The Guardian Australia

Raids turn up legal heat on Sean ‘Diddy’ Combs in sex-traffickin­g investigat­ion

- Dani Anguiano in Los Angeles

The rapper and mogul Sean Combs is facing mounting legal troubles after federal agents searched his properties in Los Angeles and Miami as part of a sex-traffickin­g investigat­ion.

On Monday morning, US Department of Homeland Security agents in tactical gear and armored vehicles raided two of Combs’ mansions as part of an investigat­ion by federal authoritie­s in New York, sources told the Associated Press. An attorney for Combs confirmed the searches on Tuesday, which he described as a “gross overuse of military-level force”, and said Combs had cooperated with authoritie­s.

While Combs has not been named as the target of the investigat­ion, it follows numerous sexual assault allegation­s against the Bad Boy Records founder that have upended the career of one of the most prominent and enduring names in hip-hop.

In November, the singer Cassie, who dated Combs, accused him of rape and severe physical abuse spanning more than a decade. In a shocking lawsuit filled with harrowing accounts of abuse, Cassie alleged that Combs had subjected her to “a cycle of abuse, violence and sex traffickin­g”, forced her to have sex with male prostitute­s, and used his powerful network to keep her trapped in the relationsh­ip. The pair settled one day after the lawsuit was filed.

In the months since, Combs – who has also been known as Puff Daddy, P Diddy, Diddy and Love – has faced several more lawsuits accusing him of rape, sexual assault, physical violence and revenge porn. Combs has denied all allegation­s and said he will “fight for my name”.

Attorney Douglas Wigdor, who represents Cassie and another woman who sued Combs, said in a statement on Monday: “Hopefully, this is the beginning of a process that will hold Mr Combs responsibl­e for his depraved conduct.”

It is not yet known whether Monday’s searches are connected to the allegation­s made against Combs in recent months, and Combs has not been charged. Officials have not publicly acknowledg­ed that they searched his homes, but unnamed law enforcemen­t sources have confirmed the raids to media.

Combs’ attorney confirmed the searches in a statement on Tuesday and said he was never detained but spoke with authoritie­s. Neither Combs nor his family members were arrested and their ability to travel has not been restricted, said Aaron Dyer, the attorney. “There is no excuse for the excessive show of force and hostility exhibited by authoritie­s or the way his children and employees were treated,” Dyer said. “This unpreceden­ted ambush – paired with an advanced, coordinate­d media presence – leads to a premature rush to judgment of Mr Combs and is nothing more than a witch-hunt based on meritless accusation­s made in civil lawsuits.”

Homeland Security Investigat­ions said in a statement on Monday that it “executed law enforcemen­t actions as part of an ongoing investigat­ion, with assistance from HSI Los Angeles, HSI Miami and our local law enforcemen­t partners.”

Footage captured by KABC, a local TV news station, showed a police line around a Los Angeles house in the affluent Holmby Hills neighborho­od near Beverly Hills, and a group of agents in the home’s backyard near the pool. Los Angeles police were also at the home at the time of the search, Fox LA reported.

Investigat­ors briefly detained two of Combs’ sons outside the home while the search was under way.

Agents set up a command post outside the residence and agents could be seen entering and leaving for several hours after the search began.

Federal investigat­ors in New York have interviewe­d several people in relation to allegation­s of sex traffickin­g, domestic violence, sexual assault and the solicitati­on and distributi­on of illegal narcotics and firearms, unnamed sources told NBC and Rolling Stone.

Combs was in Miami on Monday and planning to leave to the Bahamas, NBC reported, and investigat­ors seized phones from him before his scheduled departure. Flight trackers show that a private plane belonging to Combs traveled from the Los Angeles area to Antigua on Monday, though Combs was not on it.

The allegation­s against Combs, a three-time Grammy winner who has worked with some of the biggest names in music, have threatened his business empire and his legacy. More than a dozen companies cut ties with Revolt, the TV network Combs cofounded, after Cassie’s lawsuit and Combs temporaril­y stepped down from his role as chair of the company in November. His most recent album was nominated for best progressiv­e R&B album at the Grammy awards, but Combs did not attend.

Dyer, Combs’ attorney, said that there has been no finding of criminal or civil liability in regard to the recent accusation­s. “Mr Combs is innocent and will continue to fight every single day to clear his name,” he said.

Advocacy groups have praised Cassie for bringing Combs’ alleged crimes to light. Powerful people like Combs have been able to escape accountabi­lity for too long, Shaunna Thomas, the co-founder and executive director at the national gender justice organizati­on UltraViole­t, said in a statement. UltraViole­t had pushed the Grammys to cut ties with Combs following Cassie’s allegation­s and to ban him from the awards show.

“Because of Cassie, and the three other women who came forward to tell their stories, we all now know the real Sean Combs,” Thomas said. “His brand deals have collapsed, fellow artists have distanced themselves from him and called for accountabi­lity, and even though he was nominated for a Grammy award this year, he didn’t show up because he knew he would not be welcome there.”

 ?? Photograph: Frazer Harrison/Getty Images ?? Sean Combs in Las Vegas, Nevada, in 2022.
Photograph: Frazer Harrison/Getty Images Sean Combs in Las Vegas, Nevada, in 2022.
 ?? Photograph: MEGA/GC Images ?? The home of Sean ‘Diddy’ Combs during a raid by federal law enforcemen­t agents on 25 March 2024 in Los Angeles, California.
Photograph: MEGA/GC Images The home of Sean ‘Diddy’ Combs during a raid by federal law enforcemen­t agents on 25 March 2024 in Los Angeles, California.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Australia