CELEBRITY
Sean Combs Is Facing Multiple Abuse Lawsuits. What Happens to Them Now?
When authorities arrested Sean “Diddy” Combs and unsealed their sex trafficking and racketeering indictment against him in mid-September, it was the culmination of a vast federal criminal investigation.
After countless hours spent combing through evidence, interviewing 50 witnesses, and presenting to a grand jury, prosecutors finally unveiled the case they hope will convict Combs.
In an instant, Combs’ once-opulent world was reduced to the confines of a stark jail cell. If convicted as charged, the onetime billionaire Bad Boy Entertainment founder faces a minimum of 15 years in prison.
Even with good behavior, the 54-year-old would likely remain behind bars until at least his late 60s.
With all eyes now trained on the high-profile criminal case – and Combs’ attention undoubtedly fixated on regaining his freedom – what will become of the many lawsuits filed against him over the last year and moving forward? Combs is facing at least two dozen civil complaints accusing him of direct sexual assault, and at least two more involving claims he played a role in alleged abuse carried out by others.
The pending lawsuits against Combs started piling up just a week after his ex-girlfriend Casandra “Cassie” Ventura filed her graphic sex-trafficking complaint against him last November.
Combs settled with Ventura for an undisclosed sum within 24 hours, but her 35-page complaint, now the heart of the music mogul’s criminal prosecution, opened the floodgates.
Like other high-profile men charged with sex crimes while battling parallel lawsuits, Combs will have to make some decisions.
One option would be to seek “stays” that would essentially put the case on the back burner and ward off depositions using Combs’ Fifth Amendment right against self-incrimination.
Another would be to press ahead and demand documents and testimony from accusers that he might not be empowered to get in his criminal proceeding.
Bill Cosby, Harvey Weinstein and Danny Masterson all filed motions to delay civil litigation by their various accusers while they battled criminal charges.
Such motions were largely successful, though not always. Some legal experts who spoke to Rolling Stone said they expect Combs will do the same and file motions to pause his civil cases in favor of defending against his criminal indictment.
The plaintiffs suing Combs will need action plans, too. For them, delays come with obvious risk.
“Memories can fade, documents can be lost or destroyed, and witnesses can die,” says Joseph Camarata, a lawyer who represented several Cosby accusers in what was an often-delayed but ultimately successful defamation case against the comedian.
“Putting a complete stay on a case can be absolutely detrimental to plaintiffs because it’s their burden to prove they’re telling the truth.”
Camarata says that a popular compromise for litigants is to land on some form of a limited, highly tailored stay that allows both sides to collect records and testimony from third party witnesses while waiting for a criminal case to conclude.
And if a criminal case ends in conviction, that obviously favors plaintiffs. “You want a convicted felon sitting at the defense table across from you,” Camarata says.
David Ring, a plaintiff’s attorney who represented Evgeniya Chernyshova, the Italian actress whose testimony led to Weinstein’s rape conviction in California, says motions for delays in Combs’ civil cases could start appearing in the next couple months.
Some plaintiffs willingly agree to put their cases on hold for tactical reasons, he says.
“A defendant can get a lot of free information from a civil case that he wouldn’t be entitled to get in a criminal case.
For instance, he could take the deposition of a victim, with his lawyers asking seven hours worth of questions,” Ring explains.
“Now, all of sudden, the defendant has all this information that otherwise wouldn’t exist in just a straight criminal case.”
And waiting can have other advantages for plaintiffs.
Michelle Simpson Tuegel, who represented more than two dozen former USA gymnasts who were sexually abused by coach Larry Nassar in their case against USA Gymnastics, says some civil cases can greatly benefit from evidence prosecutors obtain from witnesses who are much more willing to comply with subpoenas from federal investigators.
“The criminal case can really identify information that maybe we couldn’t get as quickly,” Tuegel explains.
Plus, federal investigators “may have more people cooperating and providing them statements further back in time, and that may fill in [plaintiffs’] cases where memories and cooperation of witnesses, the longer you go, the harder that can be.”
As Combs’ criminal case unfolds under an intense spotlight, here are the still-pending civil cases to watch:
Jane Doe, filed November 21, 2023
A Jane Doe filed a lawsuit against former Bad Boy Entertainment CEO Harve Pierre, alleging that while she worked as Pierre’s assistant, he “used his position of authority as [her] boss to groom, exploit, and sexually assault” her from 2016 to 2017.
The Jane Doe filed the suit under both New York’s Adult Survivors Act and an amendment to New York City’s Victims of Gender-Motivated Violence Protection Law, which allows revival of certain otherwise-expired claims until March 1, 2025.
While the Jane Doe is not suing Combs directly, she is suing some of his companies, including Bad Boy Entertainment, Bad Boy Records and Combs Enterprises.
The “defendants failed to properly supervise Pierre, properly supervise [Jane Doe], and protect [Jane Doe] from a known danger, and thereby enabled Pierre’s sexual assaults,” the woman’s lawsuit claimed.
Pierre and Combs’ legal teams have filed motions to dismiss the case and to compel the woman to use her legal name instead of a Jane Doe pseudonym. A judge has not yet ruled on the matter.
Joi Dickerson-Neal, filed November 23, 2023
Joi Dickerson-Neal was the first to sue Combs for sexual assault in the days following Ventura’s lawsuit.
She filed on Thanksgiving, the final deadline to qualify for revival of her otherwise time-barred claim under New York’s Adult Survivors Act.
Dickerson-Neal alleges she was on a break from college in 1991 when Combs drugged her, raped her and made a video of the attack that he shared with others. (Combs denies the allegations.)
Dickerson-Neal filed an amended complaint in May that dropped some of her claims, including one for revenge porn. Combs’ lawyers had argued the dismissed claims involved statutes enacted after 1991 and couldn’t be applied retroactively.
Dickerson-Neal later dismissed Bad Boy Entertainment and Combs Enterprises as defendants.
A hearing is set for Sept. 25 on Combs’ motion to dismiss Dickerson-Neal’s surviving claims of assault and intentional infliction of emotional distress, leaving only her battery cause of action.
Liza Gardner, filed November 23, 2023
Liza Gardner also sued on Thanksgiving, claiming Combs and singer-songwriter Aaron Hall took turns raping her after they all met at a party thrown by record label MCA in Manhattan in 1990.
She alleges Combs also found her the next day and “began assaulting and choking” her until she passed out, an apparent intimidation tactic.
Alongside Combs and Hall, Gardner sued MCA and Uptown Records. An amended complaint filed Oct. 8 added Jodeci member DeVante Swing as a co-defendant who allegedly “aided and abetted” the assault by traveling with Gardner from North Carolina and not intervening to stop the alleged abuse.
Combs denies the allegations. Hall and Swing did not respond to requests for comment.
When authorities arrested Sean “Diddy” Combs and unsealed their sex trafficking and racketeering indictment against him in mid-September, it was the culmination of a vast federal criminal investigation.
After countless hours spent combing through evidence, interviewing 50 witnesses, and presenting to a grand jury, prosecutors finally unveiled the case they hope will convict Combs.
In an instant, Combs’ once-opulent world was reduced to the confines of a stark jail cell. If convicted as charged, the onetime billionaire Bad Boy
Entertainment founder faces a minimum of 15 years in prison. Even with good behavior, the 54-year-old would likely remain behind bars until at least his late 60s.
With all eyes now trained on the high-profile criminal case – and Combs’ attention undoubtedly fixated on regaining his freedom – what will become of the many lawsuits filed against him over the last year and moving forward?
Combs is facing at least two dozen civil complaints accusing him of direct sexual assault, and at least two more involving claims he played a role in alleged abuse carried out by others.
The pending lawsuits against Combs started piling up just a week after his ex-girlfriend Casandra “Cassie” Ventura filed her graphic sex-trafficking complaint against him last November.
Combs settled with Ventura for an undisclosed sum within 24 hours, but her 35-page complaint, now the heart of the music mogul’s criminal prosecution, opened the floodgates.
