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Sean Combs trial updates: Former employee 'Mia' alleges Combs raped her

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

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Last updated: Thursday, May 29, 2025 11:15PM GMT
'Diddy' trial recap: 'Mia' testifies Sean Combs raped her
Eyewitness News recaps testimony from a former personal assistant to Sean "Diddy" Combs who alleges the rap mogul raped her.

NEW YORK -- The third week of testimony in the sex trafficking trial of Sean "Diddy" Combs got underway Tuesday.

Prosecutors allege that Combs, a three-time Grammy winner, used his fame and fortune to create a deviant empire of exploitation, coercing women into abusive sex parties while silencing victims through blackmail and violence, including kidnapping, arson and beatings.

Combs' lawyers argue that all the sexual acts were consensual, and although he could be violent, he never veered into sex trafficking and racketeering.

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.

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

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May 28, 2025, 4:49 PM GMT

Judge denies defense's motion for mistrial

The mention of fingerprint evidence being inexplicably destroyed prompted an objection from the defense and a motion for a mistrial.

"The only way to cure the outrageous prejudice is to move for a mistrial," defense attorney Alexandra Shapiro said.

Darla Miles reports.

Shapiro accused the government of prosecutorial misconduct for asking the witness whether it was "unusual" for fingerprint evidence to be destroyed. She accused the government of trying to plant an idea that Combs was responsible for the destruction of the fingerprints lifted from Kid Cudi's front door.

"It was becoming clearer and clearer that this inference was what the government was doing this for," Shapiro said. "There's no way to un-ring this bell."

Prosecutor Christy Slavik said a mistrial is "absolutely unwarranted."

"The application for a mistrial is denied," Judge Arun Subramanian said.

The judge said there was no testimony in response to the question of whether it was unusual for fingerprint evidence to have been destroyed.

Subramanian said he would strike the testimony and give a curative instruction telling the jury the questions about the fingerprint destruction are irrelevant to the case and the responses should be disregarded.

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May 28, 2025, 3:26 PM GMT

LAFD investigator testifies fingerprints at Kid Cudi's house were destroyed

It did not take long for LAFD arson investigator Lance Jimenez to conclude the car fire on January 9, 2012 was caused by a "makeshift firebomb" known as a Molotov cocktail.

"Somebody had lit it, cut the roof and dropped it in the front seat," Jimenez told the jury. "In my opinion it was targeted."

Jimenez said he took note of the slash in the canvas top of the black Porsche 911 Cabriolet and "burn patterns" on the seat, carpeting and roof.

"There was a bottle on the front seat and there was a cloth handkerchief on the center console that was burned," Jimenez said. "Inside the bottle I observed a liquid that gave an odor I know to be gasoline."

He said he also noticed a disposable red lighter on the ground. He walked the jury through photos of the damage, including the soot damage on the driver's door, the burns on the interior and the cut in the canvas roof. The jury also saw a picture of the lighter, the 40 ounce Old English 800 malt liquor bottle used to make the Molotov cocktail and burned handkerchief.

"The cloth was more of a silky type material. I think it just fell out of the bottle. The bottle didn't break so the liquid wasn't able to disburse. The fire just smoldered out. It didn't cause damage I think it was intended for," Jimenez said.

Jimenez testified that Kid Cudi had his home swept for fingerprints after the earlier break-in. Two prints were lifted from the glass front door, but Jimenez told the jury the fingerprint cards he turned in to the LAPD evidence unit were destroyed in August of 2012.

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May 28, 2025, 2:26 PM GMT

LAPD officer testifies Bad Boy's Escalade was at Kid Cudi's house

The Los Angeles police officer who responded to Kid Cudi's home on December 22, 2011 after he reported a break-in testified that a black SUV he saw leaving the scene was registered to Sean Combs' company.

LAPD officer Christopher Ignacio said he went through the home with Scott Mescudi and recorded the incident as a trespassing for "someone entering someone's property without the owner's consent."

He said he ran the license plate from the black Cadillac Escalade seen driving from the house. The jury saw the DMV report that showed the registered owner as Bad Boy Productions, Inc.

Capricorn Clark testified Combs and a bodyguard entered Mescudi's home after allegedly kidnapping her at gunpoint from her apartment.

Kid Cudi testified nothing was missing but he found Christmas presents opened on the counter and his dog locked in a bathroom.

On cross-examination, Ignacio confirmed his report said nothing about a firearm being involved.

"You had no information that there was a gun involved?" defense attorney Brian Steel asked. "I don't believe so," Ignacio responded.

"Did you hear anything about a kidnapping?" Steel asked. "No," Ignacio answered.

The next witness is the LAFD arson investigator who responded to the firebombing of Kid Cudi's car.

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May 28, 2025, 2:22 PM GMT

Prosecution expected to call fire official, friend of Cassie, former Combs employee to witness stand

The Sean Combs sex trafficking and racketeering trial resumes Wednesday with the expected testimony of an alleged victim of the criminal enterprise federal prosecutors have accused Combs of leading: a former employee who will appear under the pseudonym Mia.

In the government's opening statement, prosecutor Emily Johnson described Mia as "an employee who the defendant worked to the bone for years." Johnson said Mia would testify "about the times that the defendant forced himself on her sexually, putting his hand up her dress, unzipping his pants and forcing her to perform oral sex, and sneaking into her bed to penetrate her against her will."

Darla Miles reports.

Defense attorney Teny Geragos countered in her opening statement that Mia allegedly had "unbelievable love" for Combs and questioned her motive for testifying against him.

"What are the reasons she is saying what she might be saying now, what she never said before, and certainly never said when she first started cooperating with the government?" Geragos said.

First, the jury will hear from a Los Angeles Fire Department arson investigator who responded to rapper Kid Cudi's home when his Porsche 911 Cabriolet was set on fire with a Molotov cocktail in 2012. Prosecutors will also call stylist Deonte Nash, a friend of Cassie Ventura's who is expected to testify regarding allegations that Ventura told him Combs was making her participate in a so-called "freak-off" sexual encounter on her 29th birthday. Combs has maintained that his encounters with Ventura were consensual.