Sean "Diddy" Combs

Diddy's ex-girlfriend says she cried for days after reading Cassie's lawsuit

Jane's testimony was expected to fill the bulk of the trial's fifth week, as prosecutors move closer to finishing the presentation of their evidence before the defense gets its turn.

NBC Universal, Inc.

Sean “Diddy” Combs forced his ex-girlfriend to have a “freak-off”-style sexual encounter with a male sex worker in 2024 after chasing her around her California home, putting her in a chokehold, punching her in the face and kicking down doors, the woman testified Monday.

Testifying for a third day under the pseudonym “Jane," the woman said Combs erupted after she accused him of cheating on her. After beating her, Jane said, Combs invited a sex worker over, gave her an ecstasy pill and told her: “You’re not going to ruin my night like this.”

Stream Los Angeles News for free, 24/7, wherever you are.

Watch button  WATCH HERE

Jane, whose injuries included a black eye and welts on her forehead, said she’d planned June 18, 2024, as as a romantic night with Combs, but now remembers it “a very terrible day."

It's also one of the more recent examples of Combs acting violently toward a woman while seeking to fulfill his sexual desires — happening amid the federal investigation that led to his arrest in September.

Get top local stories in Southern California delivered to you every morning with NBC LA's News Headlines newsletter.

Newsletter button  SIGN UP
A friend of Sean "Diddy" Combs' former girlfriend took the stand in his sex-trafficking trial, accusing Combs of dangling her over a 17-story balcony in Los Angeles during a violent outburst. NBC New York's Erica Byfield reports. 

Combs has pleaded not guilty to sex trafficking and racketeering charges that could put him in prison for life.

As in her previous two days on the stand last week, Jane became emotional and cried briefly Monday, but was mostly composed as she discussed her experiences with a man she said she loved. As Jane left the witness stand Monday, she told jurors: “I just pray for his continued healing.” The couple broke up after Combs’ arrest, but she said he still pays her rent.

Just a few weeks after Jane alleged Combs beat her, he publicly stated that he was “committed to being a better man every day" after video leaked of him attacking his former longtime girlfriend Cassie, the R&B singer whose real name is Casandra Ventura, at a Los Angeles hotel in 2016.

NBC and the Associated Press don’t name alleged victims of sexual abuse without their consent unless they have shared their identities publicly, as Cassie has.

Jane’s testimony is expected to fill the bulk of the trial’s fifth week, as prosecutors move closer to the end of their presentation before the defense gets its turn.

Jane, who faces questioning Tuesday from Combs’ lawyers, said the rapper and entrepreneur followed her to a bathroom and kicked the door “literally off the hinges" after she shoved his head into a countertop, hurled glasses and candles at him and screamed, “I hate you."

After moving to a locked closet, Jane said she tried to run away, but Combs kicked her in the thigh and knocked her to the ground. He then lifted her up by the neck and put her in a chokehold, she said, telling jurors: “I couldn’t breathe."

Jane said she then ran about six blocks and hid behind a wall for what she estimated was about two hours. When she figured things had calmed down, she said, she walked back to the home — but Combs was still around, walking toward her in the street.

Jane said she retreated to a guest bedroom and then ran into the backyard, curling into a ball on the ground as she implored Combs to leave. He refused, she said, and “started punching my head, he started kicking me." Eventually, she said, "he grabs me by my arm or my hair and starts dragging me back to the house.”

Combs then followed her to the shower, she said, and smacked her in the face so hard she lost her balance and fell to the floor. Jane said she was exhausted, but Combs insisted on inviting over a male sex worker and told her to put some makeup on and adjust her hair to hide her injuries.

“I don’t want to, I don’t want to," Jane recalled saying, to which she said Combs replied: “Is this coercion?”

Jane said that after she expressed her frustrations and desire to only have sexual relations with Combs, the verbal fights between them would sometimes be resolved when Combs would say all the things she wanted to hear and promise to spend time with her without a “hotel night.”

Also Monday, Jane said she told Combs that she cried for three days and felt nauseated after reading Cassie’s Nov. 2023 lawsuit against him, which described having hundreds of drug-fueled “freak-off” sex marathons with Combs and male sex workers.

A hotel security guard took the stand in the sex trafficking trial of Sean "Diddy" Combs. The guard worked at a Los Angeles hotel in 2016, where Combs was caught on tape assaulting his former girlfriend, Cassie Ventura. The jury learned Combs paid the guard $100,000 to make the footage disappear. NBC New York's Erica Byfield reports.

She said when she saw Cassie's lawsuit, “I almost fainted.”

Jane, who referred to similar encounters with Combs as “debauchery” and “hotel nights,” said she felt like she was “reading my own sexual trauma” as she read the lawsuit, which Combs settled within a day for $20 million. She said it followed her experience with the Bad Boy Records founder “word for word, exactly my experience.”

Cassie dated Combs for more than a decade and testified that she engaged in weekly “freak-offs," many lasting several for days. She said Combs often watched or filmed the sessions.

Jane read aloud for the jury hundreds of text messages, including some in which she complained that Combs seemed to be forcing her into sex marathons by threatening to take away her home.

She pleaded with him to recognize the damage the encounters were doing, writing: “I am not an animal.”

Resources for victims of sexual assault are available through the National Sexual Violence Resources Center and the National Sexual Assault Telephone Hotline at 800-656-4673.

Copyright AP - Associated Press
Contact Us