
Diddy used ‘power, violence and fear' prosecutors say in closing arguments
Combs, who has seemed quite at ease throughout much of his trial, appeared uncomfortable and nervous at the start of closing arguments today NZT. If convicted of the most serious charges, he could face life in prison.
The prosecution, which spent more than six weeks in Manhattan federal court presenting evidence of Combs's alleged crimes, stressed to jurors that he did not need an army of co-conspirators to be found guilty of racketeering and that 'one single' act of alleged coercion against an accuser would be enough to convict him of sex trafficking.
Combs' defence, which will offer its closing remarks before the jury enters deliberations, has argued that the accusers had their own motives and were willing participants in his drug-addled sex parties known as 'freak-offs'.
Here are the arguments the prosecution made for each criminal count Combs is facing.
Racketeering conspiracy
To find Combs guilty of racketeering conspiracy, prosecutors said jurors can have their pick of a host of crimes, which include drug distribution, arson, bribery, sex trafficking, transportation for prostitution, forced labour, witness tampering, and obstruction.
While the charge of racketeering conspiracy is often associated 'with the mafia or organised crime', Slavik said, it also firmly applies to the type of enforcement being carried out by Combs and his loyalists.
The panel needs to find there was an agreement between Combs and another member of the enterprise that 'someone would commit two individual acts in any of these categories', she said. For example, if jurors believe Combs and his staffers distributed drugs to his alleged victims at least two times, he could be found guilty of racketeering conspiracy.
Drug distribution is one of the more 'straightforward' offences of Combs' alleged criminal enterprise, the government said, as it ticked off a list of all the drugs used at freak-offs - including cocaine, meth, ketamine, oxycodone, tusi, Xanax, MDMA and GHB.
Slavik called these drugs 'an essential ingredient' of the sex parties, and the means by which Combs kept his ex-girlfriends, Casandra 'Cassie' Ventura and a woman identified by the court-approved alias, 'Jane' - compliant and awake during these sexual encounters. Combs 'fed them drugs for years', Slavik said. 'And you know he didn't get those drugs on his own.'
Rapper Kid Cudi leaves court after testifying at the trial on May 22. Photo / Getty Images
Combs and his inner circle procured these drugs by enlisting his assistants and security staff, Slavik said. 'Giving drugs to someone else is distribution,' she added. 'Period.'
Prosecutors also consider Ventura, Jane, and two former employees to be victims of forced labour. Both Ventura and Jane were coerced or forced to participate in sleep-deprived, days-long freak-offs, even when they were in pain or just not feeling up to it, Slavik said. 'This was work.'
She also pointed to allegations of kidnapping, recounting testimony from Combs' former employee, Capricorn Clark, who said she was hauled into a room in New York in 2004, daily for a week where she was given a polygraph and threatened as Combs and his entourage tried to uncover who took valuable jewellery from him.
Clark had also testified about being forced to accompany a furious Combs to the home of rapper Scott Mescudi - known by his stage name Kid Cudi - who was having a relationship with Ventura.
An arson charge was also highlighted by the prosecution, stemming from a 2012 incident in which Mescudi's car blew up in his driveway.
'The evidence and basic logic' should lead jurors to conclude that Combs was behind the arson, Slavik argued. 'For starters, he literally said he was going to blow up Kid Cudi's car,' she said, citing Ventura's testimony during the trial.
And Combs committed bribery when he and his deputies paid a hotel security guard US$100,000 ($165,000) to bury a video depicting his assault of Ventura in 2016, Slavik said, waving off the defence team's argument that the video purchase was an attempt to control public relations.
Sex trafficking of Cassie Ventura
'We're not asking you to find that every instance, every freak-off, was an instance of sex trafficking,' Slavik said.
Instead, she said the jury can convict Combs of sex trafficking if they believe he coerced one of his accusers even a single time.
Combs's freak-offs 'were as regular as his abuse of Cassie', Slavik told jurors as she homed in on the defendant's decade-long relationship with the singer, who is central to the government's case.
