Sean "Diddy" Combs' Son Justin Accused of Orchestrating Gang Rape

Warning: This article contains allegations of sexual assault.
Sean “Diddy” Combs’ son Justin Combs has been accused of facilitating a woman’s alleged gang rape.
Amid Diddy’s federal sex trafficking trial, the 31-year-old and his dad are facing a civil lawsuit from a woman who alleges she was drugged and sexually assaulted by three masked men during a 2017 trip to Los Angeles arranged by Justin, according to court documents obtained by E! News June 26.
In the complaint, the woman alleged Justin, who she said she met through Snapchat, flew her out from New Orleans under the guise that “he would get her a position with Remote TV in Atlanta through his and his father’s connections.”
Upon her arrival, the woman said she and Justin—who is the son of the Bad Boy Records founder and Misa Hylton—spent time at a Beverly Hills home consuming alcohol and marijuana, which she “believed was laced due to the effect it had on her.” The woman also alleged the son of the music mogul made her take “various pills or ‘poppers’” throughout the day.
After consuming the drugs, the woman said three masked men arrived at the house and they allegedly “took turns” raping her from Saturday evening until midday Sunday.
Following the alleged intoxication, the lawsuit stated three masked men arrived and “took turns raping Plaintiff both anally and orally while she was drugged and incapacitated” from Saturday evening until midday Sunday.
Though two of the men were unknown to the woman, she accused Diddy of being the third “due in part to his stature and mannerisms but also because Justin referred to him on at least one occasion as ‘Pops,’” per her complaint.
The woman said the possibility of a job at Remote TV “never materialized” and she suffered “severe emotional distress, emotional anguish, fear, anxiety, humiliation, embarrassment, physical injury, emotional injury and trauma” as a result of the alleged incident.
She is suing the father-and-son duo as well as Diddy’s businesses for sexual battery, gender violence and negligent supervision.
E! News has reached out to Justin’s rep for comment but has not heard back.
In response to the lawsuit, Diddy’s legal team denied the allegations on his behalf.
“No matter how many lawsuits are filed it won’t change the fact that Mr. Combs has never sexually assaulted or sex trafficked anyone—man or woman, adult or minor,” the rapper’s lawyers told E! News in a June 26 statement. “We live in a world where anyone can file a lawsuit for any reason. Fortunately, a fair and impartial judicial process exists to find the truth, and Mr. Combs is confident he will prevail in court.”
As Diddy’s ongoing federal trial approaches its close, read on to learn more about the court proceedings.
The prosecution submitted a filing to Judge Arun Subramanian, in which they requested to amend parts of their theories of attempted arson and kidnapping.
Although Sean “Diddy” Combs is still facing the same racketeering conspiracy and sex trafficking counts—which include the kidnapping and arson allegations—prosecutors wrote in the June 24 letter they had “removed instructions from the charge relating to attempted kidnapping under both California and New York law, attempted arson under California law, and aiding and abetting sex trafficking.”
The government added that it “hopes” simplifying the language “not only serves the purposes of streamlining the instructions but also will avoid any confusion.”
Combs told Judge Subramanian that he will not take the stand during his sex trafficking trial.
The judge emphasized that regardless of the rap mogul’s decision, “no one, including the jury, could draw any inference or suggestion of your guilt from the fact that you did not testify.”
Combs, who confirmed that he spoke with his team about not testifying, emphasized that this was “solely” his decision.
"We have discussed it thoroughly, that is my decision," he said to the judge. "That is totally my decision, I am making it."
Combs' defense attorney Teny Garagos told the judge that her team and the prosecution expect to take “at least four hours” each for their closing arguments.
With Homeland Security Investigations Special Agent Joseph Cerciello completing his multi-day testimony as the prosecution’s witness June 24, the defense will begin their argument. Combs’ team shared that they will not be moving forward with any witnesses and will instead focus on entered evidence.
During Ceriello’s testimony June 23, the jury was shown explicit videos—which, according to NBC News reporters in the courtroom, appeared to be from Combs’ “freak offs”—that were entered into evidence.
While the special agent noted there were 50 explicit videos from 2021 and 2022, jurors were shown two files using headphones and screens.
In voicemails to his former chief of staff Kristina Khorram played June 23, Combs detailed a specific list of requests while staying at a hotel in November 2021, including a restock on baby oil—which he regularly used during “freak offs.”
“Tell them to call me before they are on the way,” he said to Khorram. “Can’t believe I’m out. Put 20 bottles in this motherf--ker.”
Along with Khorram extending the hotel visit for an additional day, she replied, “OK. The baby oil is outside the door.”
In text messages, his former employee texted that she was preparing an IV drip for him and then-girlfriend—who is going by “Jane” for the trial—which he used as part of at least one “freak off” recovery, according to the group text messages.
