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		Sean 'Diddy' Combs hit with new sex trafficking charges a month before 
		trial
		[April 05, 2025] 
		By MICHAEL R. SISAK 
		NEW YORK (AP) — Federal prosecutors on Friday added two charges to Sean 
		“Diddy” Combs ' indictment and said they expect four accusers to testify 
		against him, expanding on allegations that the jailed hip-hop mogul 
		engaged in sex trafficking with multiple women and as recently as last 
		year.
 A superseding indictment accuses Combs of using force, fraud or coercion 
		to compel a woman to engage in commercial sex acts from at least 2021 to 
		2024.
 
 The indictment, returned by a federal grand jury in Manhattan, also 
		alleges that Combs was involved in transporting the woman — identified 
		only as “Victim-2” — and other people, including commercial sex workers, 
		to engage in prostitution during the same period.
 
 The new charges are in addition to racketeering conspiracy and sex 
		trafficking charges filed against Combs when he was arrested in 
		September. They increase the total number of charges against him from 
		three to five.
 
 In a court filing, federal prosecutors said the racketeering conspiracy 
		charge involves allegations that Combs sex-trafficked three victims and 
		forced a fourth, one of his employees, into sexual activity with him.
 
		
		 
		Combs, 55, denies committing any crimes. He is scheduled to stand trial 
		May 5 and remains locked up without bail at a federal jail in Brooklyn.
 “These are not new allegations or new accusers. These are the same 
		individuals, former long-term girlfriends, who were involved in 
		consensual relationships,” Combs' legal team said in a statement. "This 
		was their private sex life, defined by consent, not coercion.”
 
 Friday’s superseding indictment is the third filed against Combs.
 
 In the first, in January, federal prosecutors disclosed that their case 
		involved at least three women whom they said Combs forced to engage in 
		commercial sex acts. They also alleged Combs showed a firearm to a 
		female victim during a kidnapping and once dangled a woman over an 
		apartment balcony.
 
 Combs' January indictment didn't include additional charges but modified 
		some details of the existing ones, including adding four years to the 
		alleged racketeering conspiracy. Prosecutors now say it started in 2004, 
		not 2008 as the original indictment had alleged. A superseding 
		indictment in March contained minimal changes.
 
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			 Combs has pleaded not guilty to the 
			first set of charges, which allege that he coerced and abused women 
			for years with help from a network of associates and employees while 
			silencing victims through blackmail and violence, including 
			kidnapping, arson and physical beatings.
 His arraignment on the new charges has not been scheduled. 
			Prosecutors asked Friday that it be held at his final pretrial 
			conference on April 25.
 
 In their filing Friday, prosecutors said three of the four accusers 
			who are expected to testify have asked that their identities not be 
			revealed to the press or the public and that they instead be 
			referred to by at trial using only pseudonyms.
 
 The accuser referred to as “Victim-1” in Combs’ charging documents 
			is prepared to testify under her own name, prosecutors said in the 
			filing, which was heavily redacted.
 
 Federal prosecutors allege the “I’ll Be Missing You” singer and Bad 
			Boy Records founder used his “power and prestige” as a music star to 
			induce female victims into drugged-up, elaborately produced sexual 
			performances with male sex workers in events dubbed “Freak Offs.”
 
 Central to the case is a March 2016 video showing Combs hitting and 
			kicking his then-girlfriend, R&B singer Cassie, in a Los Angeles 
			hotel hallway. Prosecutors contend the assault happened during a 
			“Freak Off." Combs lawyers argue the footage was nothing more than a 
			"glimpse into a complex but decade-long consensual relationship” 
			between the two.
 
 Combs' lawyers contend the case should never have been brought and 
			are fighting to dismiss a charge involving allegations he 
			transported a male escort across state lines.
 
 “The government has concocted a criminal case based primarily on 
			allegations that Mr. Combs and two of his longtime girlfriends 
			sometimes brought a third party — a male escort — into their sexual 
			relationship,” Combs lawyer Alexandra A.E. Shapiro wrote in a 
			February court filing.
 
 “Each of the three charges in the case are premised on the theory 
			that this type of sexual activity is a federal crime,” Shapiro 
			added.
 
			
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