Slavik said these sexual encounters with male escorts and girlfriends followed a 'set playbook'. Ventura may have agreed to the first freak-off, the prosecutor said, but not the many subsequent ones.
She referenced Ventura's testimony that Combs forced Ventura to have sex with men while she suffered from infections, and that he directed escorts to commit certain sexual acts against her will. 'It was a turn-on for him,' Slavik said. 'Humiliating for her.'
She then brought up a slide focusing on three examples of alleged sex trafficking. The first: a freak-off that took place at the InterContinental Hotel in March 2016, when Combs was caught on camera attacking Ventura as she tried to leave the hotel room.
Another clear example of Combs sex-trafficking Ventura was the time he made her perform a freak-off after he attacked her, according to the prosecution's closing argument.
A male entertainer hired for that freak-off, Daniel Phillip, testified that he saw Combs throw a bottle at Ventura's head and drag her by her hair into a bedroom, where he heard slapping sounds. Phillip said Combs then told Ventura to resume the freak-off.
'He was demanding that Cassie have sex with a paid escort,' Slavik said. 'That's sex- trafficking.'
Further, when Combs allegedly showed Ventura sex tapes of herself on a flight from Cannes, France, to New York City and threatened to release them to her family, he was coercing her into a freak-off, Slavik argued. When they landed, Combs and Ventura had a freak-off that very night.
Sex trafficking of 'Jane'
The government also walked through Combs' relationship with Jane, who dated the music producer from 2021 to 2024.
Slavik broke down their relationship into four stages for the jury: a period of 'love bombing', during which Combs showered Jane with attention, gifts and trips, followed by the introduction of 'hotel nights', or freak-offs.
Then, later in the relationship, came the period when Combs used the home he leased for her as 'leverage', Slavik argued. The final stage of their relationship was the aftermath of Ventura's lawsuit, she said.
Hotel nights with Combs were never about Jane's sexual desires, despite her attempts to exert some control over them, Slavik said, pointing to Jane's testimony about why she accepted the drugs Combs gave her during these encounters: 'I didn't want it to feel too real,' Combs' ex-girlfriend said. 'It just made things easier.'
The prosecutor also pointed to a clip of a freak-off the jury had seen earlier in the trial, when Jane expressed her wish that a male entertainer wear a condom. 'You heard it in the recording, 'ain't no condoms around here,'' Slavik said, quoting Combs.
Slavik said it was important that Combs was planning freak-offs without Jane's knowledge, even as he was promising her romantic dinners and shopping sprees. Combs didn't make good on those promises and never intended to, the prosecutor argued, thus coercing Jane's participation by fraud.
Slavik also described Combs beating and choking Jane during a fight last summer, forcing her to flee her home shoeless and without a phone.
After she returned, bruised and in pain, Combs allegedly forced Jane to have sex with an escort. Combs told Jane she would not 'ruin' his night and demanded she get dressed up, Slavik said.
Slavik said Combs knew he was again committing the very crime he was being investigated for and that he intended to continue trafficking Jane.
She acknowledged video evidence showing Jane enjoying herself during 'freak-offs,' but she contended that 'what those videos really show is that she was super, super high.'
And Slavik reminded jurors of Combs' alleged effort to silence Jane as his reputation was crumbling in the wake of sexual assault allegations.
'I just needed to tell you that I need your friendship,' Combs said in a call he recorded in November 2023 with a tearful Jane, played during the prosecution's closing arguments.
Transportation to engage in prostitution
Slavik also walked jurors through the federal indictment's two counts of transportation to engage in prostitution: one for each alleged victim, Ventura and Jane.
The government has a trove of records supporting these charges - including bank statements showing Combs or his associates purchasing flights for alleged male escorts, airline records, hotel reservations and bank deposits, as well as communications with the men or escort services themselves.
It 'doesn't matter' that the men consented to these sex acts, or even that Ventura and Jane sometimes did, Slavik said. 'It's still a crime.'

