Sean Combs sex trafficking trial updates: Cassie's testimony ends after days of describing abuse

The hip-hop mogul is charged with sex trafficking and racketeering conspiracy.

WPVI logo
Last updated: Friday, May 16, 2025 11:26PM GMT
DIDDY ON TRIAL: First week of witness testimony recap
Eyewitness News breaks down the first full week of witness testimony in the Sean Combs trial including star witness Cassie Ventura.

NEW YORK -- After four days on the witness stand, Cassie Ventura concluded her testimony Friday at the trial of her ex-boyfriend, Sean "Diddy" Combs.

It came shortly after the defense concluded nearly two days of cross-examination.

Prosecutors allege Combs, 55, used his fame and fortune to orchestrate an empire of exploitation, coercing women into abusive sex parties.

If Combs is convicted on all charges, which include racketeering, kidnapping, arson, bribery and sex trafficking, he would face a mandatory 15 years in prison and could remain behind bars for life.

This story may contain accounts and descriptions of actual or alleged events that some readers may find disturbing.

"Bad Rap: The Case Against Diddy," a new podcast from "20/20" and ABC Audio, traces how the whispers of abuse came to light and led to the downfall of Sean "Diddy" Combs, who was once among the most influential entertainers and entrepreneurs in hip hop. Listen on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Amazon Music and more.

Kemberly Richardson reports from Lower Manhattan.

(ABC News and The Associated Press contributed to this report.)

May 16, 2025, 6:10 PM GMT

Cross-examination of Cassie Ventura concludes

The cross-examination of Cassie Ventura concluded with a 2012 text exchange in which Sean Combs asked Ventura if she wanted to "have a freak off one last time."

Prosecutor Emily Johnson immediately showed the exchange on re-direct as part of a longer thread in which Ventura expressed different feelings about "freak offs."

The exchange cemented a central theme of the defense cross-examination: to attempt to portray Ventura as a willing, even eager, participant in the kind of sexual lifestyle Combs wanted.

The defense also asked Ventura about her Instagram post after CNN first aired the hotel surveillance video depicting Combs attacking her near the elevator.

"Domestic violence is the issue and it's an important issue," Ventura posted in part.

"That's what you focused on in your Instagram post?" defense attorney Anna Estevao asked. "There was more to it but yeah," Ventura replied.

The defense has argued that Ventura may have been a victim of domestic violence, but that she was not a victim of sex trafficking.

The defense has also argued Ventura is motivated by money and pointed out she canceled an Australian and New Zealand tour after settling her 2023 civil lawsuit.

"You saw you would get $20 million and you canceled," Estevao said. "That wasn't the reason why," Ventura said.

AP logo
May 16, 2025, 5:51 PM GMT

The defense now says it'll finish Cassie's cross-examination sooner than expected

After fears that Cassie's testimony could spill over to next week, Estevao says she'll finish questioning Cassie "much sooner" than expected this afternoon, even before the next break.

The defense questioning may have been sped up because Cassie has been a cooperative witness throughout her four days on the witness stand.

She hasn't challenged Combs' lawyer or claimed often that she can't remember what happened during a period of her life when she concedes she was addicted to drugs.

ABCNews logo
May 16, 2025, 5:51 PM GMT

Defense digs into Ventura and Combs' 2018 breakup, rape allegation

The jury is seeing messages and hearing testimony about the prolonged breakup of Sean Combs and Cassie Ventura in late 2018, which the defense appears to be using to try and raise further doubt about her rape allegation.

"You don't say anything to the effect of, 'the last time we saw each other you raped me,'" Estevao noted about Ventura's communications with Combs.

According to Ventura's testimony, the last she and Combs had sex was Sept. 27, 2018, when Ventura testified she received a FaceTime call from her now-husband Alex Fine.

"Did you answer that call?" defense attorney Anna Estevao asked. "No," Ventura responded.

"Was it in the middle of sexual intercourse that you received this call?" Estevao asked. "We were together. I don't know," Ventura responded.

"Your husband learned about your evening with Mr. Combs, right?" Estevao asked. "You told your now-husband that Mr. Combs raped you."

"That wasn't the evening I was raped," Ventura testified. When Fine eventually found out about the alleged rape, Ventura testified that he punched a wall.

Earlier, the defense showed Ventura transcripts of her interviews with law enforcement agents, pointing out that she told them that the night of the alleged rape Combs was acting "nice but strangely." The defense also tried to point out how Ventura wondered whether the alleged attack occurred because of Combs potentially having bipolar disorder, the first time such a condition was mentioned at trial.

Combs discussed his mental health struggles in a 2009 Playboy Magazine article.

"I think therapy is good. I've been called bipolar - I'm not; I just have very drastic mood swings," he said in the interview.

The jurors are in a lunch break.

ABCNews logo
May 16, 2025, 5:16 PM GMT

Defense attempts to show Ventura's agency in 'freak offs,' relationship with Combs

The defense introduced scores of text messages during the cross-examination that contain a mix of affection, sexually-charged banter, domestic negotiation and bickering.

The defense has attempted to demonstrate that those messages show Ventura's agency in a relationship that she described on direct examination as colored by Sean Combs' alleged control, threats and beatings.

In one exchange the defense pointed to, Ventura texted, "Freak off w/a girl" and Combs responded, "What makes you wanna do that"

Defense attorney Anna Estevao asked, "You were suggesting a freak off with a girl?"

Ventura responded flatly, "That's what it says."

"That's what you were suggesting at the time?" Estevao followed up. "That's what I was suggesting," Ventura replied.

Estevao said the exchange followed an earlier conversation between Ventura and Combs about getting their relationship "to a good place."

The defense also appeared to question Ventura's recollection of when an alleged rape occurred, suggesting she switched the date from September 2018 to August 2018.

Around that time, Ventura received a message from Combs saying, "I know I look bad to you. I could tell I didn't turn you on yesterday. I fell off. I'm about to get my s--- together."

Ventura had previously testified on Wednesday that Combs allegedly raped her in her living in room in 2018. Combs and Ventura broke up the same year.