She also made sure that there were Plan-B pills, an emergency contraceptive, in his nightstand.
Jurors were shown a series of text messages between Combs and Ventura, during which the “Long Way 2 Go” singer candidly detailed the toll his alleged abuse was taking on her.
After Combs asked whether Ventura, whom he dated on and off from 2007 to 2018, wanted to take a break in March 2017, she replied, “No. I just don't want to be beat down for being defiant or ever. You treat me and make me feel like I don't matter."
In another instance, she further accused her ex of physically assaulting her.
“I give you love, and as soon as I turn my head for a second and you get fucked up, you drag me down the hall by my hair. I'm 30 years old,” Ventura wrote to him that May. “This isn't play anymore. I felt like I was dead last night and it wasn't happening to me bc seeing my light was so beautiful."
Combs’ former assistant Brendan Paul—whom he employed from 2022 to 2024—testified that he had purchased drugs for his boss on multiple occasions, including “Marijuana, 2C, cocaine, ketamine, ecstasy.”
“We would text the drug dealer and then the drug dealer would come to either of the homes,” Paul—who also recalled being fired multiple times for varying offenses, including forgetting a Lululemon fanny pack—said of the process. “I was introduced to them either through texts or phone calls.”
However, Paul vehemently denied being a “drug mule” for the rap mogul.
Judge Subramanian adjourned the courtroom for the day on June 18 after a member of the main jury did not return due to illness. (Court is not in session on June 19 for Juneteenth.)
“We have a sick juror who cannot be here and had vertigo and had to turn back,” the judge said. “The juror's partner notified us. He is not here, and he is on the regular jury, so it appears we cannot go on today.”
The judge noted that it’s unclear whether the juror’s vertigo flare-up—which causes dizziness, nausea, and headaches, along with other symptoms—is temporary or a long-term issue, but would “monitor the situation.”
With court not in session June 19 for Juneteenth, Judge Subramanian said the trial would resume with a shortened session on June 20, running from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m.
Shortly after Judge Subramanian dismissed Juror No. 6 over conflicting answers as to his place of residence, a second member faces possible dismissal over an alleged improper conversation about the case with a former colleague. The member in question was questioned by the judge and handed his phone in for inspection, per NBC News.
A decision had not been made as to the member’s dismissal by the end of the court session on June 16.
Kanye West arrived at the New York City courthouse June 13 in support of Combs. The “Stronger” rapper, who was in the building for about 30 minutes, made a brief visit to the overflow area but never entered the courtroom. The main room is reserved for Combs’ family and legal team, as well as the media and spectators who wait in line for hours for a seat.
Jane recalled an argument between them after she went on a trip to Las Vegas with another rapper and his wife.
She testified that it led to sexual voyeurism after she solicited Anton, a sex worker whom she and Combs often hired, where a group of people watched him have sex with a woman in a hotel room during the trip.
Jane told Combs’ attorney Geragos that the rap mogul was upset after accusing her of attending another man’s “freak off.”
On day 21 of Combs' trial, assistant U.S. attorney Maurene Comey shared her team is seeking to remove one of the 12 members of the jury.
“We were very reluctant to put in this letter,” she told Judge Subramanian before the jury entered the New York City courtroom. “It appeared to be a lack of candor with the court that raises serious issues with us.”
Defense attorney Alexandra Shapiro—who said that Juror No. 6 is among the panel’s Black members—asked for one or two days to “respond in writing” and “go over case law.”
In response, Judge Subramanian said he will “reserve on handling logistics” about the juror until a decision is made.
Jane and Garagos had a tense conversation June 10 as the latter insinuated the witness was having sex with men for luxury goods.
Geragos went through text messages from November 2021 between Jane and Combs, in which the witness was upset that the rap mogul was having sex with other women. Per the texts, she asked Combs if he gave the other woman “a Chanel bag” after having sex.
Jane said that she didn’t get a Chanel purse from Combs, telling Garagos that she “got trauma.”
When the attorney asked what a Bottega bag was, she replied, “I’m sure you have one.”
And when Geragos asked how much the item costs, Jane asked, “How much does my body cost?”
Jane was granted a 10-minute break following the exchange.
Jane testified that around 2022, she believed that Combs was a “cuckhold,” a person who finds pleasure in watching their partner be physically intimate with another person, after looking up her and Combs’ sexual dynamic.
“It gave me more of an understanding,” she said of her reasoning for the research. “I was just trying to deep dive on all the reasons why they had derived so much pleasure from watching their woman be with other men.”
The witness theorized that Combs’ desire for “hotel nights,” the details of which are nearly identical to Ventura's “freak offs,” was because he may be curious about his own sexuality.
“Cucks could also have a real curiosity that they're too ashamed to experience themselves,” she testified, “and so they use the woman to venture out in this curiosity without actually doing the act itself.”
