Diddy trial updates: Sean Combs' alleged Cassie abuse exposed after her mother testifiesNew Foto - Diddy trial updates: Sean Combs' alleged Cassie abuse exposed after her mother testifies

This story contains graphic descriptions that some readers may find disturbing. Sean "Diddy" Combs'alleged abuse of former girlfriendCassie Ventura Finecontinues to be exposed in court as additional witnesses testify on the pair'svolatile relationship. The embattled hip-hop mogul's sweepingfederal sex-crimes trialresumed in Manhattan on May 21 following emotional testimony from Ventura Fine's mother, Regina Ventura, and Combs' former assistant David James, who worked for Combs from 2007-2009. Ventura told the court she was "physically sick" over the rapper's alleged abuse and said she was once pressured to send him $20,000 after he raged at her daughter. Meanwhile, James recounted an intense incident during which he reportedly came face-to-face with Combs' longtime music rival,Marion "Suge" Knight, at a Los Angeles restaurant. Scott Mescudi, better known as rapperKid Cudi, isexpected to take the standthis week. Combsallegedly threatenedthe musician after he and Ventura Fine dated briefly over a decade ago. Combs, 55, wasarrested in September 2024on charges of sex trafficking, racketeering and transportation to engage in prostitution. He has pleaded not guilty to all charges. Diddy on trial newsletter:Step inside the courtroom as music mogul faces sex-crimes charges. While on the stand May 20, Ventura was quickly asked by prosecutors about an email her daughter mentioned in previous testimony. In the message, sent on Dec. 23, 2011, Ventura Fine confessed to her mother that Combs wasthreatening to release a sex tapeof her on Christmas Day. Around the same time, Ventura Fine told her mother about thealleged physical abuseshe was facing from Combs. Ventura said she was told she needed to wire $20,000 to Combs because he was "angry that he spent money on her (Cassie) and that she had been with another person." Although she wired the funds to Combs' company, the woman said the money came back four to five days later. Combs is facing federal sex-crimes and trafficking charges in a sprawling lawsuit that has eroded his status as a power player and kingmaker in the entertainment industry. He wasarrested in September 2024and has been charged with racketeering, sex trafficking and transportation to engage in prostitution. He haspleaded not guiltyto all five counts. Racketeering is the participation in an illegal scheme under the Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Statute, or RICO, as a way for the U.S. government to prosecute organizations that contribute to criminal activity. Using RICO law, which is typically aimed attargeting multi-person criminal organizations,prosecutors allegethat Combs coerced victims, some of whom they say were sex workers, through intimidation and narcotics to participate in "freak offs" — sometimes dayslong sex performances that federal prosecutors claim they have video of. The trial will not be televised, as cameras are typically not allowed in federal criminal trial proceedings. USA TODAY will be reporting live from the courtroom. Contributing: USA TODAY staff If you are a survivor of sexual assault,RAINNoffers support through the National Sexual Assault Hotline at 800.656.HOPE (4673) andHotline.RAINN.organd en EspañolRAINN.org/es. If you or someone you know is a victim of domestic violence, call the National Domestic Violence Hotline at 1-800-799-7233 or text "START" to 88788. This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:Diddy trial updates: Sean Combs' alleged Cassie abuse exposed

Diddy trial updates: Sean Combs' alleged Cassie abuse exposed after her mother testifies

Diddy trial updates: Sean Combs' alleged Cassie abuse exposed after her mother testifies This story contains graphic descriptions that s...
Rap rivalries, sex performances and assault weapons come into focus at trial of Sean 'Diddy' CombsNew Foto - Rap rivalries, sex performances and assault weapons come into focus at trial of Sean 'Diddy' Combs