Like other high-profile men charged with sex crimes while battling parallel lawsuits, Combs will have to make some decisions.
One option would be to seek “stays” that would essentially put the case on the back burner and ward off depositions using Combs’ Fifth Amendment right against self-incrimination.
Another would be to press ahead and demand documents and testimony from accusers that he might not be empowered to get in his criminal proceeding.
Bill Cosby, Harvey Weinstein and Danny Masterson all filed motions to delay civil litigation by their various accusers while they battled criminal charges.
Such motions were largely successful, though not always. Some legal experts who spoke to Rolling Stone said they expect Combs will do the same and file motions to pause his civil cases in favor of defending against his criminal indictment.
The 250 Greatest Guitarists of All Time
The plaintiffs suing Combs will need action plans, too.
For them, delays come with obvious risk. “Memories can fade, documents can be lost or destroyed, and witnesses can die,” says Joseph Camarata, a lawyer who represented several Cosby accusers in what was an often-delayed but ultimately successful defamation case against the comedian.
“Putting a complete stay on a case can be absolutely detrimental to plaintiffs because it’s their burden to prove they’re telling the truth.”
Camarata says that a popular compromise for litigants is to land on some form of a limited, highly tailored stay that allows both sides to collect records and testimony from third party witnesses while waiting for a criminal case to conclude.
And if a criminal case ends in conviction, that obviously favors plaintiffs. “You want a convicted felon sitting at the defense table across from you,” Camarata says.
David Ring, a plaintiff’s attorney who represented Evgeniya Chernyshova, the Italian actress whose testimony led to Weinstein’s rape conviction in California, says motions for delays in Combs’ civil cases could start appearing in the next couple months.
Some plaintiffs willingly agree to put their cases on hold for tactical reasons, he says.
“A defendant can get a lot of free information from a civil case that he wouldn’t be entitled to get in a criminal case.
For instance, he could take the deposition of a victim, with his lawyers asking seven hours worth of questions,” Ring explains.
“Now, all of sudden, the defendant has all this information that otherwise wouldn’t exist in just a straight criminal case.”
Sean Combs Sued for Alleged Sexual Assault of 10-Year-Old Boy in New Round of Lawsuits
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And waiting can have other advantages for plaintiffs.
Michelle Simpson Tuegel, who represented more than two dozen former USA gymnasts who were sexually abused by coach Larry Nassar in their case against USA Gymnastics, says some civil cases can greatly benefit from evidence prosecutors obtain from witnesses who are much more willing to comply with subpoenas from federal investigators.
“The criminal case can really identify information that maybe we couldn’t get as quickly,” Tuegel explains.
Plus, federal investigators “may have more people cooperating and providing them statements further back in time, and that may fill in [plaintiffs’] cases where memories and cooperation of witnesses, the longer you go, the harder that can be.”
As Combs’ criminal case unfolds under an intense spotlight, here are the still-pending civil cases to watch:
In subsequent filings, Gardner said she was only 16 years old at the time of the alleged assaults.
UMG Recordings, the parent company of MCA, challenged Gardner’s lawsuit on the grounds that she did not qualify for New York’s Adult Survivors Act because she was under the age of 18 at the time of the alleged rapes.
Gardner and her lawyer, Tyrone Blackburn, said subsequent investigation proved the alleged assaults actually took place at Hall’s residence in New Jersey, so they moved her lawsuit to Bergen County in June citing a state law that allows victims of childhood sexual assault to bring claims up until age 55. The lawsuit was later moved to New Jersey federal court.
Jane Doe, filed December 6, 2023
A Jane Doe from Michigan sued Combs with claims he and his longtime lieutenant, Harve Pierre, lured her from the Detroit area to Manhattan on a private jet when she was a 17-year-old high school student in 2003.
The unidentified woman alleges the men plied her with drugs and alcohol until she was nearly unconscious and then gang raped her that night at Combs’ Daddy’s House recording studio.
Attorneys Douglas Wigdor and Meredith Firetog, who represented Ventura, included several color photos snapped that night, including one showing the plaintiff sitting on Combs’ lap.
The Jane Doe filed under New York City’s Victims of Gender-Motivated Violence Protection Law, which Combs and his companies have asked for dismissal for on the grounds that the the law is “pre-empted” by the expiration of other statewide look-back laws, namely the Child Victims Act that expired in August 2021.
A judge had not yet ruled on the dismissal motion. If Doe prevails and proceeds to trial, the court already has ruled she will have to use her real name.
Rodney Jones, filed February 26, 2024
Music producer Rodney “Lil Rod” Jones was the first man to sue Combs for sexual assault, alleging Combs repeatedly sexually harassed and groped him over the course of working on The Love Album: Off the Grid between September 2022 and November 2023.
Jones is also suing Combs for allegedly involving him in a sex trafficking and racketeering enterprise, claiming that he was forced to procure and transport sex workers for Combs, and observed Combs’ associates travel with illegal substances and supply Combs with drugs.
In late August, Combs’ team filed a motion to dismiss Jones’ complaint, calling it a “a salacious RICO conspiracy,” filled with “legally meaningless allegations and blatant falsehoods.” Jones has until Sept. 30 to respond to Combs’ motion to dismiss before a judge will issue a ruling.
Grace O’Marcaigh, filed April 4, 2024
During a family vacation in St. Martin in late 2022, stewardess Grace O’Marcaigh claimed Combs’ youngest son, Christian “King” Combs, 26, sexually assaulted her on board the yacht the family had chartered.
O’Marcaigh claimed she physically had to fight off an “extremely aggressive” Christian, who stripped off his clothes, grabbed her arms while “trying to force [her] to perform oral copulation” on his “erect penis.”
While the primary claim is against Christian, O’Marcaigh is suing Sean Combs for aiding and abetting his son’s behavior and for having liability as the leaseholder on the rented yacht.
Neither Combs nor Christian’s legal teams have formally responded to the filing, and the next court hearing is set for Dec. 10.
Crystal McKinney, filed May 21, 2024
Model Crystal McKinney attended a Sean John fashion show on the arm of designer Roberto Cavalli in February 2003 before Combs allegedly drugged and sexually assaulted the 22-year-old.
McKinney claimed in the hours before the alleged assault, Combs showered her with compliments and made promises about her career during a private dinner at Cipriani.
During an after-party at Combs’ recording studio, McKinney claimed that Combs pressured her to take a hit of a laced joint, before he led her into a bathroom and forced her to perform oral sex.
In the filing, McKinney said the assault made her “physically sick” and that she passed out a short time later, only to wake up in “shock to find herself in a taxicab.”
McKinney “saved the unwashed clothing from that night … in a plastic wrap,” due to how traumatic the event was, her lawsuit added.
When authorities arrested Sean “Diddy” Combs and unsealed their sex trafficking and racketeering indictment against him in mid-September, it was the culmination of a vast federal criminal investigation.
After countless hours spent combing through evidence, interviewing 50 witnesses, and presenting to a grand jury, prosecutors finally unveiled the case they hope will convict Combs.
In an instant, Combs’ once-opulent world was reduced to the confines of a stark jail cell.
If convicted as charged, the onetime billionaire Bad Boy Entertainment founder faces a minimum of 15 years in prison.
Even with good behavior, the 54-year-old would likely remain behind bars until at least his late 60s.
With all eyes now trained on the high-profile criminal case – and Combs’ attention undoubtedly fixated on regaining his freedom – what will become of the many lawsuits filed against him over the last year and moving forward? Combs is facing at least two dozen civil complaints accusing him of direct sexual assault, and at least two more involving claims he played a role in alleged abuse carried out by others.
The pending lawsuits against Combs started piling up just a week after his ex-girlfriend Casandra “Cassie” Ventura filed her graphic sex-trafficking complaint against him last November.
Combs settled with Ventura for an undisclosed sum within 24 hours, but her 35-page complaint, now the heart of the music mogul’s criminal prosecution, opened the floodgates.
Like other high-profile men charged with sex crimes while battling parallel lawsuits, Combs will have to make some decisions.
