Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Crime Stories with Nancy Grace. A Ditty knife attack.
Speaker 2 (00:08):
That's right, A victim describes ambushing Combs with a knife,
attacking him with a knife after he allegedly rapes her,
and Diddy paranoia. Now did he claiming prosecutors are in
disguise sparring on him in his jail cell as he
(00:30):
claims I'm not a monster? As he files a fifty
million dollar lawsuit against a witness. Now think about it, JFK,
RFK MLK and Diddy Yes, Demands mounting for the secret
did he files to be released? I'm Nancy Grace, this
(00:51):
is Crime Stories. Thank you for being with us.
Speaker 3 (00:55):
Did he hits back? A fifty million dollar defamation suit
filed by the music Moguli against grand jury witness who
claims to have infamous freakoff tapes lawsuits?
Speaker 1 (01:05):
Lawsuit?
Speaker 2 (01:06):
I want to talk about a ditty knife attack unless
rape victim claim she was gang raped at the hands
of Ditty, a revenge rape after she brings up to
Pac Shakur's murder and after that says she goes to
stab Ditty straight out to Crime online dot Com investigative
(01:28):
reporter Sydney Summer, what happened?
Speaker 4 (01:31):
Ben she that's correct. Ashley Parham claimed that she was
attacked at a friend zone. She made this comment to
a friend a man she was kind of seeing, and
she claims he lured her to his home knowing that
Ditty and these other men would be there and attack her,
so she claimed she was gang raped. She claims Ditty
attacked her viciously with a TV remote and after that attack,
(01:55):
she claimed, all of the men who were involved act
like nothing happened. She walked out into the backyard at
this home, found Diddy and his associates smoking casually in
the backyard. He makes a comment to her, I'm surprised
you can walk. He claims that he drugged her like
a horse, and she had already armed herself with a
(02:16):
kitchen knife because she's in fear. She couldn't find her clothes,
she couldn't find her purse, her cell phone, and she's
at this man's house that she doesn't know very well,
so she arms herself with a kitchen knife. She confronts
these men out in the backyard and with Ditty's comments
to her, she was angry and she attacked him with
a knife. She claims that he begged for his life
(02:38):
he was scared, and this thought just came to her,
like this is so insane, this is so crazy, I
can't do this. So instead of stabbing him, she takes off,
running to a neighbor's house, and that neighbor then called
law enforcement.
Speaker 1 (02:53):
Joining me.
Speaker 2 (02:54):
Lynn Shaw, founder or director Linz Warriors. Their sole effort
as a nonprofit is to stop sex trafficking and help
sex assault victims. You know, when Shaw, when I hear that,
my blood boils because I have investigated and prosecuted so
many rape cases, vicious rape cases were After the rape,
(03:17):
the rapist just acts like no big deal, according to her,
And of course, Shawn Combs is innocent until proven guilty
after a gang rape, including by using a TV remote
on this victim. Shawn Combs and his gang is standing
outside smoking, acting like nothing happened.
Speaker 5 (03:37):
Well, usual behavior from people like this, these monsters. Nancy.
My question would be she ran to a neighbor's house,
the neighbor called law enforcement. I always go to where
is the follow up to hold the accountability what happened there?
And I'm going to go back to also, were there
any women there that were watching this that could have
(03:58):
helped her? Who could speak out because I have to
say something. So many people are complicit here, We're not
getting to the bottom of that list. You know, where
was this Christina Korn? Where were the other women and girls?
Speaker 1 (04:11):
I'm going to say girls.
Speaker 5 (04:12):
Because I maintained eventually, eventually we are going to find
out about minors. I stand by that to.
Speaker 2 (04:18):
Sidney Sumner right now. Yes, Lynn Shaw is right. Were
there other witnesses? Yeah, I doubt they're saying anything because
they were part.
Speaker 1 (04:27):
Of a gang according to this witness.
Speaker 2 (04:30):
And you know what, I smelled, Joshua River, high profile
lawyer and joined me out of LA jurisdiction. I smell witnesses,
witnesses that can either cough up about this knife attack
on Ditty or choose to be co defendants.
Speaker 6 (04:48):
I don't know what witnesses exactly are going to materialize
after this whole thing. I mean, we're talking about somebody
making allegations from decades ago. What exactly are they going
to walk into court with?