A run-in with a rival record executive at Mel's Drive-in, assault weapons with illegally defaced serial numbers and a sex performance at Trump International Hotel & Tower on Central Park West were some of the topics that jurors in Sean Combs' criminal trial heard about Tuesday, as prosecutors tried to build their racketeering and sex trafficking case against the rap mogul. Across nearly six hours of testimony on the trial's 11th day, federal prosecutors called to the stand Combs' former personal assistant, a federal agent, the mother of the government's star witness and a sex worker nicknamed "The Punisher." They argued that the wide-reaching testimony helps prove the lengths to which Combs was willing to go to benefit from and protect what they alleged is a criminal enterprise. Combs has pleaded not guilty, and his lawyers argued that his private conduct in the bedroom does not amount of sex trafficking. His lawyers have argued any violence alleged by witnesses was driven by love, jealousy and drug use -- not a desire to coerce anyone into sex. Prosecutors plan to continue their case Wednesday by calling Dawn Hughes, a psychologist who specializes in sex trauma, George Kaplan, a former assistant to Combs and Scott Mescudi, the rapper known as Kid Cudi and who briefly dated Combs' former girlfriend, Cassie Ventura. Combs' one-time personal assistant David James told jurors about the wide range of tasks he completed for the rap mogul: from stocking hotel rooms and allegedly buying drugs to being the driver when Combs – allegedly armed with multiple guns – wanted to confront rival record executive Marion "Suge" Knight. Jurors first heard about the alleged interaction between Combs and Knight during the testimony of Combs' ex-girlfriend, Cassie Ventura. It allegedly occurred in approximately 2008 or 2009 and was a moment that threatened to dredge up the violent history between the titans of 1990s rap music and the long-standing rivalries between the East and West Coasts. Ventura testified that, after a so-called "freak off," a security guard named D-Roc informed him that Knight, the former CEO of Death Row Records and a longtime rival of Combs, was spotted at Mel's. Despite her pleas to stop, Ventura said Combs packed up his weapons and headed to the restaurant to confront Knight. "I was crying. I was screaming, like, please don't do anything stupid," Ventura testified last week. James told jurors the other side of the story, describing D-Roc confronting Knight when they were at Mel's to pick up cheeseburgers for Combs. "We pulled into the parking lot and D-Roc looks over and says, 'That's motherf------- Suge Knight,'" James said, describing how he drove back to Combs' house to find Combs and Ventura arguing. "Cassie looked very distressed. She was telling him not to go," James testified. James testified that Combs, allegedly with three guns on his lap, ordered him to drive back to the diner. It was that moment, he said, that eventually prompted him to stop working for Combs. "I was really struck by it. I realized for the first time being Mr. Combs' assistant that my life was in danger," James testified. MORE: Inner circle members give testimony as 2nd week of Sean 'Diddy' Combs trial gets underway Prosecutors have charged that Combs and his alleged associates used "violence, use of firearms, threats of violence, coercion" to protect and promote the "power of the Combs' enterprise." James also testified about buying and supplying drugs for Combs and stocking the moguls' hotel rooms with baby oil, Astroglide lubricant, condoms and prophylactics. He told the jury he once accidentally walked in on a freak-off, featuring Ventura and a male sex worker. When questioned by defense lawyers, James testified that he once had sex with a prostitute and that he declined to pay for her services, and that he got into a physical altercation with another one of Combs' employees. James said he spoke with prosecutors under a proffer agreement, meaning he had immunity from being prosecuted for anything he said on the stand. "Have they given you some type of immunity?" defense attorney Marc Agnifilo asked. "I'd have to ask my lawyer that question," he said. "My lawyer said I