One option would be to seek “stays” that would essentially put the case on the back burner and ward off depositions using Combs’ Fifth Amendment right against self-incrimination.
Another would be to press ahead and demand documents and testimony from accusers that he might not be empowered to get in his criminal proceeding.
Bill Cosby, Harvey Weinstein and Danny Masterson all filed motions to delay civil litigation by their various accusers while they battled criminal charges.
Such motions were largely successful, though not always. Some legal experts who spoke to Rolling Stone said they expect Combs will do the same and file motions to pause his civil cases in favor of defending against his criminal indictment.
The 250 Greatest Guitarists of All Time
The plaintiffs suing Combs will need action plans, too. For them, delays come with obvious risk.
“Memories can fade, documents can be lost or destroyed, and witnesses can die,” says Joseph Camarata, a lawyer who represented several Cosby accusers in what was an often-delayed but ultimately successful defamation case against the comedian.
“Putting a complete stay on a case can be absolutely detrimental to plaintiffs because it’s their burden to prove they’re telling the truth.”
Camarata says that a popular compromise for litigants is to land on some form of a limited, highly tailored stay that allows both sides to collect records and testimony from third party witnesses while waiting for a criminal case to conclude.
And if a criminal case ends in conviction, that obviously favors plaintiffs. “You want a convicted felon sitting at the defense table across from you,” Camarata says.
David Ring, a plaintiff’s attorney who represented Evgeniya Chernyshova, the Italian actress whose testimony led to Weinstein’s rape conviction in California, says motions for delays in Combs’ civil cases could start appearing in the next couple months.
Some plaintiffs willingly agree to put their cases on hold for tactical reasons, he says.
“A defendant can get a lot of free information from a civil case that he wouldn’t be entitled to get in a criminal case.
For instance, he could take the deposition of a victim, with his lawyers asking seven hours worth of questions,” Ring explains.
“Now, all of sudden, the defendant has all this information that otherwise wouldn’t exist in just a straight criminal case.
Sean Combs Sued for Alleged Sexual Assault of 10-Year-Old Boy in New Round of Lawsuits
FKA Twigs Gets New Trial Date After ‘Hopeless’ Mediation With Shia LaBeouf
And waiting can have other advantages for plaintiffs.
Michelle Simpson Tuegel, who represented more than two dozen former USA gymnasts who were sexually abused by coach Larry Nassar in their case against USA Gymnastics, says some civil cases can greatly benefit from evidence prosecutors obtain from witnesses who are much more willing to comply with subpoenas from federal investigators.
“The criminal case can really identify information that maybe we couldn’t get as quickly,” Tuegel explains.
Plus, federal investigators “may have more people cooperating and providing them statements further back in time, and that may fill in [plaintiffs’] cases where memories and cooperation of witnesses, the longer you go, the harder that can be.”
As Combs’ criminal case unfolds under an intense spotlight, here are the still-pending civil cases to watch:
Jane Doe, filed November 21, 2023
A Jane Doe filed a lawsuit against former Bad Boy Entertainment CEO Harve Pierre, alleging that while she worked as Pierre’s assistant, he “used his position of authority as [her] boss to groom, exploit, and sexually assault” her from 2016 to 2017.
The Jane Doe filed the suit under both New York’s Adult Survivors Act and an amendment to New York City’s Victims of Gender-Motivated Violence Protection Law, which allows revival of certain otherwise-expired claims until March 1, 2025. While the Jane Doe is not suing Combs directly, she is suing some of his companies, including Bad Boy Entertainment, Bad Boy Records and Combs Enterprises. The “defendants failed to properly supervise Pierre, properly supervise [Jane Doe], and protect [Jane Doe] from a known danger, and thereby enabled Pierre’s sexual assaults,” the woman’s lawsuit claimed.
Pierre and Combs’ legal teams have filed motions to dismiss the case and to compel the woman to use her legal name instead of a Jane Doe pseudonym. A judge has not yet ruled on the matter.
Joi Dickerson-Neal, filed November 23, 2023
Joi Dickerson-Neal was the first to sue Combs for sexual assault in the days following Ventura’s lawsuit. She filed on Thanksgiving, the final deadline to qualify for revival of her otherwise time-barred claim under New York’s Adult Survivors Act. Dickerson-Neal alleges she was on a break from college in 1991 when Combs drugged her, raped her and made a video of the attack that he shared with others. (Combs denies the allegations.)
Dickerson-Neal filed an amended complaint in May that dropped some of her claims, including one for revenge porn. Combs’ lawyers had argued the dismissed claims involved statutes enacted after 1991 and couldn’t be applied retroactively. Dickerson-Neal later dismissed Bad Boy Entertainment and Combs Enterprises as defendants.
A hearing is set for Sept. 25 on Combs’ motion to dismiss Dickerson-Neal’s surviving claims of assault and intentional infliction of emotional distress, leaving only her battery cause of action.
Liza Gardner, filed November 23, 2023
Liza Gardner also sued on Thanksgiving, claiming Combs and singer-songwriter Aaron Hall took turns raping her after they all met at a party thrown by record label MCA in Manhattan in 1990. She alleges Combs also found her the next day and “began assaulting and choking” her until she passed out, an apparent intimidation tactic. Alongside Combs and Hall, Gardner sued MCA and Uptown Records. An amended complaint filed Oct. 8 added Jodeci member DeVante Swing as a co-defendant who allegedly “aided and abetted” the assault by traveling with Gardner from North Carolina and not intervening to stop the alleged abuse. Combs denies the allegations. Hall and Swing did not respond to requests for comment.
Like Dickerson-Neal, Gardner first stepped forward as a Jane Doe but was later forced to reveal her identity. In subsequent filings, Gardner said she was only 16 years old at the time of the alleged assaults.
UMG Recordings, the parent company of MCA, challenged Gardner’s lawsuit on the grounds that she did not qualify for New York’s Adult Survivors Act because she was under the age of 18 at the time of the alleged rapes. Gardner and her lawyer, Tyrone Blackburn, said subsequent investigation proved the alleged assaults actually took place at Hall’s residence in New Jersey, so they moved her lawsuit to Bergen County in June citing a state law that allows victims of childhood sexual assault to bring claims up until age 55. The lawsuit was later moved to New Jersey federal court.
Jane Doe, filed December 6, 2023
A Jane Doe from Michigan sued Combs with claims he and his longtime lieutenant, Harve Pierre, lured her from the Detroit area to Manhattan on a private jet when she was a 17-year-old high school student in 2003. The unidentified woman alleges the men plied her with drugs and alcohol until she was nearly unconscious and then gang raped her that night at Combs’ Daddy’s House recording studio.
Attorneys Douglas Wigdor and Meredith Firetog, who represented Ventura, included several color photos snapped that night, including one showing the plaintiff sitting on Combs’ lap. The Jane Doe filed under New York City’s Victims of Gender-Motivated Violence Protection Law, which Combs and his companies have asked for dismissal for on the grounds that the the law is “pre-empted” by the expiration of other statewide look-back laws, namely the Child Victims Act that expired in August 2021.
A judge had not yet ruled on the dismissal motion. If Doe prevails and proceeds to trial, the court already has ruled she will have to use her real name.
Rodney Jones, filed February 26, 2024
Music producer Rodney “Lil Rod” Jones was the first man to sue Combs for sexual assault, alleging Combs repeatedly sexually harassed and groped him over the course of working on The Love Album: Off the Grid between September 2022 and November 2023.
Jones is also suing Combs for allegedly involving him in a sex trafficking and racketeering enterprise, claiming that he was forced to procure and transport sex workers for Combs, and observed Combs’ associates travel with illegal substances and supply Combs with drugs.
In late August, Combs’ team filed a motion to dismiss Jones’ complaint, calling it a “a salacious RICO conspiracy,” filled with “legally meaningless allegations and blatant falsehoods.” Jones has until Sept. 30 to respond to Combs’ motion to dismiss before a judge will issue a ruling.
Rodney Jones and Crystal McKinney are both suing Sean Combs for sexual assault.