Speaker 7 (05:01):
Is my question.
Speaker 6 (05:02):
And Joe, it's no wonder that people are coming out
of the woodwork decades and decades later, because it's so
easy to do at this point when you've got a
man in prison, who seriously can't defend himself.
Speaker 2 (05:12):
Okay, I don't know if something's wrong with my ISB,
but none of these people are gonna walk into court
struggling in casually. They're going to be dragged into court
or else they can choose to be a co defendant.
Speaker 1 (05:29):
And when you say, who are the witnesses?
Speaker 2 (05:31):
For one, Ashley Parham, the woman you're just hearing about
that says she was raped at the hands of Diddy
and was so upset she went after.
Speaker 1 (05:40):
Him with a knife.
Speaker 2 (05:41):
And let me just say, doctor Sherry Schwartz joining us
renowned forensic psychologist, doctor Sherry. The fact that she is
admitting to trying to stab Sean Combs after an alleged rape,
to me, gives her story a certain air of credit ability,
because usually witnesses don't admit they committed and aggravated assault
(06:07):
with a knife. That's right.
Speaker 8 (06:09):
The fact that she is telling on herself effectively that
she went after him with a knife, and it sounds
like intended to do him harm before her senses caught
up with her and she went for help, she's implicating
herself in a very serious crime.
Speaker 2 (06:25):
The alleged knife attack on Shawn Combe's coming to light
as he files a fifty million dollar lawsuit. Now, wait, wait,
Shawn Combs is answering up to nearly fifty potential lawsuits
plus a massive federal indictment charging sex trafficking, and he
(06:48):
is suing for fifty million dollars.
Speaker 1 (06:50):
What listen?
Speaker 3 (06:51):
While Sean Diddy Combs has been sued forty two times
in just over a year, the disgraced mogul has just
filed one of his own. Combs has logged a fifthty
million dollar defamation lawsuit against grand jury witness Courtney Burgess
and his lawyer Ariel Mitchell. Combs accuses Burgess of pretending
to have proof that mister Combs engaged in heines acts,
knowing no such proof exists. Referring to sex tapes, Burgess
(07:15):
claims depict Combs sexually assaulting celebrities and miners.
Speaker 2 (07:18):
A fifty million dollar lawsuit. I would think that would
be filed against song comes, but it's the reverse, Okay,
Sidney Sumner, what's happening, Nancy?
Speaker 4 (07:29):
Shawn Combs is claiming that this is a defamation suit.
He's claiming that people are pretending to have evidence of
these fruit offs that doesn't exist. He claims that Burgess,
who says he has eight tapes depicting Combs sexually assaulting
celebrities miners. Paul claims those don't exist. In Burgess is
(07:51):
lying and it is damaging his reputation. It's painting the
jury pool. It's causing irreferable harm.
Speaker 2 (07:59):
Well, let's take a listen. Let's hear it from the
horse's mouth. This is what Burgess tells us too.
Speaker 9 (08:09):
Sex A lot of celebrities, people getting high drunk, like
in a trance because one one's on the table, he's
eating off you understand, and they was you know, I'm
looking at just go a street naked and she don't
feel like she embarrassed with anything. Water poured on what
it was tubbs.
Speaker 7 (08:29):
Yes, it seemed like there was more in the trans
and more than drunk.
Speaker 9 (08:33):
Because you're drunk, you use it slurn.
Speaker 2 (08:35):
That's Courtney Burgess describing exactly what is in the tape
that he has.
Speaker 1 (08:40):
Quote.
Speaker 2 (08:41):
It depicts sex people getting high drunk, uh, stuck in
a trance because one's on the table and eating off us.
Speaker 1 (08:50):
I'm looking at this.
Speaker 2 (08:51):
Girl naked, not embarrassed her anything. Water poured all over
her tubs? Yes, it was more than a trance. It
was more than drunk. What is he saying, Sydney, Nancy.
Speaker 4 (09:06):
I think he's saying that it appears the people in
these tapes aren't fully aware of what's going on. This
woman who's completely naked in this video has no shame
about covering her body. These people just don't. They're not
fully there. Maybe they're drugged, maybe they're on a combination
of things. But Burgess is saying it does not appear
(09:28):
that Sean Combe's partners in these stepscapes are aware that
they're having sex or that they're being recorded.