have no legal visibility." MORE: Sean 'Diddy' Combs trial updates: Court adjourns; rapper Kid Cudi could testify Wednesday Regina Ventura, the mother of star witness Cassie Ventura, took the stand on Tuesday to testify about taking a home equity loan to pay Combs in order to prevent him from following through on an alleged threat to release a sex tape of her daughter. "The threats that have been made towards me by Sean 'Puffy' Combs are that … he is going to release 2 explicit sex tapes of me," Ventura wrote in an email to her mother and Combs' assistant Capricorn Clark on Dec. 23, 2011. Jurors saw the email when Cassie Ventura testified last week. "I was physically sick. I did not understand a lot of it. The sex tapes threw me," Regina Ventura testified about the threat. Regina Ventura testified that she and her husband decided to take out a loan so they could send Combs the $20,000 he demanded, though he ultimately returned the money. "We decided that's the only way we could get the money," she said. "I was scared for my daughter's safety." Regina Ventura also told jurors she decided to photograph the injuries her daughter allegedly suffered from Combs so that they would have a record of the alleged abuse. Approximately 15 years after she documented the injuries, prosecutors last week showed the photos to the jury to underscore Cassie Ventura's testimony about the violence she suffered at Combs' hands. Known professionally as The Punisher, male escort Sharay Hayes told the jury that he first met Combs and Cassie Ventura in 2012, when he was hired to help create a "sexy erotic scene" for what, Ventura said, was Combs' birthday. He testified that he got his nickname when he was a teenager based on the way he played basketball. He testified that Ventura, who used the name Janet when booking sex workers, instructed him to come to Trump International Hotel & Tower on Central Park West in Manhattan to perform a strip act. When he arrived, Ventura asked him to cover her baby oil while Combs watched, Hayes said. "I was specifically told to not acknowledge her husband. Try not to look at him. No communication between me and him," Hayes testified. "The room was dimly lit, maybe electronic candles. All of the furniture was covered in sheets and there was an area pretty much for me to sit and for her to sit across from me. There were bowls of water and bottles of baby oil." Hayes told jurors that Combs was nude for the encounter and wore a veil, occasionally masturbating during the interaction and offering "subtle directions" to Ventura. After their first interaction, Hayes said he worked for the couple another eight to 12 times, receiving $1,200 to $2,000 on each occasion. During their last encounter, Hayes testified Combs instructed him to have sex with Ventura but declined because he could not sexually perform under "a lot of pressure." Cross-examined by Combs' lawyers, Hayes testified that he believed Ventura was comfortable during the exchanges, potentially undercutting the argument she was coerced to participate. "I didn't get any cues there was any discomfort there," Hayes said when asked if Ventura seemed uncomfortable with the encounters. The question of whether Ventura was forced or participated voluntarily is one of the most critical issues in the prosecution of the onetime cultural icon Combs. For the final witness of the day, jurors heard from a federal agent who testified about recovering multiple assault-style weapons from Combs' Miami Beach residence when it was raided in March 2024. The agent, Gerard Gannon, said the serial numbers of the weapons had been defaced – a violation of federal firearms laws. Holding parts of the weapons in court for the jury to see, Gannon testified that investigators recovered a 30-round magazine containing 19 rounds and a full 10-round magazine in Combs' home, with the ammunition on the same shelf as 7-inch platform heels and lingerie. Prosecutors have alleged Combs and his associates relied on "violence, use of firearms, [and] threats of violence" to operate their criminal enterprise. Rap rivalries, sex performances and assault weapons come into focus at trial of Sean 'Diddy' Combsoriginally appeared onabcnews.go.com