Courtesy of Tyrone Blackburn; Gregory Pace/FilmMagic
Grace O’Marcaigh, filed April 4, 2024
During a family vacation in St. Martin in late 2022, stewardess Grace O’Marcaigh claimed Combs’ youngest son, Christian “King” Combs, 26, sexually assaulted her on board the yacht the family had chartered. O’Marcaigh claimed she physically had to fight off an “extremely aggressive” Christian, who stripped off his clothes, grabbed her arms while “trying to force [her] to perform oral copulation” on his “erect penis.”
While the primary claim is against Christian, O’Marcaigh is suing Sean Combs for aiding and abetting his son’s behavior and for having liability as the leaseholder on the rented yacht. Neither Combs nor Christian’s legal teams have formally responded to the filing, and the next court hearing is set for Dec. 10.
Crystal McKinney, filed May 21, 2024
Model Crystal McKinney attended a Sean John fashion show on the arm of designer Roberto Cavalli in February 2003 before Combs allegedly drugged and sexually assaulted the 22-year-old. McKinney claimed in the hours before the alleged assault, Combs showered her with compliments and made promises about her career during a private dinner at Cipriani. During an after-party at Combs’ recording studio, McKinney claimed that Combs pressured her to take a hit of a laced joint, before he led her into a bathroom and forced her to perform oral sex.
In the filing, McKinney said the assault made her “physically sick” and that she passed out a short time later, only to wake up in “shock to find herself in a taxicab.” McKinney “saved the unwashed clothing from that night … in a plastic wrap,” due to how traumatic the event was, her lawsuit added.
Like many other accusers, McKinney filed her suit under the Gender Motivated Violence Protection Act. Combs’ team responded to the former model’s complaint last week, seeking a dismissal on the grounds that her claim is time-barred and preempted by state law.
April Lampros, filed May 24, 2024
April Lampros was a college student and intern at Arista Records when she began an on-off relationship with Combs in early 1994. The rising music executive allegedly “love bombed” Lampros before sexually assaulting her on three occasions in 1995 and 1996, and once more around early 2001.
Lampros said her relationship with Combs came back to haunt her in 2023 when she learned Combs allegedly recorded a sex tape of her and showed it to multiple people in 1997, according to the lawsuit.
Combs’ lawyers have argued that the three leading causes of action in Lampros’ suit — battery, assault and negligent infliction of emotional distress — are beyond their original statute of limitations and not revivable under a provision of New York City’s Victims of Gender-Motivated Protection Law since the underlying VGMVPL statute wasn’t enacted by city officials until 2000. In a proposed amended complaint filed in September, Lampros dropped her legal claims related to the 1995 and 1996 alleged assaults, leaving only one cause of action regarding her claim that Combs “violently grabbed her and forced himself onto her” during a final meeting around the beginning of 2001. She claimed Combs broped her breast, kissed her on the neck and “touched her genitals against her will.”
A judge has not yet ruled on Combs’ motion to dismiss the entire lawsuit on the basis that the revival provision of the VGMVPL is pre-empted by New York state’s Adult Survivors Act, which provided a look-back window that expired on November 24, 2023.
Adria English, filed July 3, 2024
Former Hustler Club dancer and adult film star Adria English claimed that Combs sex trafficked her when she was hired to dance at his infamous White Party bashes. From 2004 to 2009, English claimed the mogul and his associates facilitated her travel to the Hamptons and Miami, where she was “forced to consume liquor and illicit narcotics.” Eventually, English claimed, she was expected to “engage in sexual intercourse” with party guests, claiming Combs “demanded” for her to perform such acts and later “congratulated” her for a “job well done at the end of the night,” according to her lawsuit.
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CIVIL CASES
Sean Combs Is Facing Multiple Abuse Lawsuits. What Happens to Them Now?
As the music executive faces a high-profile criminal case, what becomes of the various civil lawsuits filed against him over the last year?
By Nancy Dillon, Cheyenne Roundtree
October 28, 2024
Diddy performs onstage at the 2023 MTV Video Music Awards held at Prudential Center on September 12, 2023 in Newark, New Jersey. (Photo by Christopher Polk/Variety via Getty Images)
Diddy onstage at the 2023 MTV Video Music Awards held on Sept. 12, 2023, in Newark, New Jersey
Christopher Polk/Variety/Getty Images
When authorities arrested Sean “Diddy” Combs and unsealed their sex trafficking and racketeering indictment against him in mid-September, it was the culmination of a vast federal criminal investigation. After countless hours spent combing through evidence, interviewing 50 witnesses, and presenting to a grand jury, prosecutors finally unveiled the case they hope will convict Combs.
In an instant, Combs’ once-opulent world was reduced to the confines of a stark jail cell. If convicted as charged, the onetime billionaire Bad Boy Entertainment founder faces a minimum of 15 years in prison. Even with good behavior, the 54-year-old would likely remain behind bars until at least his late 60s.
With all eyes now trained on the high-profile criminal case – and Combs’ attention undoubtedly fixated on regaining his freedom – what will become of the many lawsuits filed against him over the last year and moving forward? Combs is facing at least two dozen civil complaints accusing him of direct sexual assault, and at least two more involving claims he played a role in alleged abuse carried out by others.
The pending lawsuits against Combs started piling up just a week after his ex-girlfriend Casandra “Cassie” Ventura filed her graphic sex-trafficking complaint against him last November. Combs settled with Ventura for an undisclosed sum within 24 hours, but her 35-page complaint, now the heart of the music mogul’s criminal prosecution, opened the floodgates.
Like other high-profile men charged with sex crimes while battling parallel lawsuits, Combs will have to make some decisions. One option would be to seek “stays” that would essentially put the case on the back burner and ward off depositions using Combs’ Fifth Amendment right against self-incrimination. Another would be to press ahead and demand documents and testimony from accusers that he might not be empowered to get in his criminal proceeding.
Bill Cosby, Harvey Weinstein and Danny Masterson all filed motions to delay civil litigation by their various accusers while they battled criminal charges. Such motions were largely successful, though not always. Some legal experts who spoke to Rolling Stone said they expect Combs will do the same and file motions to pause his civil cases in favor of defending against his criminal indictment.
The 250 Greatest Guitarists of All Time
The plaintiffs suing Combs will need action plans, too. For them, delays come with obvious risk. “Memories can fade, documents can be lost or destroyed, and witnesses can die,” says Joseph Camarata, a lawyer who represented several Cosby accusers in what was an often-delayed but ultimately successful defamation case against the comedian. “Putting a complete stay on a case can be absolutely detrimental to plaintiffs because it’s their burden to prove they’re telling the truth.”
Camarata says that a popular compromise for litigants is to land on some form of a limited, highly tailored stay that allows both sides to collect records and testimony from third party witnesses while waiting for a criminal case to conclude. And if a criminal case ends in conviction, that obviously favors plaintiffs. “You want a convicted felon sitting at the defense table across from you,” Camarata says.
David Ring, a plaintiff’s attorney who represented Evgeniya Chernyshova, the Italian actress whose testimony led to Weinstein’s rape conviction in California, says motions for delays in Combs’ civil cases could start appearing in the next couple months.
Some plaintiffs willingly agree to put their cases on hold for tactical reasons, he says. “A defendant can get a lot of free information from a civil case that he wouldn’t be entitled to get in a criminal case. For instance, he could take the deposition of a victim, with his lawyers asking seven hours worth of questions,” Ring explains. “Now, all of sudden, the defendant has all this information that otherwise wouldn’t exist in just a straight criminal case.”
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And waiting can have other advantages for plaintiffs. Michelle Simpson Tuegel, who represented more than two dozen former USA gymnasts who were sexually abused by coach Larry Nassar in their case against USA Gymnastics, says some civil cases can greatly benefit from evidence prosecutors obtain from witnesses who are much more willing to comply with subpoenas from federal investigators. “The criminal case can really identify information that maybe we couldn’t get as quickly,” Tuegel explains. Plus, federal investigators “may have more people cooperating and providing them statements further back in time, and that may fill in [plaintiffs’] cases where memories and cooperation of witnesses, the longer you go, the harder that can be.”
