Sean “Diddy” Combs is facing a new lawsuit alleging rape and assault, adding to his growing legal troubles. Thalia Graves, the plaintiff in the case, claims that in 2001, Combs and his security chief, Joseph Sherman, raped her at his New York recording studio. According to the lawsuit, Graves was drugged during the ride to the studio, lost consciousness, and woke up bound in Combs’ office, where the assault took place. Disturbingly, Graves alleges that the attack was filmed without her consent and later distributed as a pornographic video.
This lawsuit comes on the heels of Combs’ arrest on federal sex trafficking charges, as prosecutors accuse him of running a criminal enterprise involving coercion, blackmail, and violence. Graves’ legal action is part of a broader wave of allegations against the hip-hop mogul, who has been implicated in multiple sexual assault cases dating back decades. Graves, represented by high-profile attorney Gloria Allred, said she continues to suffer from PTSD, depression, and other trauma stemming from the alleged assault.
The lawsuit, filed under the New York City Victims of Gender-Motivated Violence Protection Act, seeks damages and calls for the destruction of all recordings of the assault. The case highlights a pattern of alleged abuse involving Combs, who remains incarcerated without bail as his legal battles continue
The reason is not unclear, but Levine said it could be because Combs (54), is paranoid and scared of someone poisoning his food, or because he is on hunger strike or its just bad food.
According to an AP report, combs is being held at the Metropolitan Detention Center in Brooklyn the only federal jail in New York City. It has been often described as hell on earth and an ongoing tragedy and has had problems since it opened in the 1990s, it added.
The conditions recently have so bad that some judges have refused to send people there, the report said.
We also take seriously addressing the staffing and other challenges at MDC brooklyn. An agency team is working to fix problems, including by adding permanent correctional and medical staff, remedying more than 700 backlogged maintenance requests and answering judges’ concerns, the Federal Bureau of Prisons said in a statement.
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