Rap rivalries, sex performances and assault weapons come into focus at trial of Sean 'Diddy' Combs

Rap rivalries, sex performances and assault weapons come into focus at trial of Sean 'Diddy' Combs A run-in with a rival record exec...
'Monsters' Star Cooper Koch Says He Spoke With Erik Menendez After Life Sentence Reduction: He Wants to Make 'A Lot of Change in the Prison System'New Foto - 'Monsters' Star Cooper Koch Says He Spoke With Erik Menendez After Life Sentence Reduction: He Wants to Make 'A Lot of Change in the Prison System'

Cooper Koch, who starred as Erik Menendez in "Monsters: The Lyle and Erik Menendez Story," opened up about his conversation with his real-life counterpart after a Los Angeles judgerecently reduced the life sentences of the Menendez brothers. "I'm so grateful that that happened," Koch said of the resentencing at a "Monsters" FYC event Tuesday. "And so is Erik [Menendez], I spoke to him yesterday and he is so excited." More from Variety Los Angeles Judge Reduces Menendez Brothers' Life Sentence, Now Eligible for Parole Hearing Menendez Brothers' Resentencing Hearing Postponed Menendez Brothers Score Court Win, as Judge Allows Resentencing to Proceed Cooper Koch on the Menendez brothers' resentencing: "I actually spoke to Erik yesterday."pic.twitter.com/1jUpNVePhD — Variety (@Variety)May 21, 2025 Koch went on to say that "the most inspiring" thing he heard from Erik Menendez was his passion for what he plans to do after he gets out, which includes working towards "a lot of change in the prison system." "He is going to be an advocate for other people who have L.W.O.P, which is life without parole," Koch explained. "His life is going to surround making change in the prison system, and I just think that is so beautiful." Koch shared that Erik Menendez hopes that if he and his brother are released from prison, that in "10 years, people look back and they say, 'We really made the right decision. Thank God we let them out.'" The ruling gives Erik and Lyle hope for being released from prison after serving 35 years for murdering their parents in 1989. L.A. County Superior Court Judge Michael Jesic moved to reduce the Menendez brothers' original sentences of life without parole to 50 years to life. Because they were under the age of 26 at the time of their crime, they now have a shot at parole under California's Youthful Offender law. However, the brothers must still receive the nod from the state parole board before they are released. Public interest in the case heightened after release of Ryan Murphy's "Monsters" series about the murder and trial in September 2024. District Attorney George Gascón came out in favor ofreducing their sentences to 50 years to life in October. However, he lost re-election to Nathan Hochman,who withdrew the office's request to reduce the sentencings. Gascón, a criminal justice reformer, found that the brothers had been rehabilitated after 35 years behind bars. The Menendez family has argued that new evidence supports the claim that the brothers were sexually abused by their father, and that attitudes about abuse have evolved over the last three decades. Hochman has said the brothers have failed to acknowledge that their claim of self-defense was "fabricated," and thus have not taken responsibility for the crimes. Kochvisited the brothers in prison with Kim Kardashianin September. "We just looked at each other, and immediately embraced,"the actor said of Erik said shortly after that visit. "He was so kind. Lyle, too, I got to hug both of them and just be in their presence. They're such upstanding individuals. They've done so much work in their prison. Erik teaches meditation and speech classes, and they're doing this Greenspace project to improve the prison grounds. It was just amazing." Koch also previously said that he first talked to Erik the night before "Monsters" premiered on Netflix. Best of Variety New Movies Out Now in Theaters: What to See This Week Emmy Predictions: Apple Holds Strong for Top Series Races With 'Severance' and 'The Studio'; Netflix and FX Could Dominate Doc and Writing Races Emmy Predictions: Talk/Scripted Variety Series - The Variety Categories Are Still a Mess; Netflix, Dropout, and 'Hot Ones' Stir Up Buzz Sign up forVariety's Newsletter. For the latest news, follow us onFacebook,Twitter, andInstagram.

‘Monsters’ Star Cooper Koch Says He Spoke With Erik Menendez After Life Sentence Reduction: He Wants to Make ‘A Lot of Change in the Prison System’

'Monsters' Star Cooper Koch Says He Spoke With Erik Menendez After Life Sentence Reduction: He Wants to Make 'A Lot of Change in...
Ships have been hitting the Brooklyn Bridge for nearly 150 yearsNew Foto - Ships have been hitting the Brooklyn Bridge for nearly 150 years