As Combs’ criminal case unfolds under an intense spotlight, here are the still-pending civil cases to watch:
Jane Doe, filed November 21, 2023
A Jane Doe filed a lawsuit against former Bad Boy Entertainment CEO Harve Pierre, alleging that while she worked as Pierre’s assistant, he “used his position of authority as [her] boss to groom, exploit, and sexually assault” her from 2016 to 2017.
The Jane Doe filed the suit under both New York’s Adult Survivors Act and an amendment to New York City’s Victims of Gender-Motivated Violence Protection Law, which allows revival of certain otherwise-expired claims until March 1, 2025. While the Jane Doe is not suing Combs directly, she is suing some of his companies, including Bad Boy Entertainment, Bad Boy Records and Combs Enterprises. The “defendants failed to properly supervise Pierre, properly supervise [Jane Doe], and protect [Jane Doe] from a known danger, and thereby enabled Pierre’s sexual assaults,” the woman’s lawsuit claimed.
Pierre and Combs’ legal teams have filed motions to dismiss the case and to compel the woman to use her legal name instead of a Jane Doe pseudonym. A judge has not yet ruled on the matter.
Joi Dickerson-Neal, filed November 23, 2023
Joi Dickerson-Neal was the first to sue Combs for sexual assault in the days following Ventura’s lawsuit. She filed on Thanksgiving, the final deadline to qualify for revival of her otherwise time-barred claim under New York’s Adult Survivors Act. Dickerson-Neal alleges she was on a break from college in 1991 when Combs drugged her, raped her and made a video of the attack that he shared with others. (Combs denies the allegations.)
Dickerson-Neal filed an amended complaint in May that dropped some of her claims, including one for revenge porn. Combs’ lawyers had argued the dismissed claims involved statutes enacted after 1991 and couldn’t be applied retroactively. Dickerson-Neal later dismissed Bad Boy Entertainment and Combs Enterprises as defendants.
A hearing is set for Sept. 25 on Combs’ motion to dismiss Dickerson-Neal’s surviving claims of assault and intentional infliction of emotional distress, leaving only her battery cause of action.
Liza Gardner, filed November 23, 2023
Liza Gardner also sued on Thanksgiving, claiming Combs and singer-songwriter Aaron Hall took turns raping her after they all met at a party thrown by record label MCA in Manhattan in 1990. She alleges Combs also found her the next day and “began assaulting and choking” her until she passed out, an apparent intimidation tactic. Alongside Combs and Hall, Gardner sued MCA and Uptown Records. An amended complaint filed Oct. 8 added Jodeci member DeVante Swing as a co-defendant who allegedly “aided and abetted” the assault by traveling with Gardner from North Carolina and not intervening to stop the alleged abuse. Combs denies the allegations. Hall and Swing did not respond to requests for comment.
Like Dickerson-Neal, Gardner first stepped forward as a Jane Doe but was later forced to reveal her identity. In subsequent filings, Gardner said she was only 16 years old at the time of the alleged assaults.
UMG Recordings, the parent company of MCA, challenged Gardner’s lawsuit on the grounds that she did not qualify for New York’s Adult Survivors Act because she was under the age of 18 at the time of the alleged rapes. Gardner and her lawyer, Tyrone Blackburn, said subsequent investigation proved the alleged assaults actually took place at Hall’s residence in New Jersey, so they moved her lawsuit to Bergen County in June citing a state law that allows victims of childhood sexual assault to bring claims up until age 55. The lawsuit was later moved to New Jersey federal court.
Jane Doe, filed December 6, 2023
A Jane Doe from Michigan sued Combs with claims he and his longtime lieutenant, Harve Pierre, lured her from the Detroit area to Manhattan on a private jet when she was a 17-year-old high school student in 2003. The unidentified woman alleges the men plied her with drugs and alcohol until she was nearly unconscious and then gang raped her that night at Combs’ Daddy’s House recording studio.
Attorneys Douglas Wigdor and Meredith Firetog, who represented Ventura, included several color photos snapped that night, including one showing the plaintiff sitting on Combs’ lap. The Jane Doe filed under New York City’s Victims of Gender-Motivated Violence Protection Law, which Combs and his companies have asked for dismissal for on the grounds that the the law is “pre-empted” by the expiration of other statewide look-back laws, namely the Child Victims Act that expired in August 2021.
A judge had not yet ruled on the dismissal motion. If Doe prevails and proceeds to trial, the court already has ruled she will have to use her real name.
Rodney Jones, filed February 26, 2024
Music producer Rodney “Lil Rod” Jones was the first man to sue Combs for sexual assault, alleging Combs repeatedly sexually harassed and groped him over the course of working on The Love Album: Off the Grid between September 2022 and November 2023.
Jones is also suing Combs for allegedly involving him in a sex trafficking and racketeering enterprise, claiming that he was forced to procure and transport sex workers for Combs, and observed Combs’ associates travel with illegal substances and supply Combs with drugs.
In late August, Combs’ team filed a motion to dismiss Jones’ complaint, calling it a “a salacious RICO conspiracy,” filled with “legally meaningless allegations and blatant falsehoods.” Jones has until Sept. 30 to respond to Combs’ motion to dismiss before a judge will issue a ruling.
Rodney Jones and Crystal McKinney are both suing Sean Combs for sexual assault.
Courtesy of Tyrone Blackburn; Gregory Pace/FilmMagic
Grace O’Marcaigh, filed April 4, 2024
During a family vacation in St. Martin in late 2022, stewardess Grace O’Marcaigh claimed Combs’ youngest son, Christian “King” Combs, 26, sexually assaulted her on board the yacht the family had chartered. O’Marcaigh claimed she physically had to fight off an “extremely aggressive” Christian, who stripped off his clothes, grabbed her arms while “trying to force [her] to perform oral copulation” on his “erect penis.”
While the primary claim is against Christian, O’Marcaigh is suing Sean Combs for aiding and abetting his son’s behavior and for having liability as the leaseholder on the rented yacht. Neither Combs nor Christian’s legal teams have formally responded to the filing, and the next court hearing is set for Dec. 10.
Crystal McKinney, filed May 21, 2024
Model Crystal McKinney attended a Sean John fashion show on the arm of designer Roberto Cavalli in February 2003 before Combs allegedly drugged and sexually assaulted the 22-year-old. McKinney claimed in the hours before the alleged assault, Combs showered her with compliments and made promises about her career during a private dinner at Cipriani. During an after-party at Combs’ recording studio, McKinney claimed that Combs pressured her to take a hit of a laced joint, before he led her into a bathroom and forced her to perform oral sex.
In the filing, McKinney said the assault made her “physically sick” and that she passed out a short time later, only to wake up in “shock to find herself in a taxicab.” McKinney “saved the unwashed clothing from that night … in a plastic wrap,” due to how traumatic the event was, her lawsuit added.
Like many other accusers, McKinney filed her suit under the Gender Motivated Violence Protection Act. Combs’ team responded to the former model’s complaint last week, seeking a dismissal on the grounds that her claim is time-barred and preempted by state law.
April Lampros, filed May 24, 2024
April Lampros was a college student and intern at Arista Records when she began an on-off relationship with Combs in early 1994. The rising music executive allegedly “love bombed” Lampros before sexually assaulting her on three occasions in 1995 and 1996, and once more around early 2001.
Lampros said her relationship with Combs came back to haunt her in 2023 when she learned Combs allegedly recorded a sex tape of her and showed it to multiple people in 1997, according to the lawsuit.
Combs’ lawyers have argued that the three leading causes of action in Lampros’ suit — battery, assault and negligent infliction of emotional distress — are beyond their original statute of limitations and not revivable under a provision of New York City’s Victims of Gender-Motivated Protection Law since the underlying VGMVPL statute wasn’t enacted by city officials until 2000. In a proposed amended complaint filed in September, Lampros dropped her legal claims related to the 1995 and 1996 alleged assaults, leaving only one cause of action regarding her claim that Combs “violently grabbed her and forced himself onto her” during a final meeting around the beginning of 2001. She claimed Combs broped her breast, kissed her on the neck and “touched her genitals against her will.”
