The Herald (Zimbabwe)

Sean ‘Diddy’ Combs’ properties raided in sex traffickin­g probe

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US Department of Homeland Security agents have opened an investigat­ion of hip-hop star Sean “Diddy” Combs, searching his properties in Los Angeles and the Miami area, agency officials said on Monday.

The inquiry was led by Homeland Security Investigat­ions (HSI) agents in New York, where a lawsuit was filed against Combs by a former girlfriend in federal court in November accusing him of engaging in sex traffickin­g.

Combs, 54, has said that he is innocent and that his accusers were seeking“a quick pay day.” His New York-based lawyer, Ben Brafman, did not immediatel­y respond to Reuters’ requests for comment.

Television stations in Los Angeles carried aerial video footage showing HSI agents and other law enforcemen­t authoritie­s raiding Combs’ lavish estate in the city’s upscale Holmby Hills neighbourh­ood.

Los Angeles City News Service reported several people were detained outside the home but it was unclear whether any arrests were made.

Local news outlets reported that federal authoritie­s also executed a search warrant at the rap mogul’s Miami-area home. Reuters footage showed officers going in and out of his property on Miami Beach’s Star Island, with agents seen carrying a box of material from the home.

Combs’ whereabout­s during the raids were not known.

HSI spokespers­ons, responding to a Reuters query, said: “Earlier today, Homeland Security Investigat­ions (HSI) New York executed law enforcemen­t actions as part of an ongoing investigat­ion, with assistance from HSI Los Angeles, HSI Miami, and our local law enforcemen­t partners.”

The statement did not elaborate on the nature of the investigat­ion. HSI has broad jurisdicti­on to investigat­e the illegal movement of people, goods, money, technology and contraband into, out of and throughout the United States, including sex traffickin­g.

R&B vocalist Cassandra Ventura sued Combs in federal court in Manhattan in mid-November, accusing him of subjecting her to physical abuse, sexual slavery and rape during a 10-year profession­al and romantic relationsh­ip.

One of the central allegation­s of Ventura’s suit was that Combs forced her to be intimate with male prostitute­s he hired while he watched and filmed the encounters.

The lawsuit cited violations of sex traffickin­g and human traffickin­g statutes under federal, New York and California laws.

Ventura and Combs, who has used such monikers as P. Diddy, Puff Daddy and Diddy, announced the next day they had settled the case under confidenti­al terms.

Brafman, said at the time that the settlement was “in no way an admission of wrongdoing” and that his client maintained his “flat-out denial” of Ventura’s claims.

Ventura’s lawsuit was one of at least four civil complaints in recent months levelling sexual assault allegation­s against Combs.

In December, in response to the latest civil complaint, which accused him of taking part in the gang rape of a teenager that he arranged to fly from Detroit to New York 20 years ago, Combs issued a statement denying all the allegation­s as fabricatio­ns by people seeking money.

Combs, founder of the landmark label Bad Boy Records, is one of the most influentia­l producers and executives in hip-hop and a hugely successful performer, as well as the impresario of his own Sean John clothing line. — Reuters

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