NEW YORK (AP) — A Mexican navy tall ship'sfatal collision withthe Brooklyn Bridge on Saturday highlighted a hazard that has worried seafarers for nearly 150 years. Even before construction on the bridge was finished in the late 19th century, the topmast of a passing U.S. Navy ship hit the span's wires — and vessels continued to clip the iconic New York City structure for many years. But historians say Saturday's crash appears to be the first boat collision with the bridge to take the lives of crew members. Two Mexican naval cadets died and more were injured after the training ship Cuauhtémoc's masts crashed into the bridge as dozens of sailors stood harnessed high up in rigging as part of a public display. "That's the first and possibly only time where there's been a fatality onboard of a ship that struck the Brooklyn Bridge," said Dominique Jean-Louis, chief historian at the Center for Brooklyn History, part of the Brooklyn Public Library. Opened in 1883, the Brooklyn Bridge spans the East River, connecting its eponymous borough's downtown to Manhattan. The highest point of the bridge's underside is listed at 135 feet (41.1 meters) on average above the water, but it fluctuates with the tides. During construction, a warehouse owner sued state officials — first to stop the bridge and then for compensation — arguing that some ships still had topmasts that exceeded the height. The case made it all the way up to the U.S. Supreme Court, which dismissed the lawsuit, determining that the bridge did not unduly restrict ship navigation. Before that decision, however, at least one ship had already tangled with the still-under-construction crossing. According to an 1878 report in the New York Daily Tribune, the U.S. Navy wooden steam training ship USS Minnesota was headed toward the high point of the bridge after planning ahead and lowering its topmast. But at the last minute, it had to change course to avoid an oncoming ship, sending it to an area with lower clearance and striking the bridge's wires. Nobody was reported injured. By the time the bridge was complete, steam ships were transporting the lion's share of goods, and high-masted ships were waning in importance, said Richard Haw, professor of interdisciplinary studies at John Jay College of Criminal Justice and the author oftwo booksabout the Brooklyn Bridge. "They go from sail ships to steam ships," Haw said. "You don't need a huge clearance." Yet mast strikes continued, including at least two reported in the 1920s — one of which was with the U.S. Navy's flagship USS Seattle, which had "a little wooden pole that was a little too high," Jean-Louis said. In 1941, the SS Nyassa was bringing hundreds of refugees to New York City when the captain miscalculated the tide and part of its mast was bent into a right angle by the bridge's underspan, according to a New York Times article at the time that described a "crunching sound." Among the refugees on board was Hedwig Ehrlich, widow of the Nobel Prize-winning Jewish German scientist Paul Ehrlich, as she headed to live with daughters in San Francisco. As the 20th century went on, ships got taller and wider. And they still required mast-like appendages for observation and communication. A shipyard just north of the bridge, now known as the Brooklyn Navy Yard, churned out larger and larger ships during and after World War II, including aircraft carriers that could barely fit beneath the bridge. One photo from 1961 shows the USS Constellation aircraft carrier leaving the navy yard and passing underneath the Brooklyn Bridge with a mast that folded down onto the ship's deck, specially designed to get out into the harbor. In the past two decades, at least three minor strikes have been reported against the bridge's underside or base, including a crane being pulled via barge in 2012, which tore into temporary scaffolding mounted underneath the bridge. A similar crane accident damaged peripheral bridge maintenance equipment in July of 2023, according to a Coast Guard incident report. None of the modern accident reports document serious injuries. But off the water, the bridge has been a site of tragedy long before Saturday's crash. More than 20 people were killed and countless crippled while building it, including workers injured by decompression sickness, a little-understood affect of working in underwater in boxes sunk to the riverbed. Twelve people died in a panic-driven stampede among crowds visiting the bridge shortly after it opened to the public in 1883.

Ships have been hitting the Brooklyn Bridge for nearly 150 years

Ships have been hitting the Brooklyn Bridge for nearly 150 years NEW YORK (AP) — A Mexican navy tall ship'sfatal collision withthe Brook...
Unsure of what to do if you're detained at customs? Social videos are walking people through their rightsNew Foto - Unsure of what to do if you're detained at customs? Social videos are walking people through their rights

