
P Diddy forced me into sick sex sessions with male escorts while he terrorised me with beatings, says star's ex Cassie
Cassie Ventura, 38, said: 'You make the wrong face . . . then I was getting hit in the face.''
8
8
8
The r'n'b singer said she was a sexual novice when she fell in love with the rapper, 55, having been won over by his wealth and charm.
Within a year, she said she agreed to marathon 'freak off' sex sessions with strangers to prove her love and keep him happy.
But Ms Ventura told a New York court how she began to experience a different side of Diddy — what she called 'his abusive side'.
She added: 'Very controlling over my life, the things I wanted to do . . . but there's still love there.
'Control was everything from the way I looked, what I was working on that day, who I was speaking to.
'You make the wrong face and the next thing I knew I was getting hit in the face.'
Ms Ventura said this was combined with fears of blackmail when Combs recorded sex sessions, which lasted from 36 hours to four days.
She said the sex became her job and she took part fearing the star would release the footage.
Ms Ventura later fought back tears as she told how she was made to feel disgusted with herself by Combs.
Denying she wanted to engage in every 'freak off', she said: 'I just felt it was all I was good for.
Diddy's $61.5m mansion where feds seized 1,000 bottles of baby oil during raid lies silent in new pics as trial starts-
'I felt disgusted. I was humiliated, I didn't have those words to put together at the time, how horrible I felt. I couldn't talk to anybody.'
Asked about Combs' temper, she said: 'He'd be violent. His look would change. I wouldn't know what would happen.
'Best way (to describe it) is his eyes go black. The person I was in love with was no longer there.'
Asked if she enjoyed any parts of the sex sessions, she said: 'Just the one on one time I'd get. I did feel very close to him. As sad as it was, it was the only time I could get.
'When you really care about somebody and you're in love with them, you don't want to disappoint them.'
'I never wanted him to feel I judged him for it but I wanted him to know it made me feel horrible, made me feel worthless, like I didn't have anything else to offer.'
Ms Ventura testified despite being eight-and-a-half months pregnant with her third child with husband, Alex Fine, a personal trainer hired by Combs to work with her.
She said she was 19 when Combs signed her on a ten-record deal to his Bad Boy Records label in 2006.
'CALLING THE SHOTS'
They had sex for the first time on a boat trip in Miami after he gave her an ecstasy pill. And she alleged Combs quickly began calling 'all the shots' during their decade-long relationship.
She described how the rapper would 'stomp me in the head if I was down' and beat her so badly that the whites of her eyes turned red.
Prosecutors claim triple-Grammy winner Combs ran a 'criminal enterprise' coercing women into sex and threatening them if they went public.
He faces charges of racketeering conspiracy, sex trafficking and prostitution.
Combs' lawyers conceded he was a domestic abuser but that his sex life was not a crime.
He claims all of the sex acts were consensual and that his appetites were kinky but not criminal.
8
8
Combs' lawyer, Marc Agnifilo, had sought to have Ms Ventura seated in the witness box before the jury came in on the grounds her pregnancy could encourage sympathy. But the judge disagreed.
Combs kept his eyes fixed on her as she took her seat.
Detailing their arguments, Ms Ventura said: 'If they were violent arguments they would usually result in some sort of physical abuse.
He would bash my head, knock me over, drag me, kick me, stomp me in the head if I was down'.
Asked by prosecutor Emily Anne Johnson how frequently, Ms Ventura replied: 'Too frequently.'
The singer added: 'Within the first year Sean proposed to me this idea where he'd watch me in sexual activity with a third party, specifically another man.'
With a sigh, Ms Ventura said in a halting voice: 'It entails hiring of an escort, and setting up this experience so I could perform for Sean.'
When Combs floated the idea of 'freak offs', Ms Ventura said she remembered 'my stomach falling to my butt'.
Over time it turned into the fact there were blackmail material to make me feel if I didn't do it it would be hung over my head or these things would become public.
Cassie Ventura
She added: 'The nervousness and confusion on that moment . . . I had just turned 22. I didn't have a concept of how that would be turn-on but I also felt a sense of responsibility with him sharing something like that with me.
'I was confused, nervous but also loved him very much. Pretty quickly I knew it wasn't something I wanted to be doing, especially as regularly as it became. But I wanted to make him happy. It got to a point I didn't feel I had much of a choice.'