A judge has not yet ruled on Combs’ motion to dismiss the entire lawsuit on the basis that the revival provision of the VGMVPL is pre-empted by New York state’s Adult Survivors Act, which provided a look-back window that expired on November 24, 2023.
Adria English, filed July 3, 2024
Former Hustler Club dancer and adult film star Adria English claimed that Combs sex trafficked her when she was hired to dance at his infamous White Party bashes. From 2004 to 2009, English claimed the mogul and his associates facilitated her travel to the Hamptons and Miami, where she was “forced to consume liquor and illicit narcotics.” Eventually, English claimed, she was expected to “engage in sexual intercourse” with party guests, claiming Combs “demanded” for her to perform such acts and later “congratulated” her for a “job well done at the end of the night,” according to her lawsuit.
English is suing Combs under the Gender Motivated Violence Protection Act. The former dancer’s legal team was granted a motion to issue a summons to Combs and other legal parties electronically in early August. Weeks later on Oct. 2, English’s attorneys Ariel Mitchell-Kidd and Steven Metcalf requested to withdraw from the case, citing a “fundamental disagreement” regarding “almost every aspect of the litigation, including settlement demands, causes of actions in the pleadings and [English’s] undermining behavior and questionable antics.”
Combs’ legal team has yet to respond formally to the suit.
Dawn Richard, filed September 10, 2024
Former Danity Kane and Diddy-Dirty Money member Dawn Richard became the second Bad Boy artist to sue their former label boss. She claimed Combs sexually harassed and assaulted her, and through a “pattern of coercive threats and displays of brutal violence” caused her to “engage in commercial sex acts.”
Combs’ legal team has yet to respond to Richard’s suit in court documents, but in media statements and at Combs’ bail hearing, his lawyers dismissed her claims as irrelevant to the sex trafficking and racketeering charges.
And as attorney Tuegel highlighted, evidence from Combs’ criminal trial could bolster Richard’s case. In the days after Richard’s filing, prosecutors alleged Combs had 128 phone contacts with Richard’s former bandmate Kalenna Harper, who later put out a statement that distanced herself from Richard’s experience.
Although Combs’ attorney downplayed the communications, saying it was “hardly obstruction,” Richard’s lawyer Lisa Bloom told Rolling Stone that she’d be “demanding those text and phone messages in our litigation and if they show witness tampering, we will add that claim to our lawsuit and aggressively pursue it.”
Thalia Graves, filed September 24, 2024
In a harrowing lawsuit filed by her high-profile attorney Gloria Allred, Graves claims Combs and an associate identified as Joseph “Big Joe” Sherman lured her to the Daddy’s House recording studio in Manhattan in 2001 and likely drugged her beverage, causing her to briefly lose consciousness. She alleges she awoke to find herself “bound and restrained,” and that Combs “mercilessly raped her, anally and vaginally.” Graves claims Sherman slammed her onto a table and forced his penis into her mouth.
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CIVIL CASES
Sean Combs Is Facing Multiple Abuse Lawsuits. What Happens to Them Now?
As the music executive faces a high-profile criminal case, what becomes of the various civil lawsuits filed against him over the last year?
By Nancy Dillon, Cheyenne Roundtree
October 28, 2024
Diddy performs onstage at the 2023 MTV Video Music Awards held at Prudential Center on September 12, 2023 in Newark, New Jersey. (Photo by Christopher Polk/Variety via Getty Images)
Diddy onstage at the 2023 MTV Video Music Awards held on Sept. 12, 2023, in Newark, New Jersey
Christopher Polk/Variety/Getty Images
When authorities arrested Sean “Diddy” Combs and unsealed their sex trafficking and racketeering indictment against him in mid-September, it was the culmination of a vast federal criminal investigation. After countless hours spent combing through evidence, interviewing 50 witnesses, and presenting to a grand jury, prosecutors finally unveiled the case they hope will convict Combs.
In an instant, Combs’ once-opulent world was reduced to the confines of a stark jail cell. If convicted as charged, the onetime billionaire Bad Boy Entertainment founder faces a minimum of 15 years in prison. Even with good behavior, the 54-year-old would likely remain behind bars until at least his late 60s.
With all eyes now trained on the high-profile criminal case – and Combs’ attention undoubtedly fixated on regaining his freedom – what will become of the many lawsuits filed against him over the last year and moving forward? Combs is facing at least two dozen civil complaints accusing him of direct sexual assault, and at least two more involving claims he played a role in alleged abuse carried out by others.
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The pending lawsuits against Combs started piling up just a week after his ex-girlfriend Casandra “Cassie” Ventura filed her graphic sex-trafficking complaint against him last November. Combs settled with Ventura for an undisclosed sum within 24 hours, but her 35-page complaint, now the heart of the music mogul’s criminal prosecution, opened the floodgates.
Like other high-profile men charged with sex crimes while battling parallel lawsuits, Combs will have to make some decisions. One option would be to seek “stays” that would essentially put the case on the back burner and ward off depositions using Combs’ Fifth Amendment right against self-incrimination. Another would be to press ahead and demand documents and testimony from accusers that he might not be empowered to get in his criminal proceeding.
Bill Cosby, Harvey Weinstein and Danny Masterson all filed motions to delay civil litigation by their various accusers while they battled criminal charges. Such motions were largely successful, though not always. Some legal experts who spoke to Rolling Stone said they expect Combs will do the same and file motions to pause his civil cases in favor of defending against his criminal indictment.
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The plaintiffs suing Combs will need action plans, too. For them, delays come with obvious risk. “Memories can fade, documents can be lost or destroyed, and witnesses can die,” says Joseph Camarata, a lawyer who represented several Cosby accusers in what was an often-delayed but ultimately successful defamation case against the comedian. “Putting a complete stay on a case can be absolutely detrimental to plaintiffs because it’s their burden to prove they’re telling the truth.”
Camarata says that a popular compromise for litigants is to land on some form of a limited, highly tailored stay that allows both sides to collect records and testimony from third party witnesses while waiting for a criminal case to conclude. And if a criminal case ends in conviction, that obviously favors plaintiffs. “You want a convicted felon sitting at the defense table across from you,” Camarata says.
David Ring, a plaintiff’s attorney who represented Evgeniya Chernyshova, the Italian actress whose testimony led to Weinstein’s rape conviction in California, says motions for delays in Combs’ civil cases could start appearing in the next couple months.
Some plaintiffs willingly agree to put their cases on hold for tactical reasons, he says. “A defendant can get a lot of free information from a civil case that he wouldn’t be entitled to get in a criminal case. For instance, he could take the deposition of a victim, with his lawyers asking seven hours worth of questions,” Ring explains. “Now, all of sudden, the defendant has all this information that otherwise wouldn’t exist in just a straight criminal case.”
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And waiting can have other advantages for plaintiffs. Michelle Simpson Tuegel, who represented more than two dozen former USA gymnasts who were sexually abused by coach Larry Nassar in their case against USA Gymnastics, says some civil cases can greatly benefit from evidence prosecutors obtain from witnesses who are much more willing to comply with subpoenas from federal investigators. “The criminal case can really identify information that maybe we couldn’t get as quickly,” Tuegel explains. Plus, federal investigators “may have more people cooperating and providing them statements further back in time, and that may fill in [plaintiffs’] cases where memories and cooperation of witnesses, the longer you go, the harder that can be.”
As Combs’ criminal case unfolds under an intense spotlight, here are the still-pending civil cases to watch:
Jane Doe, filed November 21, 2023
A Jane Doe filed a lawsuit against former Bad Boy Entertainment CEO Harve Pierre, alleging that while she worked as Pierre’s assistant, he “used his position of authority as [her] boss to groom, exploit, and sexually assault” her from 2016 to 2017.