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1News
5 hours ago
- 1News
What to know as jury begins deliberations in Diddy sex trafficking trial
For seven weeks, a jury in Manhattan has listened as prosecutors laid out a criminal sex trafficking and racketeering case against rapper Sean 'Diddy' Combs. They heard his ex-girlfriends and other witnesses deliver shocking accounts of violence and drug-fueled sexual marathons. Next week, jurors are set to begin deliberating, ultimately deciding whether Combs was running a criminal enterprise, as the government says, or — as his lawyer insists — merely living a swinger lifestyle that included recreational drug use and, regrettably, domestic violence. The answer will determine the future of one of the biggest music moguls and cultural figures of the past four decades. If convicted, Combs, 55, would face 15 years to life in prison. Here's what to know about the case: ADVERTISEMENT What are the charges? The three-time Grammy Award winner has pleaded not guilty to five felony charges: one count of racketeering conspiracy; two counts of sex trafficking by force, fraud or coercion; and two counts of transportation to engage in prostitution. Prosecutors say Combs coerced women into abusive sex parties involving hired male sex workers, ensured their compliance with drugs like cocaine and threats to their careers, and silenced victims through blackmail and violence that included kidnapping, arson and beatings. Sean "Diddy" Combs in court. (Source: Associated Press) 'He's the leader of a criminal enterprise. He doesn't take no for an answer," Assistant US Attorney Christy Slavik said in her closing arguments on Thursday (local time). Combs' lawyer, Marc Agnifilo, portrayed the Bad Boys Records founder as the victim of overzealous prosecutors who exaggerated elements of his lifestyle and recreational drug use to bring charges that resulted in what he called a 'fake trial'. What is racketeering? ADVERTISEMENT The most serious charge, racketeering conspiracy, alleges that Combs ran a criminal enterprise for two decades that relied on bodyguards, household staff, personal assistants and others in his orbit to facilitate and cover up crimes. Federal prosecutors brought the charge under the Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organisations Act, or RICO. Congress passed the federal law in 1970 with the declared purpose of targeting organised crime, but its use has been more widespread. To prove the charge, prosecutors must show that an enterprise existed and was involved in a pattern of racketeering activity. In this case, that alleged activity includes kidnapping, arson, bribery and sex trafficking. Key pieces of evidence Early in the trial, prosecutors showed jurors 2016 security video of Combs beating and kicking his former longtime girlfriend Cassie at a Los Angeles hotel. Cassie, an R&B singer whose legal name is Casandra Ventura, testified the assault took place as she was trying to leave one of the sexual encounters, which witnesses say he referred to as 'freak-offs" or 'hotel nights'. Jurors saw numerous explicit clips of such encounters, some involving Cassie and others involving a later girlfriend who was identified only by the pseudonym 'Jane'. Both women took the stand. ADVERTISEMENT Cassie testified over four days that she participated in hundreds of the events with paid sex workers while she and Combs were in a relationship from 2007 until 2018, often feeling like she didn't have a choice. She sued Combs in 2023, alleging years of abuse. He settled within hours, and dozens of similar lawsuits followed. Cassie Ventura, left, and Sean "Diddy" Combs appear at The Metropolitan Museum of Art's Costume Institute benefit gala celebrating "China: Through the Looking Glass" in New York on May 4, 2015. (Source: Associated Press) Jane testified over six days that she was romantically involved with Combs from 2021 until his September arrest at a New York hotel, and that she, too, felt forced to have sex with the hired strangers in multiday sex marathons while Combs watched. The Associated Press doesn't generally identify people who say they are victims of sexual abuse unless they come forward publicly, as Cassie has done. Testimony also included hours of text message exchanges, some of which involved Combs or other people in his orbit, that were read aloud by a Homeland Security Investigations agent. In all, 34 people took the stand, all of them called by the prosecution. Combs did not testify. ADVERTISEMENT How will jury deliberations work? Judge Arun Subramanian will give instructions to the jurors before sending them off to deliberate inside the Manhattan federal courthouse. The jury of eight men and four women must unanimously decide guilty or not guilty on each count. That means all 12 jurors must agree. If jurors don't reach an agreement, they could come back and say they are deadlocked. Traditionally, the judge would then encourage them to continue deliberating, but if they can't reach a consensus, it would be up to the judge to decide whether to declare a mistrial.