Speaker 1 (09:37):
I don't think that's having sex, Sydney.
Speaker 2 (09:39):
When someone is raping you and you're passed out, drunk
or high, commentos, that's not sex.
Speaker 1 (09:47):
That is right without consent. Listen.
Speaker 10 (09:50):
Burgess maintains that he is telling the truth about receiving
a flash drive containing the video files and Porter's manuscript
through an intermediary for Jess, calling diddyel for having the
nerve to sue when he will quote rotten jail for
what he's done. His lawyer Ariel Mitchell, who claims to
have seen the tapes, stands by Burgess, calling Comb's suit
(10:10):
a pathetic ploy to silence victims and plans to counter.
Speaker 2 (10:14):
Sue crime stories with Nancy Grace.
Speaker 1 (10:26):
Here's my question.
Speaker 2 (10:27):
Shawn Combe's diddy is suing Burgess and his lawyer, claiming
that they fabricated the whole story about tapes of frea coffs.
Speaker 1 (10:40):
Free coffs basically rapes.
Speaker 2 (10:42):
On video, So if they don't exist, then why is
agna Fello demanding they be handed over?
Speaker 1 (10:52):
Listen?
Speaker 10 (10:53):
Attorney Mark Agniphilo is demanding that prosecutors hand over multiple
videos of Shawan Combe's infamous freak off, claiming the tapes
prove his innocence. Prosecutors have described the tapes as elaborate
and produced sex performances, but agna Philo claims they depict
private sexual activity between Combs and Cassie Ventura, who, he says,
(11:14):
quote not only consented, but thoroughly enjoyed herself.
Speaker 2 (11:18):
And there he goes climbing the tape show that all
of the alleged rapes were consensual, including Cassie Ventura. Now,
remember Cassie Ventura was caught on video running down a
hotel corridor a public hotel, with Comb's chasing her in
a towel because she didn't want to return to a
free cough according to her, and this video bears that out.
Speaker 1 (11:42):
So here's my question, Josh Ritter.
Speaker 2 (11:46):
If the tapes don't exist, why is Agnafello and come
is making such a big deal about getting them return
handed over to the defense.
Speaker 6 (11:55):
Because what is the government doing holding on to them
the government? This is not how it works. The government
doesn't get to say we have a bunch of evidence,
we have evidence showing you performing certain crimes, and not
turn that over. He has a right to have that,
He has a right to demand it from the government.
Speaker 1 (12:10):
You like to say, you don't like saying it. A
lot of people don't.
Speaker 2 (12:17):
Video of him performing certain crimes you mean gang raping
alleged victims shall they're drugged and pass out?
Speaker 1 (12:25):
Say it. That's what's alleged. That's what he's defending against.
Speaker 2 (12:29):
It doesn't taste good, does it. It feels bad because
it is bad.
Speaker 6 (12:33):
And agna Philo is saying, if you've got it, then
then produce it. If you're going to speak about having it,
then actually come with the goods. Instead of telling everybody
what you've got and tainting the jury pool, then actually
show up with the goods and the evidence and we'll
take a look for ourselves and see exactly what these
videotapes show.
Speaker 3 (12:53):
Did He insist he is not a monster, and he
pushes back against an alleged media frenzy by individuals seeking
to Robin at his expense, claims the Rappers attorneys.
Speaker 2 (13:04):
As Seawan Combs files a fifty million dollar lawsuit. More
apparently baby oil rearing its ugly head again.
Speaker 3 (13:16):
Listen, did he accuser using the pseudonym? Nicole, who says
she had a four year relationship with Sean Combs, says
she last saw him in July of twenty twenty four.
Nicole claims Comb shoved two pills down her throat, shortly
after which she passed out. She says she woke up
to their hotel room destroyed, surrounded by empty bottles of
baby oil and wine, food containers, towels, and a hookah.
(13:38):
Nicole says she immediately left with no word from Combs
until receiving an invitation to see him in New York
the day before his arrest.
Speaker 1 (13:45):
Wow, Sidney Sumner, what is she saying?
Speaker 2 (13:47):
And how does baby oil keep popping up throughout this investigation?
Speaker 4 (13:52):
We don't know about the baby oil?
