the Virgin recording process when she texted him a photo of herself in men's jeans and asked for his opinion. Stack replied, 'I want to see the you that's in this picture represented in the music.' 'This was before I had any sense of my gender broadening at all,' she explained. Stack has shared several posts celebrating Virgin and his creative bond with Lorde. 'The kinda song I was put on earth to help make,' he wrote on X after 'What Was That' was released. In April, he shared a short video of him and Lorde working in the studio on 'What Was That,' captioning it, 'The night we finally got the drums right.'

Controversial megachurch televangelist Jimmy Swaggart dies at age 90 two weeks after being rushed to the hospital
Controversial megachurch televangelist Jimmy Swaggart dies at age 90 two weeks after being rushed to the hospital

Yahoo

timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

Controversial megachurch televangelist Jimmy Swaggart dies at age 90 two weeks after being rushed to the hospital

Controversial televangelist Rev. Jimmy Swaggart has died at the age of 90 — two weeks after he was rushed to the hospital following a heart attack. The Louisiana native, whose multimillion-dollar ministry was tarnished by his prostitution scandals, had been in critical condition ever since he went into cardiac arrest on June 14. Swaggart Ministries spokesperson Megan Kelly confirmed his death in a statement Tuesday. A cause was not immediately shared, but he had been in poor health. 'Today, our hearts are heavy as we share that Brother Swaggart has finished his earthly race and entered into the presence of His Savior, Jesus Christ. Today was the day he has sung about for decades. He met his beloved Savior and entered the portals of glory. At the same time, we rejoice knowing that we will see him again one day,' the statement read. The outspoken Pentecostal preacher, one of the best-known televangelists, began his television ministry in 1975 after having a radio show and a magazine. By 1983, there were more than 250 TV stations carrying his program. He is also the founder of Jimmy Swaggart Ministries, which was worth an estimated $142 million in 1986, and started the Jimmy Swaggart Bible College. In addition to his television appearances and in-person ministry, he authored approximately 50 Christian books and earned a Grammy nomination for his music. Swaggart's star power as an influential TV preacher continued to rise until he and other televangelists, such as rival Jim Bakker, became embroiled in sex scandals. Swaggart was photographed with Debra Murphee, an admitted prostitute, in New Orleans in 1988. Murphee told reporters at the time that the two did not have sex, but that he paid her to pose nude for him. Photos of Swaggart and Murphee apparently stemmed from a rivalry with preacher Marvin Gorman, whom Swaggart accused of sexual misdeeds. Gorman had apparently hired the photographer who captured the image that doomed Swaggart's career. The scandal also saw Swaggart stripped of clerical authority in the Assemblies of God denomination and later forced him to become non-denominational. While he continued to preach for decades, a sizable chunk of his audience was lost. Swaggart acknowledged his public downfall in an emotional 1988 sermon, telling parishioners, 'I have sinned against you. I beg you to forgive me,' but did not mention his involvement with a prostitute. His troubles, however, did not stop there. In 1991, Swaggart was detained by police with another prostitute. He was charged with driving on the wrong side of the road and driving an unregistered Jaguar. The Ferriday, Louisiana, native, grew up the son of a preacher in a family full of musicians. Swaggart had two cousins who became well-known musicians: rocker Jerry Lee Lewis and country singer Mickey Gilley. After Swaggart's heart attack earlier this month, his son, Donnie, told his congregation at the Family Worship Center how he found his father unresponsive. 'This morning at a little after eight, Gabe and I rushed into Mother's house. Dad had gone into cardiac arrest. He never regained consciousness. We both took turns giving him chest compressions until EMT could get there and they were, I've never seen so many people arrive at one time and I want to thank them,' he said. 'But they were able to get a heartbeat back. Right now he is in ICU and without a miracle, without a miracle, his time will be short.' In addition to his son, Swaggart is survived by his wife of 70 years, three grandchildren and five great-grandchildren. With reporting from the Associated Press.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store