A video from an immigration lawyer offering advice on what rights U.S. citizens and visa holders have if stopped by customs at airports is going viral on TikTok, racking up more than 8 million views. Thepost from New York-based immigration lawyer Brad Bernsteincomes on the heels of accounts from TikTok users who say they are American citizens but were detained for hours and had their phones or luggage searched when entering the country. The videos — and the detailsTwitch streamer Hasan Piker sharedabout being stopped and questioned at Chicago O'Hare International Airport — have many wondering what to do and what rights they have if they are detained by U.S. customs officials. Bernstein said one of the biggest questions he hears is whether all constitutional rights are protected during CBP screenings. "The Supreme Court has ruled that the Constitution doesn't apply until you've entered the United States of America," Bernstein said. "And although you're physically in the United States at an airport, you're not considered to have entered the United States under immigration law until you pass through immigration and customs." NBC News legal analyst Danny Cevallos explained that the Supreme Court has held "that routine searches at the border do not require a warrant, probable cause, or even reasonable suspicion, due to the government's inherent sovereign interest in protecting its territorial integrity." Bernstein said that individual protections depend heavily on a traveler's citizenship status, and that those on visas or green card holders have less protection. "A U.S. citizen has to be allowed back into the United States. The government cannot take your U.S. passport away, they cannot take your citizenship away," Bernstein said. But he advised caution. "There is a much lower standard of constitutional authority at the airport, versus just walking around locally on our streets, where the Fourth Amendment of illegal search and seizure would apply," he said. Statistically, advanced searches are rare, but it's important to plan ahead, Bernstein said. Travelers who want to protect their privacy going through CBP should only take electronics that are absolutely necessary when traveling, log out of cloud-based services and consider taking a secondary phone when going abroad, he advised. Above all, even though these searches can be intimidating, it's best to stay calm and tell the truth. "The more you say no, the more questions you're going to have. And the longer your stay at the airport is going to be," Bernstein said. According to the American Civil Liberties Union, U.S. citizens don't need to carry proof of citizenship with them in the country. "If you have valid immigration documents and are over the age of 18, the law does require you to carry those documents on you. If you are asked by an immigration agent to produce them, it is advisable to show the documents to the agent or you risk being arrested,"the ACLU website reads. TikTok creator Savanna, who says she is an American citizen born in the U.S., said she was stopped and questioned by CBP for more than two hours at an airport in Miami. Her video about the encounter has receivedmore than 2 million viewson TikTok. In it, she describes customs officials scrolling through her socials and repeatedly questioning her about how much money she made daily on TikTok. "I've been traveling out of the country and I've never had this problem," she told NBC News. "But the one thing that did change between February and now, or February and April, was that I created 'Trump for the Dump.'" Savanna said the line is a satirical clothing brand she created with the intention of donating the profits to humanitarian causes. The Department of Homeland Securityreposted Savanna's video on Xand said that she was not stopped because of political reasons. "Lawful travellers have nothing to fear from these measures, which are designed to protect our nation's security," DHS said in a statement, adding "allegations that political beliefs trigger inspections or removals are baseless and irresponsible." DHS saidits datashows that overall border searches have increased since last year but advanced screenings have slightly declined. Cevallos pointed to a recent federal case that determined "basic" electronic device searches at the border are constitutional. "This has been criticized as an 'interpretation of the Fourth Amendment that threatens individuals' privacy interests at the border,'" Cevallos said. Piker, the streamer and American political pundit known on Twitch as HasanAbi, said he believes he was stopped by CBP on his return trip from France on May 11 because of his political views,a reasoning that DHS also disputes. "I was invited to the back room to be questioned on my opinions on a multitude of different things from Donald Trump to Israel, Palestine," he told NBC News. Piker said he wasn't surprised when he was asked to step aside by agents. "I knew that it was most likely going to happen because I'd heard so many reports of this happening to immigration attorneys and even TikTokers and stuff that have said negative things about Donald Trump," he said. DHS spokesperson Tricia McLaughlin said ina post on Xthat Piker was "Lying for 'likes.'" "I thought it was really funny cause they admitted that it happened," Piker said in response to McLaughlin's post. "The parts that they omitted that I think is very nefarious is that like, is this an admission that asking people about their loyalty to the current administration or their opinion on Israel-Palestine is a part of a routine investigation? Because there's nothing routine about that at all. It's not pertinent to my entry into the country as an American citizen."

Unsure of what to do if you're detained at customs? Social videos are walking people through their rights

Unsure of what to do if you're detained at customs? Social videos are walking people through their rights A video from an immigration la...

 

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