NZ Herald
2 days ago
- NZ Herald
Diddy used ‘power, violence and fear' prosecutors say in closing arguments
Combs, who has seemed quite at ease throughout much of his trial, appeared uncomfortable and nervous at the start of closing arguments today NZT. If convicted of the most serious charges, he could face life in prison. The prosecution, which spent more than six weeks in Manhattan federal court presenting evidence of Combs's alleged crimes, stressed to jurors that he did not need an army of co-conspirators to be found guilty of racketeering and that 'one single' act of alleged coercion against an accuser would be enough to convict him of sex trafficking. Combs' defence, which will offer its closing remarks before the jury enters deliberations, has argued that the accusers had their own motives and were willing participants in his drug-addled sex parties known as 'freak-offs'. Here are the arguments the prosecution made for each criminal count Combs is facing. Racketeering conspiracy To find Combs guilty of racketeering conspiracy, prosecutors said jurors can have their pick of a host of crimes, which include drug distribution, arson, bribery, sex trafficking, transportation for prostitution, forced labour, witness tampering, and obstruction. While the charge of racketeering conspiracy is often associated 'with the mafia or organised crime', Slavik said, it also firmly applies to the type of enforcement being carried out by Combs and his loyalists. The panel needs to find there was an agreement between Combs and another member of the enterprise that 'someone would commit two individual acts in any of these categories', she said. For example, if jurors believe Combs and his staffers distributed drugs to his alleged victims at least two times, he could be found guilty of racketeering conspiracy. Drug distribution is one of the more 'straightforward' offences of Combs' alleged criminal enterprise, the government said, as it ticked off a list of all the drugs used at freak-offs - including cocaine, meth, ketamine, oxycodone, tusi, Xanax, MDMA and GHB. Slavik called these drugs 'an essential ingredient' of the sex parties, and the means by which Combs kept his ex-girlfriends, Casandra 'Cassie' Ventura and a woman identified by the court-approved alias, 'Jane' - compliant and awake during these sexual encounters. Combs 'fed them drugs for years', Slavik said. 'And you know he didn't get those drugs on his own.' Rapper Kid Cudi leaves court after testifying at the trial on May 22. Photo / Getty Images Combs and his inner circle procured these drugs by enlisting his assistants and security staff, Slavik said. 'Giving drugs to someone else is distribution,' she added. 'Period.' Prosecutors also consider Ventura, Jane, and two former employees to be victims of forced labour. Both Ventura and Jane were coerced or forced to participate in sleep-deprived, days-long freak-offs, even when they were in pain or just not feeling up to it, Slavik said. 'This was work.' She also pointed to allegations of kidnapping, recounting testimony from Combs' former employee, Capricorn Clark, who said she was hauled into a room in New York in 2004, daily for a week where she was given a polygraph and threatened as Combs and his entourage tried to uncover who took valuable jewellery from him. Clark had also testified about being forced to accompany a furious Combs to the home of rapper Scott Mescudi - known by his stage name Kid Cudi - who was having a relationship with Ventura. An arson charge was also highlighted by the prosecution, stemming from a 2012 incident in which Mescudi's car blew up in his driveway. 'The evidence and basic logic' should lead jurors to conclude that Combs was behind the arson, Slavik argued. 'For starters, he literally said he was going to blow up Kid Cudi's car,' she said, citing Ventura's testimony during the trial. And Combs committed bribery when he and his deputies paid a hotel security guard US$100,000 ($165,000) to bury a video depicting his assault of Ventura in 2016, Slavik said, waving off the defence team's argument that the video purchase was an attempt to control public relations. Sex trafficking of Cassie Ventura 'We're not asking you to find that every instance, every freak-off, was an instance of sex trafficking,' Slavik said. Instead, she said the jury can convict Combs of sex trafficking if they believe he coerced one of his accusers even a single time. Combs's freak-offs 'were as regular as his abuse of Cassie', Slavik told jurors as she homed in on the defendant's decade-long relationship with the singer, who is central to the government's case. Slavik said these sexual encounters with male escorts and girlfriends followed a 'set playbook'. Ventura may have agreed to the first freak-off, the prosecutor said, but not the many subsequent ones. She referenced Ventura's testimony that Combs forced Ventura to have sex with men while she suffered from infections, and that he directed escorts to commit certain sexual acts against her will. 