Ms Ventura said she feared making Combs angry, adding: 'Over time it turned into the fact there were blackmail material to make me feel if I didn't do it it would be hung over my head or these things would become public.
'It was always in the back of my mind I'd be hurt by him.
'Sean is a really polarising person, also very charming, so it's hard to be able to decide on that moment what you need when he's telling you what he wants.
'I just didn't know. I just didn't know what would happen.'
FEARED HIS ANGER
Before she met Combs, she thought he was a 'larger than life' figure in the music industry. Ms Ventura repeatedly called herself 'naive' including in her belief they were in a monogamous relationship.
She said: 'I was insanely jealous but also super young, didn't get it at all. I didn't get that he was him.
'As he would say, 'I'm Puff Daddy and Puff Daddy has many women'. He likes the company of women.
'I had to learn that over time. He made me feel like we were in a monogamous relationship.'
She said Combs became more controlling and abusive, adding: 'If I wasn't smiling at him the way he wanted, I just looked a certain way he didn't like — maybe I was a brat or something — he would let me know I need to fix my face or watch my mouth.'
Describing the 'freak offs', Ms Ventura said: 'They ranged anywhere from 36, 48 to 72 hours. The longest was four days. Maybe even more on and off with breaks. A significant part of the week'.
8
8
8
Recovery was about 'recovering from the drugs, dehydration, staying awake all that time', she said.
She and Mr Fine have been married six years and have two daughters. She first announced their relationship in 2018, two months after splitting from Combs.
Earlier, Judge Arun Subramanian indicated he could make the 'freak off' videos and photos public despite Ms Ventura wanting them sealed.
Referring to media requests to see the material, he said: 'I'm inclined to grant the application.'
Combs was again supported at court by mum Janice.
He denies all the charges.
He faces life imprisonment if convicted.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The Independent
5 minutes ago
- The Independent
Trump uses Sydney Sweeney as reason to randomly attack Taylor Swift
Donald Trump lauded Sydney Sweeney 's American Eagle jeans advert, calling it the "'HOTTEST' ad out there" shortly after discovering she is a registered Republican. Trump used his praise for Sweeney to criticise "WOKE" advertising, reigniting his feud with pop star Taylor Swift, whom he claimed was "NO LONGER HOT." The American Eagle commercial, titled "Sydney Sweeney Has Great Jeans," has drawn significant criticism for allegedly promoting "eugenic ideals" through wordplay on "jeans" and "genes." American Eagle defended the advert, clarifying that it was solely about Sweeney's jeans and her personal story, not about genetic traits. The controversy sparked a political debate, with Trump's allies defending Sweeney and the advert against "cancel culture," while some Democrats mocked the conservative support.


The Independent
5 minutes ago
- The Independent
Tennessee set to execute inmate without turning off his implanted defibrillator
Tennessee is set to execute an inmate Tuesday without deactivating his implanted defibrillator, as uncertainty lingers about whether the device will shock his heart when a lethal drug takes effect. Barring a late reprieve requested from the governor or the courts, Byron Black 's execution will go forward after a legal back-and-forth over whether the state would need to turn off his implantable cardioverter-defibrillator, or ICD. The nonprofit Death Penalty Information Center said it's unaware of any other cases in which an inmate was making similar claims to Black about ICDs or pacemakers. The execution would be Tennessee's second since May, after a pause for five years, first because of COVID-19 and then because of missteps by the Tennessee Department of Correction. Twenty-seven men have died by court-ordered execution so far this year in the U.S., and nine other people are scheduled to be put to death in seven states during the remainder of 2025. The number of executions this year exceeds the 25 carried out last year and in 2018. It is the highest total since 2015, when 28 people were put to death. Black's condition Black, 69, is in a wheelchair, suffering from dementia, brain damage, kidney failure, congestive heart failure and other conditions, his attorneys have said. In mid-July, a trial court judge agreed with Black's attorneys that officials must have the instrument deactivated to avert the risk that it could cause unnecessary pain and prolong the execution. But the state Supreme Court intervened July 31 to overturn that decision, saying the other judge lacked the authority to order the change. The state has disputed that the lethal injection would cause Black's defibrillator to shock him. Even if shocks were triggered, Black wouldn't feel them, the state has added. Black's attorneys have countered that even if the lethal drug being used, pentobarbital, renders someone unresponsive, they aren't necessarily unaware or unable to feel pain. Black's case Black was convicted in the 1988 shooting deaths of his girlfriend Angela Clay, 29, and her two daughters, Latoya Clay, 9, and Lakeisha Clay, 6. Prosecutors said he was in a jealous rage when he shot the three at their home. At the time, Black was on work-release while serving time for shooting Clay's estranged husband. Linette Bell, whose sister and two nieces were killed, recently told WKRN-TV: 'He didn't have mercy on them, so why should we have mercy on him?' 