Jane testified that she had nicknamed Paul—an escort she and Combs solicited on multiple occasions—“Trifecta” because she compared their sexual dynamic to the on-court success of basketball stars.
“I was Kobe Bryant and Paul was Shaq [O’Neil],” she told jurors. “Combs was Michael Jordan.”
She described Paul as “really nice,” noting that if she “had to” have sex with escorts, “at least it was with someone with a warm energy.”
Jane testified that Combs’ dynamic with Khorram was a “point of contention” in the witness’ romance with the rap mogul.
“She was always with him,” Jane said of Khorram. “It was difficult for our relationship. I believe that she had very strong feelings about me, which influenced a great deal with how Sean treated me.”
On June 10, Judge Subramanian denied a motion for mistrial by Combs' legal team, in which his attorneys argued that Ventura and her friend Bryana Bongolan lied about the latter being dangled over the 17th-floor balcony by the rap mogul.
His lawyers, whose previous motion for a mistrial was also denied, accused the prosecution in the filing of “misconduct” with the “introduction of perjured testimony.”
“In this trial the government has presented testimony that it knew or should have known was materially false related to its allegation that Mr. Combs dangled Bryana Bongolan from the balcony of Cassie Ventura’s apartment in September 2016,” the letter said. “Accordingly, to avoid an unfair conviction in this case the Court should grant a mistrial.”
Jane alleged that the rap mogul had beaten her for hours June 2024.
Jane testified that she and Combs began arguing about the latter seeing a woman who was 25 years his junior, which Jane said led to her calling him a “pedophile” and pushing his head into a marble kitchen counter.
The witness said she had hidden in the primary bedroom and Combs began kicking the door open. (Photos of the cracked door were entered into evidence.) She alleged that while trying to run away, the Bad Boy Records founder kicked her in the back of the thigh, which made her fall.
“He put me in a chokehold on the ground, lifted me up, and I couldn't breathe, and I was on my tippy toes,” she told the prosecution. “I was just trying to get out of his grip.”
Jane said she ran out of the house and hid behind a wall outside for approximately two hours, hoping he would leave, but he did not. She said they subsequently returned to his home, where she curled up in the backyard to protect herself as Combs allegedly attacked her.
According to Jane, the altercation escalated after Combs allegedly punched her back. “He started punching my head,” she told the court. “He started kicking me. He started saying all kinds of things and just kept punching.”
She alleged that he told her that she was “trying to take him away from his kids and his family.”
“I said, ‘No, I'm not. Just leave me alone. Just leave. Please stop,’” she testified. “Then he just grabs me by my arm and my hair and just starts dragging me back to the house … by my hair, by my arm.”
After the alleged assault, Jane said she saw “two golfball-sized welts” on her forehead, as well as a black eye.
Jane said that Homeland Security Investigated raided her home, which was paid for by Combs in March 2023, along with multiple other residences owned by the mogul. She said that agents came to her house and she called Combs’ head of security to tell him about the situation.
Jane alleged that the mogul threatened to release their sex tapes and show them to her baby’s father in December 2023.
As Jane and Combs' relationship deteriorated, she said he told her that he had “nothing to lose” by releasing the videos. She testified, “It was just back-to-back pressure phone calls.”
She texted Khorram about the interaction, which was entered into evidence. In the texts, Jane wrote that Combs was threatening to post the footage, in which she said she was “heavily drugged.”
She also wrote that she needed “time away from” Combs because she was trying to work through “all the trauma” he caused.
Jane told the court that Khorram assured her that Combs would not use the footage.
Jane said during her testimony that parts of Ventura's November 2023 lawsuit—which was ultimately settled—mirrored her own experience with Combs.
“I almost fainted, in fact, I think I did,” she told jurors as she cried. “There was three specific pages that was just a harrowing reference to what I was experiencing.”
Jane, who took part in “hotel nights, "said that it felt like she was reading “her own story.” It led to her confronting Combs via text messages.
“I feel like I am reading my own sexual trauma,” she wrote after Ventura’s lawsuit, in screenshots shown in evidence. “I am sick. It's exactly word for word, drug-filled days and nights. You knew this was coming. You gaslit me, you made me go crazy.”
“I am disgusted, I felt forced to perform back to back,” the messages continued. “You made me feel crazy about the sex trauma I was feeling. I feel very violated. This was sexual exploitation.”
Combs subsequently called Jane and recorded the conversation without her knowledge that was entered into evidence, in which he told her that they “did these things together” and that “this is when” he needed her “to be there.”
Jane, who didn’t know she was being recorded, told Combs that she was “sick” to her stomach after reading Ventura’s documents.
Jane said that while she was often high on ecstasy while participating in “Hotel Nights” with Combs and male escorts, one evening she decided not to take any drugs while having sex with three men.