Speaker 11 (13:54):
Nancy but this woman, Nicole filed an anonymous lawfood as
a Jane Doe back last year, and she claims that
over four years, Ditty repeatedly drugged her and raped her
while she was drugged over.
Speaker 4 (14:09):
Their relationship, and in one instance, she even became pregnant
with his child. She claims at that point an associate
of Ditty, a woman who she never really identified, called
her and berated her to have an abortion to get
rid of this baby. She ended up carrying anyway, and
spent months avoiding Ditty's contact, but he would always suck
(14:31):
her in again.
Speaker 2 (14:32):
You know, doctor Sherry Schwartz, even if not her real name,
Nicole is telling the truth.
Speaker 1 (14:39):
I have no reason to doubt her.
Speaker 2 (14:40):
She's going to be attacked and torn to shreds on
cross exam. I'll tell you why, because she says these
rapes occurred over a period of time, and the defense
is going.
Speaker 1 (14:51):
To argue, then why did you go back?
Speaker 2 (14:55):
Very often, the psychopathy of a rapist and his victim
is something very hard to understand, but what she is
saying is mirrored by other witnesses.
Speaker 8 (15:09):
Yes, And one of the interesting things about this case
and unique about this case in particular, is the theme
of Ditty and the power in that context, and so
for many of these women, and there's no doubt that
he's very charismatic as well.
Speaker 1 (15:27):
For these women, there was probably.
Speaker 8 (15:30):
Some incentive to go back. And I don't mean that
in a way that they are to share the blame
for what happened to them, because the victim isn't to blame.
But when you're dealing with somebody who's so charismatic and powerful,
and maybe we don't know, maybe says, hey, I have
a tape.
Speaker 2 (15:48):
Why do you keep saying Ditty's charismatic? When I look
at Ditty, I say Satan himself. I mean, all of
these witnesses cannot be lying and only one telling the truth.
I mean, he's got over forty lawsuits plus a federal
six trafficking indictment that's as thick as the Bible thrown
(16:09):
at him.
Speaker 1 (16:10):
And you think he's charismatic.
Speaker 8 (16:13):
Well, I don't necessarily think he's charismatic, But when you're
dealing with somebody that has antisocial traits, psychopathic traits, then
you would be very surprised at how charismatic and convincing
they can be to lure their victims back. In especially
if there's some sort of emotional connection.
Speaker 2 (16:33):
Well, what about this money, power and control? According to
a lot of these victims, excuse me, alleged victims, He's innocent.
Speaker 1 (16:41):
Until proven guilty.
Speaker 2 (16:43):
These victims say they thought their career in show business
would be over, that he would destroy them if they
didn't go along.
Speaker 1 (16:54):
But this whole baby oil theme continues.
Speaker 2 (16:57):
To rear its ugly head. Here there is a when
is corroborating what Nicole says?
Speaker 1 (17:03):
Listen.
Speaker 12 (17:04):
Several accusers have described Combe's excessive use of baby oil x.
Nicole claims Comb's encouraged her to coat herself in warmed
baby oil before their encounters, and the mogul could go
through an entire bottle in less than five minutes. Former
assistant Philip Pines claims the floors were always slippery while
(17:25):
he cleaned up Combs's Wild King Knights. Pine says there
were often rings of oil around the bathtub and he
could feel oil in the water while he drained a
used bath. Pine says he never wants to smell that
stuff again.
Speaker 1 (17:40):
Oh okay, wait a minute.
Speaker 2 (17:45):
Nicole, not her real name, describes waking up after being
sex assaulted with the whole area strown, the rooms strown
with empty baby oil bottles. Now, a former assistant, I
get us. The defense lawyer Joshua Ridder would say, crawled
the woodwork like he's a roach. No, I disagree with that. Look,
(18:10):
all your witnesses are not going to be nuns in
priests and virgins, Ridder. These witnesses are corroborating each other.
He claims the floors were slippery after he cleaned up
after a wild king night.
Speaker 1 (18:25):
I don't even know want to know what that is.
Speaker 2 (18:27):
He says, there were rings Okay Lynn Shaw, rings of
oil around the bathtub, that he could still feel the
oil in the water while draining a bath that he
can't stand to smell baby oil. That's disgusting.