The Jane Doe filed the suit under both New York’s Adult Survivors Act and an amendment to New York City’s Victims of Gender-Motivated Violence Protection Law, which allows revival of certain otherwise-expired claims until March 1, 2025. While the Jane Doe is not suing Combs directly, she is suing some of his companies, including Bad Boy Entertainment, Bad Boy Records and Combs Enterprises. The “defendants failed to properly supervise Pierre, properly supervise [Jane Doe], and protect [Jane Doe] from a known danger, and thereby enabled Pierre’s sexual assaults,” the woman’s lawsuit claimed.
Pierre and Combs’ legal teams have filed motions to dismiss the case and to compel the woman to use her legal name instead of a Jane Doe pseudonym. A judge has not yet ruled on the matter.
Joi Dickerson-Neal, filed November 23, 2023
Joi Dickerson-Neal was the first to sue Combs for sexual assault in the days following Ventura’s lawsuit. She filed on Thanksgiving, the final deadline to qualify for revival of her otherwise time-barred claim under New York’s Adult Survivors Act. Dickerson-Neal alleges she was on a break from college in 1991 when Combs drugged her, raped her and made a video of the attack that he shared with others. (Combs denies the allegations.)
Dickerson-Neal filed an amended complaint in May that dropped some of her claims, including one for revenge porn. Combs’ lawyers had argued the dismissed claims involved statutes enacted after 1991 and couldn’t be applied retroactively. Dickerson-Neal later dismissed Bad Boy Entertainment and Combs Enterprises as defendants.
A hearing is set for Sept. 25 on Combs’ motion to dismiss Dickerson-Neal’s surviving claims of assault and intentional infliction of emotional distress, leaving only her battery cause of action.
Liza Gardner, filed November 23, 2023
Liza Gardner also sued on Thanksgiving, claiming Combs and singer-songwriter Aaron Hall took turns raping her after they all met at a party thrown by record label MCA in Manhattan in 1990. She alleges Combs also found her the next day and “began assaulting and choking” her until she passed out, an apparent intimidation tactic. Alongside Combs and Hall, Gardner sued MCA and Uptown Records. An amended complaint filed Oct. 8 added Jodeci member DeVante Swing as a co-defendant who allegedly “aided and abetted” the assault by traveling with Gardner from North Carolina and not intervening to stop the alleged abuse. Combs denies the allegations. Hall and Swing did not respond to requests for comment.
Like Dickerson-Neal, Gardner first stepped forward as a Jane Doe but was later forced to reveal her identity. In subsequent filings, Gardner said she was only 16 years old at the time of the alleged assaults.
UMG Recordings, the parent company of MCA, challenged Gardner’s lawsuit on the grounds that she did not qualify for New York’s Adult Survivors Act because she was under the age of 18 at the time of the alleged rapes. Gardner and her lawyer, Tyrone Blackburn, said subsequent investigation proved the alleged assaults actually took place at Hall’s residence in New Jersey, so they moved her lawsuit to Bergen County in June citing a state law that allows victims of childhood sexual assault to bring claims up until age 55. The lawsuit was later moved to New Jersey federal court.
Jane Doe, filed December 6, 2023
A Jane Doe from Michigan sued Combs with claims he and his longtime lieutenant, Harve Pierre, lured her from the Detroit area to Manhattan on a private jet when she was a 17-year-old high school student in 2003. The unidentified woman alleges the men plied her with drugs and alcohol until she was nearly unconscious and then gang raped her that night at Combs’ Daddy’s House recording studio.
Attorneys Douglas Wigdor and Meredith Firetog, who represented Ventura, included several color photos snapped that night, including one showing the plaintiff sitting on Combs’ lap. The Jane Doe filed under New York City’s Victims of Gender-Motivated Violence Protection Law, which Combs and his companies have asked for dismissal for on the grounds that the the law is “pre-empted” by the expiration of other statewide look-back laws, namely the Child Victims Act that expired in August 2021.
A judge had not yet ruled on the dismissal motion. If Doe prevails and proceeds to trial, the court already has ruled she will have to use her real name.
Rodney Jones, filed February 26, 2024
Music producer Rodney “Lil Rod” Jones was the first man to sue Combs for sexual assault, alleging Combs repeatedly sexually harassed and groped him over the course of working on The Love Album: Off the Grid between September 2022 and November 2023.
Jones is also suing Combs for allegedly involving him in a sex trafficking and racketeering enterprise, claiming that he was forced to procure and transport sex workers for Combs, and observed Combs’ associates travel with illegal substances and supply Combs with drugs.
In late August, Combs’ team filed a motion to dismiss Jones’ complaint, calling it a “a salacious RICO conspiracy,” filled with “legally meaningless allegations and blatant falsehoods.” Jones has until Sept. 30 to respond to Combs’ motion to dismiss before a judge will issue a ruling.
Rodney Jones and Crystal McKinney are both suing Sean Combs for sexual assault.
Courtesy of Tyrone Blackburn; Gregory Pace/FilmMagic
Grace O’Marcaigh, filed April 4, 2024
During a family vacation in St. Martin in late 2022, stewardess Grace O’Marcaigh claimed Combs’ youngest son, Christian “King” Combs, 26, sexually assaulted her on board the yacht the family had chartered. O’Marcaigh claimed she physically had to fight off an “extremely aggressive” Christian, who stripped off his clothes, grabbed her arms while “trying to force [her] to perform oral copulation” on his “erect penis.”
While the primary claim is against Christian, O’Marcaigh is suing Sean Combs for aiding and abetting his son’s behavior and for having liability as the leaseholder on the rented yacht. Neither Combs nor Christian’s legal teams have formally responded to the filing, and the next court hearing is set for Dec. 10.
Crystal McKinney, filed May 21, 2024
Model Crystal McKinney attended a Sean John fashion show on the arm of designer Roberto Cavalli in February 2003 before Combs allegedly drugged and sexually assaulted the 22-year-old. McKinney claimed in the hours before the alleged assault, Combs showered her with compliments and made promises about her career during a private dinner at Cipriani. During an after-party at Combs’ recording studio, McKinney claimed that Combs pressured her to take a hit of a laced joint, before he led her into a bathroom and forced her to perform oral sex.
In the filing, McKinney said the assault made her “physically sick” and that she passed out a short time later, only to wake up in “shock to find herself in a taxicab.” McKinney “saved the unwashed clothing from that night … in a plastic wrap,” due to how traumatic the event was, her lawsuit added.
Like many other accusers, McKinney filed her suit under the Gender Motivated Violence Protection Act. Combs’ team responded to the former model’s complaint last week, seeking a dismissal on the grounds that her claim is time-barred and preempted by state law.
April Lampros, filed May 24, 2024
April Lampros was a college student and intern at Arista Records when she began an on-off relationship with Combs in early 1994. The rising music executive allegedly “love bombed” Lampros before sexually assaulting her on three occasions in 1995 and 1996, and once more around early 2001.
Lampros said her relationship with Combs came back to haunt her in 2023 when she learned Combs allegedly recorded a sex tape of her and showed it to multiple people in 1997, according to the lawsuit.
Combs’ lawyers have argued that the three leading causes of action in Lampros’ suit — battery, assault and negligent infliction of emotional distress — are beyond their original statute of limitations and not revivable under a provision of New York City’s Victims of Gender-Motivated Protection Law since the underlying VGMVPL statute wasn’t enacted by city officials until 2000. In a proposed amended complaint filed in September, Lampros dropped her legal claims related to the 1995 and 1996 alleged assaults, leaving only one cause of action regarding her claim that Combs “violently grabbed her and forced himself onto her” during a final meeting around the beginning of 2001. She claimed Combs broped her breast, kissed her on the neck and “touched her genitals against her will.”
A judge has not yet ruled on Combs’ motion to dismiss the entire lawsuit on the basis that the revival provision of the VGMVPL is pre-empted by New York state’s Adult Survivors Act, which provided a look-back window that expired on November 24, 2023.