“I was with multiple men this night,” she testified. “I threw up. Sean came in and said, ‘You’ll feel better now. Let’s go outside.’”
Jane said that at the end of the night, she felt “absolutely terrible.”
After day 18 of the trial, Combs' legal team filed a motion for mistrial June 7, arguing that Ventura and Bongolan lied about the latter being dangled over the 17th-floor balcony by the rap mogul.
Lawyers for Combs—whose previous motion for a mistrial was denied by Judge Subramanian—accused the prosecution of “misconduct” with the “introduction of perjured testimony.”
“In this trial the government has presented testimony that it knew or should have known was materially false related to its allegation that Mr. Combs dangled Bryana Bongolan from the balcony of Cassie Ventura’s apartment in September 2016,” the letter said. “Accordingly, to avoid an unfair conviction in this case the Court should grant a mistrial.”
The defense accused Bongolan of lying about the incident, pointing to some alleged inconsistencies in her story. The prosecution will respond June 9 and the judge will make his ruling the next day.
Jane testified that Combs began paying the rent for her home in April 2023, two years into their relationship, and is still doing so. She said that she and the rap mogul agreed a month prior that he would provide her with a monthly allowance.
“It was in this ‘hotel night,’ I remember that this was when Sean proposed this ‘love contract’ between him and I,” she told jurors. “It was him asking me what I wanted for an allowance every
month, just moving forward, that's what he was going to do for me.”
"I said 15,000 and he said 10,000," she said of the allowance."I started looking for new places and moved into a new home and used that budget. I wanted something big and spacious for my child and I to enjoy. A place I could go home to and enjoy, some sense of balance in the relationship. I had been giving him all my love and this was him giving me something."
Jane alleged that per the agreement, she would receive money “for everything without pressure for two years.”
Jane said that she suffered urinary tract infections and yeast infections “almost every week” as a result of the hourslong sex sessions and would take antibiotics regulary. She admitted that along with having sex before fully recovering from her UTIs at times, she also dealt with soreness in her pelvic area during “100 percent” of the “hotel nights.”
The witness also shared that she suffered pain in her shoulders and back during the sex. She added, “I would be at the edge of the seat or at the edge of the bed in the position that he liked me doing foreplay on these men.”
Despite the pain she experienced, Jane testified that she didn’t tell Combs of her pain because she “didn’t want to indicate any negativity.”
But she alleged the pain didn’t begin and end in the bedroom. She told jurors that she had gotten her nipples pierced at Combs’ request because he allegedly told her it would “really turn him on and that's what he wanted from his girl.”
She said she removed the piercings because they “snagged and bled and got infected.”
However, she testified that Combs was unhappy with her decision.
“He was OK with it at first,” she alleged. “But then I could tell he was getting impatient with how long it was taking me to put them back in.”
She added, “He would say things like, ‘Where are my piercings? This is the last time I see you when you don't have any piercings on.’”
Jane alleged that she was expected to participate in a “hotel night” for hours on her birthday in 2023 against her wishes.
Despite allegedly telling him “more than once” that she did not want to take part in the sex session—the details of which are nearly identical to Ventura's experience at “freak offs”—she said that he surprised her with an “entertainer” during dinner.
“I dressed up for him,” the witness, who dated Combs from 2021 to 2024, testified. “We were at a sushi dinner. I was really happy to be around my lover. He was just so loving, and then he said, ‘I’m so excited to see the entertainer tonight.’”
“I did not expect that,” she continued. “I said, ‘An entertainer?’ I didn't have words. He said, ‘It's your birthday. Let’s have fun.’ I just accepted it.”
Jane, who began crying during her testimony, said that the escort felt “like a stranger to me more than anyone.”
“It was my birthday and I didn’t want to do this on my birthday,” she testified. “I just sat there on the couch, got in position to have intercourse, so we could just get it over with. I asked Sean for a condom. Sean was giving me this really bad look. He gave me a dirty look, like shaking his head and said, ‘You better not ask for a f--king condom.’”
After the rap mogul allegedly handed the escort the contraception, “Jane” said he was “so dismissive.”
“He was walking away,” she testified. “He looked so disappointed while all of this was happening. It made me feel really bad. I just wanted it to be over.”
Jane said that the longest “hotel night” took place over New Year’s in 2022 and was “3 to 3.5 days.”
She alleged that she would use “ecstasy, caffeine, water and protein shakes” to stay awake during the all-night sex session.
Jane testified that despite asking Combs “more than once” for the male escorts to wear a condom during their “hotel nights,” he allegedly refused.
“He responded almost incensed, guilt-tripped me,” she told jurors. “It wasn't something he wanted … He wanted to move on from the subject. ‘It wasn't going to happen, so stop asking.’ He said he didn’t want to see a rubber while he was watching.”
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