Speaker 5 (18:46):
Listen, we have to talk about the victims, all of
these victims coming together giving us similar stories that don't
even know each other. Can we please go back to
searching about the victims, talking about them, because I'll tell
you why this is so important. All of the women
and men, girls and boys we work with at the
Warriors are depending on this case. They're asking me on
(19:09):
a daily basis, will Dirty Diddy be held accountable? And
waiting and waiting and waiting for this. So let's talk
about accountability. We've seen kicking, we've seen strangling, We've seen
baby oil bathtubs. Let's get to it and hold this
guy accountable. What else do we have to see in here?
Speaker 2 (19:26):
Apparently defense attorney Agna Fello is also on the baby
oil bandwagon, and he really stuck his foot in his
mouth in an interview with our friend Harvey Levin.
Speaker 13 (19:37):
They call them freak offs. But you know, back when
I was a kid in the late seventies, they were
called threesomes.
Speaker 6 (19:43):
If these are genuinely threesomes, how do you explain the
thousand bottles of baby oil?
Speaker 13 (19:50):
I don't know where the number one thousand came the
US attorney set. I can't imagine it's thousands. I mean,
you know, and I'm not really sure what the baby
oil has to do with anything.
Speaker 6 (19:59):
They're essential saying it's a lubricant for an orgy.
Speaker 13 (20:02):
I guess I don't know what you need A thousand
one bottle of baby oil goes a long way. I
don't know what you need to need a thousand for.
I mean, he has a big house. He buys in bulk,
you know, I think they have costcos in every place
where he has a home. I mean, have you sat
in the parking lot of a Costco and see what
people walk out.
Speaker 11 (20:17):
Of there with?
Speaker 1 (20:18):
Not a thousand bottles of baby oil? I don't think
it was a thousand.
Speaker 3 (20:20):
I think it was.
Speaker 13 (20:21):
I think it was a let's just say it's a line, okay.
Speaker 1 (20:24):
From our friends at TMZ.
Speaker 2 (20:25):
That's our friend Harvey Levin and having a field day
with Combs, a defense attorney Agna Fello. Okay, I hardly
think Shawn Comes is sitting out in his minivan outside
the Costco buying in bulk. But hey, maybe he is,
because one of these witnesses says Comes goes through.
Speaker 1 (20:42):
Multiple bottles of baby oil.
Speaker 2 (20:44):
In just a minute, and speaking of baby oil. Did
not think in law school that I was going to
be talking about that joining me outside of Shawn Comes
aka Ditties Miami mansion.
Speaker 1 (20:58):
Remember, he paid that whole.
Speaker 2 (21:00):
Thing off because he's going to use it as collateral
to get get out of jail on bond. Robert Crispin,
former Task Force dea, now private investigator and owner of
Crispin Special Investigations. You're standing out in front of the mansion.
Now that's the mansion where apparently a thousand bottles of
(21:22):
baby oil were confiscated.
Speaker 14 (21:25):
Yeah, it's the white gates right behind me, and it's
in fabulous Star Island in Miami Beach. It's the enclave
to amazing millionaires and billionaires and hedge fund people. Certainly
not a Diddy behavior category, but it's fifty five acres
(21:45):
of complete paradise with amazing views of Kibiskaine and amazing
views of the skyline of Miami.
Speaker 1 (21:53):
It's incredible. Crispin.
Speaker 2 (21:55):
Did I ask you about Diddy's view of the skyline?
Speaker 1 (22:00):
No, I didn't.
Speaker 2 (22:02):
I asked you about a criminal investigation, Crispin. Weren't you
with the Federal Task Force in the Department of Justice
with the deea homicide, crimes against children and more. I
don't care about the keeps Game skyline. I'm asking you.
Are you in front of where a thousand bottles of
(22:23):
baby oil were confiscated along with a treasure trove of
digital evidence we believe against Sean Combs.
Speaker 14 (22:33):
Right behind those white gates behind my left shoulders, where
it all went down is where agents pulled troths and
troths of evidence out of there, including those bottles of
baby oil.
Speaker 1 (22:43):
You know what, You.
Speaker 2 (22:44):
Don't have to say it like it tastes bad, because
that's going to be an element of proof. And you
cannot go in front of a jury and act like
you disbelieve it or you discount it. Because these women
are describing waking up with pain in their vaginas and anuses,
surrounded by empty bottles of baby oil. Don't laugh it off, Crispin.