Adria English, filed July 3, 2024
Former Hustler Club dancer and adult film star Adria English claimed that Combs sex trafficked her when she was hired to dance at his infamous White Party bashes. From 2004 to 2009, English claimed the mogul and his associates facilitated her travel to the Hamptons and Miami, where she was “forced to consume liquor and illicit narcotics.” Eventually, English claimed, she was expected to “engage in sexual intercourse” with party guests, claiming Combs “demanded” for her to perform such acts and later “congratulated” her for a “job well done at the end of the night,” according to her lawsuit.
English is suing Combs under the Gender Motivated Violence Protection Act. The former dancer’s legal team was granted a motion to issue a summons to Combs and other legal parties electronically in early August. Weeks later on Oct. 2, English’s attorneys Ariel Mitchell-Kidd and Steven Metcalf requested to withdraw from the case, citing a “fundamental disagreement” regarding “almost every aspect of the litigation, including settlement demands, causes of actions in the pleadings and [English’s] undermining behavior and questionable antics.”
Combs’ legal team has yet to respond formally to the suit.
Dawn Richard, filed September 10, 2024
Former Danity Kane and Diddy-Dirty Money member Dawn Richard became the second Bad Boy artist to sue their former label boss. She claimed Combs sexually harassed and assaulted her, and through a “pattern of coercive threats and displays of brutal violence” caused her to “engage in commercial sex acts.”
Combs’ legal team has yet to respond to Richard’s suit in court documents, but in media statements and at Combs’ bail hearing, his lawyers dismissed her claims as irrelevant to the sex trafficking and racketeering charges.
And as attorney Tuegel highlighted, evidence from Combs’ criminal trial could bolster Richard’s case. In the days after Richard’s filing, prosecutors alleged Combs had 128 phone contacts with Richard’s former bandmate Kalenna Harper, who later put out a statement that distanced herself from Richard’s experience.
Although Combs’ attorney downplayed the communications, saying it was “hardly obstruction,” Richard’s lawyer Lisa Bloom told Rolling Stone that she’d be “demanding those text and phone messages in our litigation and if they show witness tampering, we will add that claim to our lawsuit and aggressively pursue it.”
Thalia Graves, filed September 24, 2024
In a harrowing lawsuit filed by her high-profile attorney Gloria Allred, Graves claims Combs and an associate identified as Joseph “Big Joe” Sherman lured her to the Daddy’s House recording studio in Manhattan in 2001 and likely drugged her beverage, causing her to briefly lose consciousness. She alleges she awoke to find herself “bound and restrained,” and that Combs “mercilessly raped her, anally and vaginally.” Graves claims Sherman slammed her onto a table and forced his penis into her mouth.
Graves says in her complaint that she received extensive psychological treatment afterward but never recovered from the alleged attack. She claims any progress she made was “dramatically reversed” last November when her ex-boyfriend told her Combs and Sherman recorded the horrific rape and had shown the video to multiple men. In yet another startling new claim, her lawsuit alleges Combs and Sherman “have continued to disseminate the video, including by selling it as pornography, through the present.”
Combs’ reps, as well as Sherman, did not immediately respond to requests for comment from Rolling Stone.
Jane Doe, filed September 26, 2024
A Florida entrepreneur and model became the 12th person to accuse Combs of sexual assault, claiming he founder flew her to his various homes and would “consistently pressure” her to bring other men and women into the bedroom despite her protests.
The woman claimed that she first met Combs overseas while traveling in fall of 2020, which led to an ongoing relationship that ended in July 2024. Over the course of four years, the woman said that Combs’ and his associates would book her travel to and from the mogul’s homes in Los Angeles, Miami, New York and other cities, the employees allegedly using “coercive and harassing language to compel her to comply.” Each visit, Combs “would make her ‘perform a show’ for him and would ply her with alcohol and substances until she passed out—she would wake up with bruising and injuries but with no recollection of how she sustained her injuries,” the lawsuit claimed.
The woman said she grew fearful of Combs, who allegedly tracked her location, recorded their sexual encounters and insisted on making the woman financially dependent on him. Combs’ reps did not immediately respond to request for comment from Rolling Stone.
Six Anonymous Doe Plaintiffs, filed October 14, 2024
Houston lawyer Tony Buzbee filed six complaints nearly simultaneously on Oct. 14 after promising a wave of lawsuits during a press conference with his co-counsel, Andrew Van Arsdale, from California-based AVA Law Group. The lawsuits were filed on behalf of two Jane Does and four John Does, including a man who says he was 16 years old at the time of his alleged assault at one of Combs’ notorious “white parties” in 1998. The John Doe marked the first male accuser to step forward with a claim he was abused as a minor. He alleges Combs cornered him at the Hamptons-based party and ordered him to “drop his pants” and expose his penis so Combs could “inspect it.” When he resisted, Combs allegedly responded, “Don’t you want to break into the business?” The lawsuit claims Combs grabbed the teen’s genitals and began “squeezing.”
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One of the Jane Does who sued Oct. 14 alleges she was raped by Combs in a Manhattan Marriott in 2004 when she was 19 years old. The other Jane Doe alleges Combs picked her out of a crowd at a 1995 promo party for The Notorious B.I.G.’s music video “One More Chance” and violently sexually assaulted and threatened her in a bathroom.
The three other John Does who sued Oct. 14 say their assaults took place in 2006, 2008 and 2021. One alleges his attack unfolded in a stockroom at Macy’s Herald Square during a promotional event for Combs’ Sean John apparel line.
Combs’ attorneys denied the accusations in a statement provided to Rolling Stone. “The press conference and 1-800 number that preceded today’s barrage of filings were clear attempts to garner publicity,” the statement read. “Mr. Combs and his legal team have full confidence in the facts, their legal defenses, and the integrity of the judicial process. In court, the truth will prevail: that Mr. Combs has never sexually assaulted anyone—adult or minor, man or woman.”
Seven Anonymous Doe Plaintiffs, filed October 20, 2024
Three women and four men filed lawsuits against Combs in New York on Oct. 20. The anonymous plaintiffs — who all filed with a John or Jane Doe pseudonym — are represented by attorney Tony Buzbee. The filings brought the total number of suits against Combs to more than two dozen.
Four of the accusers claim Combs sexually assaulted them in 2022. One man, a personal trainer, claimed he was drugged on the night the Bad Boy Entertainment founder was honored with the Lifetime Achievement Award at the BET Awards in June 2022. At the after-party celebration, the man claimed his unconscious body was passed around “like a party favor for [Combs’ guests] sexual enjoyment.”
A 17-year-old aspiring singer claimed he met Combs during a penthouse hotel party in Manhattan in 2022, where he was allegedly drugged and sexually assaulted.
One lawsuit comes from a woman who claimed she was 13 years old when she was allegedly drugged and sexually assaulted by Combs and an unnamed celebrity following the MTV Video Music Awards in 2000.
Two John Doe Plaintiffs, filed October 28, 2024
Two John Doe plaintiffs sued Combs with allegations the music mogul sexually assaulted them on separate occasions while they were aspiring performers seeking a break in their music careers. One of the plaintiffs claims he was 10 years old in 2005 when a consultant hired by his parents delivered him to a hotel room where he was given an allegedly laced soda and left alone with Combs. The plaintiff claims Combs forced his penis into his mouth shortly before he lost consciousness. He claims he later woke up with his pants undone and pain in his anus and buttocks.
The other John Doe plaintiff alleges he was 17 years old in 2008 when he participated in a three-day audition for Combs’ TV series, Making the Band. He alleges that on the first day, Combs began groping and fondling him during a private meeting while asking how he would handle situations of “sexual pressure” in the music industry. He says that a day later, during another private interview, Combs allegedly forced him to perform oral sex and sodomized him.
“As we’ve said before, Mr. Combs cannot respond to every new publicity stunt, even in response to claims that are facially ridiculous or demonstrably false. Mr. Combs and his legal team have full confidence in the facts and the integrity of the judicial process. In court, the truth will prevail: that Mr. Combs never sexually assaulted or trafficked anyone—man or woman, adult or minor,” Combs’ media team said in an Oct. 28 email.