'It feels like it is never-ending,' Bell told the news outlet. 'They aren't even resting in their own grave.' Medical considerations An implantable cardioverter-defibrillator is a small, battery-powered electronic device that is surgically implanted in the chest, typically near the left collarbone. It serves as a pacemaker and an emergency defibrillator. Black's attorneys say the only way to be sure it's off is for a doctor to place a programming device over the implant site, sending it a deactivation command, with no surgery required. The legal case also spurred a reminder that most medical professionals consider participation in executions a violation of health care ethics. While the judge's order to deactivate the device was in place, state officials said Nashville General Hospital practitioners would do the procedure the day before at the hospital, but wouldn't travel to the prison on execution day as the court required. The judge offered some leeway, allowing the procedure at the hospital on the morning of the execution. But Nashville General then released a statement saying the state's contractor didn't reach out to proper hospital leadership and that there had been no agreement to do the work. Intellectual disability claim In recent years, Black's legal team has also tried and failed to get a new hearing over whether he is intellectually disabled and ineligible for the death penalty under U.S. Supreme Court precedent. His attorneys have said that if they had delayed a prior attempt to seek his intellectual disability claim, he would have been spared under a 2021 state law. Nashville District Attorney Glenn Funk contended in 2022 that Black is intellectually disabled and deserves a hearing under that 2021 law, but the judge denied it. That is because an inmate can't get an intellectual disability hearing under the 2021 law if they have already filed a similar request and a court has ruled on it 'on the merits." In Funk's attempt, he focused on input from an expert for the state in 2004 who determined back then that Black didn't meet the criteria for what was then called "mental retardation.' But she concluded that Black met the new law's criteria for a diagnosis of intellectual disability. Black has also been seeking a determination by the courts that he is incompetent to be executed.


The Independent
5 minutes ago
- The Independent
Former DOJ Trump ‘loyalty test' prosecutors are planning to run for office and fight back
At this time last year, Ryan Crosswell was hard at work trying to put New York City's mayor in prison on corruption charges while serving as a prosecutor in the Justice Department. But after resigning in protest over the Trump administration's decision to drop the case against Mayor Eric Adams and cut back on prosecutions of public corruption cases, he's looking at a switching careers to making laws instead of enforcing them. According to CBS News, Crosswell, a U.S. Marine Corps veteran, left the department in February amid the uproar over the dropping of charges against Adams, a move which at the time was framed as a way to enable the mayor to better assist the Trump administration's immigration enforcement efforts. Four months later, he announced a campaign for the House of Representatives seat for Pennsylvania's seventh district against Republican Ryan Mackenzie, telling the television network: "If you're a Marine and you're a former prosecutor, you are protecting people." Crosswell is just one of a number of ex-federal prosecutors looking to continue public service careers by seeking election to various offices across the United States. The former prosecutors all have one thing in common — they left federal service in the tumultuous opening months of the Trump administration amid what have been described as loyalty tests as a condition of remaining in the government. Erika Evans, the granddaughter of Olympic track-and-field medalist Lee Evans, left the Department of Justice in March on account of the changes made to the Civil Rights Division under Assistant Attorney General Harmeet Dhillon. Dhillon, a longtime GOP activist, has made it a priority to refocus the division away from protecting racial minorities towards pushing back on alleged anti-white discrimination. Evans told CBS she resigned after receiving emails asking for DOJ employees to report colleagues involved in Diversity, Equity and Inclusion work that the Trump administration has banned. "We received emails requiring that we report any colleagues doing diversity work in the office. We had 10 to 14 days to report them or we would get in trouble ourselves," Evans said. "That was pretty disgusting." Now, she's looking to resume her public service career as Seattle's elected City Attorney. In a video released by her campaign, she says she'll 'take on Trump' if elected and 'demand the community safety we deserve' from the federal government. She explained how she'd wanted to spend her career in public service but felt she had to leave because of the Trump administration's priorities. "When I realized that that was not going to be possible any longer with the values that the Trump administration was having for the department, I knew I needed to shift,' she said.