'It was a turn-on for him,' Slavik said. 'Humiliating for her.' She then brought up a slide focusing on three examples of alleged sex trafficking. The first: a freak-off that took place at the InterContinental Hotel in March 2016, when Combs was caught on camera attacking Ventura as she tried to leave the hotel room. Another clear example of Combs sex-trafficking Ventura was the time he made her perform a freak-off after he attacked her, according to the prosecution's closing argument. A male entertainer hired for that freak-off, Daniel Phillip, testified that he saw Combs throw a bottle at Ventura's head and drag her by her hair into a bedroom, where he heard slapping sounds. Phillip said Combs then told Ventura to resume the freak-off. 'He was demanding that Cassie have sex with a paid escort,' Slavik said. 'That's sex- trafficking.' Further, when Combs allegedly showed Ventura sex tapes of herself on a flight from Cannes, France, to New York City and threatened to release them to her family, he was coercing her into a freak-off, Slavik argued. When they landed, Combs and Ventura had a freak-off that very night. Sex trafficking of 'Jane' The government also walked through Combs' relationship with Jane, who dated the music producer from 2021 to 2024. Slavik broke down their relationship into four stages for the jury: a period of 'love bombing', during which Combs showered Jane with attention, gifts and trips, followed by the introduction of 'hotel nights', or freak-offs. Then, later in the relationship, came the period when Combs used the home he leased for her as 'leverage', Slavik argued. The final stage of their relationship was the aftermath of Ventura's lawsuit, she said. Hotel nights with Combs were never about Jane's sexual desires, despite her attempts to exert some control over them, Slavik said, pointing to Jane's testimony about why she accepted the drugs Combs gave her during these encounters: 'I didn't want it to feel too real,' Combs' ex-girlfriend said. 'It just made things easier.' The prosecutor also pointed to a clip of a freak-off the jury had seen earlier in the trial, when Jane expressed her wish that a male entertainer wear a condom. 'You heard it in the recording, 'ain't no condoms around here,'' Slavik said, quoting Combs. Slavik said it was important that Combs was planning freak-offs without Jane's knowledge, even as he was promising her romantic dinners and shopping sprees. Combs didn't make good on those promises and never intended to, the prosecutor argued, thus coercing Jane's participation by fraud. Slavik also described Combs beating and choking Jane during a fight last summer, forcing her to flee her home shoeless and without a phone. After she returned, bruised and in pain, Combs allegedly forced Jane to have sex with an escort. Combs told Jane she would not 'ruin' his night and demanded she get dressed up, Slavik said. Slavik said Combs knew he was again committing the very crime he was being investigated for and that he intended to continue trafficking Jane. She acknowledged video evidence showing Jane enjoying herself during 'freak-offs,' but she contended that 'what those videos really show is that she was super, super high.' And Slavik reminded jurors of Combs' alleged effort to silence Jane as his reputation was crumbling in the wake of sexual assault allegations. 'I just needed to tell you that I need your friendship,' Combs said in a call he recorded in November 2023 with a tearful Jane, played during the prosecution's closing arguments. Transportation to engage in prostitution Slavik also walked jurors through the federal indictment's two counts of transportation to engage in prostitution: one for each alleged victim, Ventura and Jane. The government has a trove of records supporting these charges - including bank statements showing Combs or his associates purchasing flights for alleged male escorts, airline records, hotel reservations and bank deposits, as well as communications with the men or escort services themselves. It 'doesn't matter' that the men consented to these sex acts, or even that Ventura and Jane sometimes did, Slavik said. 'It's still a crime.'