(23:09):
But Crispin, while are you there? You're in front of
Denny's mansion in Miami. Isn't that where he intended to
stay if he had made bond and had planned to
fly to Miami from Manhattan.
Speaker 14 (23:25):
Yeah? Actually, he said that he was going to stay
right here in his Miami mansion and he'd wear a
GPS tracker and any of his travel would be tracked.
And this is it. This is where he would stay.
But I can tell you if from talking to some neighbors,
that's certainly not what they wanted. Some of these neighbors
told me today that they were subjected to two in
(23:46):
three day and night long parties going on at this mansion.
Speaker 7 (23:50):
Right behind me.
Speaker 14 (23:51):
And when they talked about they're happy when he didn't
get a bond, I don't see anybody crying that their
neighborhood is not the center of all this attention and
wild parties that last two and three nights long.
Speaker 2 (24:04):
Much less the Feds closing in in a major raid
on that place. So you state that the neighbors around
that multimillion dollar mansion they're in Miami knew that there
would be three and four day parties. That's certainly putting
perfume on the pig. The Feds call it free coughs
(24:25):
aka rapes. So did they not suspect.
Speaker 1 (24:30):
That criminal activity was taking place?
Speaker 14 (24:32):
You know, I got to tell you I had a
conversation with one of those people today about that, and
you know why the police never came. And I'll be
honest with you. You know, you got a lot of money,
you party. Some people party more than other people. If
you got a lot of money, sometimes you party more
than people who don't have a lot of money. But
these are such sprawling estates that what goes on inside
(24:55):
these houses you're probably just not going to hear. With
the hurricane windows and the size of the property here.
This is home to, like I said, fifty five acres
of paradise, and there's only about fifty houses here, and
they're you know, they're sprawled out, so they got an
acre acre and a half between them, so you're really
knocking to hear things. When you go back inside and
(25:16):
Diddy's backyard, it overlooks the water and it's the first
house when you come over the bridge on your left.
So it's not like he was deep inside this development.
He was right at the entrance, so there wasn't a
whole lot of people that were going to see anything.
It was his backyard, the water. And then three ninety five.
Speaker 3 (25:37):
The disgrace for rapper and music mogul Sean He Diddy
Combs maintains his innocence and it's the slew of sexisault
allegations and federal sex trafficking charges.
Speaker 1 (25:49):
Tonight, we were.
Speaker 2 (25:50):
Joining you not only from New York, but we are
also camped outside Diddy's Miami mansion.
Speaker 1 (25:55):
But first I want you to hear.
Speaker 2 (25:57):
From MTV's Make the Band. This is where Sean comes
is brating a woman about getting fat thing.
Speaker 1 (26:17):
Okay, some of you might laugh at that. I think
that's no big deal.
Speaker 2 (26:21):
That, by the way, from our friends at MTV on
Making the Band, But it's just another way of degrading women.
I want to watch this one more time. Take a
look at the look on her face.
Speaker 1 (26:36):
A thing, Llanita, what's your stomach looking like? For real?
Are you feeling a little thick fat?
Speaker 2 (26:48):
You're like a burger away, Doctor Schwartz, could you please
weigh in on this. This has just come to lie
and there's so much more. And I know Joshua Ritter's
going to scream to high have and that doesn't prove anything,
And he's right. It doesn't prove sex trafficking, but it
(27:08):
does prove a casual cruelty, a nonsalant abusive nature toward women.
Speaker 1 (27:18):
It absolutely does.
Speaker 8 (27:19):
And while it may not prove sex trafficking, it shows
a pattern of behavior toward women and his general view
of women.
Speaker 1 (27:27):
Which is negative.
Speaker 8 (27:29):
And also he knows this is being filmed and is
going to be broadcast, and he does it anyway knowing
that this is going to humiliate this woman.
Speaker 2 (27:38):
Rider.
Speaker 1 (27:38):
I guess you're going to client it proves nothing.
Speaker 6 (27:40):
Right, Burgers and baby oil don't prove anything. Listen, you
can call him a jerk. You can say he's been
a bad guy for a very long time. You can
say he's been even exploitive of people. But that's none
of that are crimes. All of this sounds awful, and
we can talk about it all day long, and MTV
can exploit it and and Harvey Levin can get into
(28:02):
the baby oil, but none of it is evidence in court.