Newsroom
22-06-2025
- Newsroom
When abuse masquerades as ‘rough sex'
Opinion: Sean 'Diddy' Combs – also known as Puff Daddy or P Diddy – is on trial in the United States on a raft of sex-trafficking, forced-prostitution, and racketeering charges. The case against the American rapper alleges that he and his associates were responsible for coercing women into drug-fuelled sex marathons known as 'freak-offs'. Combs is alleged to have controlled, abused, and raped his ex-partner Cassie Ventura. Singer Dawn Richard testified that Combs was frequently violent toward Ventura, punching her, choking her, dragging her, and slapping her in the mouth. Kerry Morgan, a former long-time friend of Ventura, also testified she had witnessed his violence against Ventura and that she herself had been choked and assaulted by him. The Combs trial has highlighted the insidious nature of coercion, control, and violence in intimate relationships. It has also drawn attention to 'choking' – a term now commonly used to refer to strangulation. Strangulation is a common and dangerous form of violence. It involves compression of the neck – an area highly vulnerable to injury – with hands, an arm, or objects, such as belts or scarves. Strangulation is also deeply gendered. In New Zealand, a fifth of women who experience physical violence from an intimate partner have been purposely choked or burnt at least once. Strangulation often leaves no visible injury, but it can result in a range of serious health consequences. These consequences might be felt immediately, or they might arise in the days, weeks, or months following the event. People who have been strangled may report difficulty breathing, a sore throat, confusion, vision changes, or loss of consciousness. Strangulation can also result in miscarriage, traumatic brain injury and death. Strangulation is a known red flag for escalating violence in relationships. It is troubling, then, that the same act – applying pressure to the neck – has become an increasingly common aspect of some people's sexual lives, often under the guise of 'rough sex'. How common is 'choking' during sex? In Australia, research with young adults aged 18 to 35 found over half – 57 percent – had a history of partnered sexual choking. In the US, a 2021 survey found a quarter of undergraduate students at a large university reported being choked during their most recent sexual event. Data about the prevalence of the practice in Aotearoa is limited. Project Gender sought to gather some insights through a survey (promoted via social media) of online dating and sex. Thirty percent of the 823 respondents to this survey reported being choked or suffocated during consensual sex with a partner from a dating app. Being choked during sex may be increasing in frequency, but it is not always wanted. It is often reported as a 'scary' experience – particularly for women. A third of respondents in Project Gender's survey said they 'never' or 'rarely' consented to being choked. The influence of pornography Choking during sex is eroticised in pornography, presenting it as a pleasurable and legitimate act within the pursuit of (mostly) male heterosexual pleasure. These portrayals occur in material marketed at 'mainstream' audiences, outside of content aimed at audiences seeking portrayals of safe, explicitly consensual BDSM – bondage, domination, submission, and masochism. Young people report they often first learn about choking through pornography, which can act as a default source of information about sex. However, pornography is not the only arena in which choking and strangulation is depicted. It is eroticised in popular films such as Polish erotic drama 365 days, and in chart topping music hits such as 'Lovin on Me' by Jack Harlow or 'Take My Breath' by The Weeknd. Choking is also discussed in sex and relationships advice in magazines such as Men's Health and Cosmopolitan. Articles often reference the pleasures that can be found – usually for women – during choking. Online articles also frame choking as a positive and 'safe' behaviour. Few articles are subject to expert or medical review. Collectively, these repeated portrayals may reinforce wider messaging that suggests rough sex or 'choking' is ordinary or should be expected. Additionally, these portrayals may neutralise the potential harms associated with these practices. Challenging the 'rough sex is normal' narrative While some people may enjoy partaking in 'rougher' styles of sex, irrespective of consent it is important we do not lose focus on the health risks associated with choking. To help challenge and contextualise broader narratives that are shaping contemporary ideas and sexual expectations, reliable information about sex, relationships, consent, and violence needs to be available to everyone. Rather than learning from the fantasy-based, stereotypical images of sex in mainstream pornography, a good place to begin is with resources developed in conjunction with experts, clinicians, sexual educators, and others with specialist insights. These resources provide concise and accurate information about the realities of choking during sex, enabling people to make more informed decisions about their sexual lives.