And that's my whole point. Is the government better becoming
with something better than baby oil and burgers if they
want to convict a man for the serious crimes that
they have alleged against him.
Speaker 1 (28:15):
Rid or look around to you. Do you think you're
in court? Do you see a judge and a black
robe in front of you? No, you do not. You
are in a studio.
Speaker 2 (28:24):
You are in a TV studio joining us from California.
We're not bound by the rules of evidence right now.
We're talking about the truth, and the truth is he
was demeaning and abusive to women. Will that video I
just showed you come into court. No. And I wouldn't
try to bring it into court because I would lose
(28:45):
credibility because I know it's inadmissible and it's not relevant. However,
the baby oil is a whole another can of worms,
because one victim after the next, after the next say
that they were subjected to coating themselves sometimes in five
five one two through for five bottles of baby oil
(29:09):
before they were sex assaulted. Again comes innocent until proven
guilty and speaking of baby oil. Back to the Miami mansion.
Robert Crispin standing by, owner of Crispin Special Investigations, former
fed in that jurisdiction. You know now that I'm thinking
about where you are, Crispin Diddy paid down the mortgage.
(29:34):
I think he paid it off, correct me if I'm wrong,
Sidney Sumner, so he could use that house as collateral
if he were allowed bail.
Speaker 1 (29:43):
He was not allowed bail.
Speaker 2 (29:44):
That means that thing is paid off in full, multi
multimillion dollar home. I think the victims are going to
go after that in lawsuits. That's going to be attached
to these lawsuits. I mean, tell me about it. How
big is it?
Speaker 1 (29:57):
How much is it worth now?
Speaker 3 (29:59):
Nancy?
Speaker 14 (29:59):
It's valued right now at about forty eight million dollars.
But he paid off the eighteen million thinking it's going
to tell the judge, hey, I'm putting up my entire house. Well,
that was a really bad decision on his lawyer's part.
Because there's a thing in a federal government called forfeiture,
and the government is in the business of making money
as well, So that house is going to be forfeited.
(30:23):
I can guarantee you that house is going to the government.
Speaker 2 (30:25):
Legal documents we obtained show that he paid off the
eighteen million dollars that he still owed on that Miami
property so he could use his collateral in the bail plea.
The home is completely unencumbered now. I think, as Crispin
is pointing out, that was the home he intended to
(30:48):
use as his Heidi.
Speaker 1 (30:50):
Hole if he made bond.
Speaker 2 (30:53):
And again, Crispin, the significance of this mansion is guns, ammunition, drugs,
and large amounts of baby oil and lubricant related to
violent sex events dubbed freak coughs were.
Speaker 1 (31:11):
Found there in the mansion behind.
Speaker 3 (31:14):
You exactly, Nancy.
Speaker 14 (31:16):
The white gates behind me was ground zero for all
this nefarious and criminal behavior. And when the Feds came
showing up on the door and took all that evidence,
the baby oil, the electronic evidence, this is everything that
got him indicted.
Speaker 3 (31:36):
Crime stories with Nancy Grace, Diddy's defense is now claiming
the government is spying on the wrapper behind bars. The
attorney's alleged prosecutors arranged the search of Comb's jail cell
not to look for contraband, but for evidence. They insist.
Federal investigators are posing his prison guards to listen in
(31:58):
and record all Comb's phone calls, including those with his attorneys,
to then furnish the recordings to the US Attorney's office.
Speaker 1 (32:05):
Didy, Nooya, that's right. Diddy's paranoia knows no heights.
Speaker 2 (32:10):
I'm just wondering if rich and powerful people are more
paranoid than the.
Speaker 1 (32:14):
Rest of us.
Speaker 2 (32:15):
Joining me right now a special guest, doctor Dwayne Hendrix,
former associate warden at MDC Metropolitan Detention Center housing Diddy.
He is also founder and president of a New Daylight Foundation.
He is the author of who Are You See It?
Speaker 1 (32:32):
Say It? Seese It? Doctor Hendrix.
Speaker 2 (32:35):
I could go on about your resume, but can we
get right down to it. Sean Comb's now claiming that
prosecutors are in disguise planted within the MDC to spy
on him in his jail cell.
Speaker 1 (32:55):
This is your home away from home, MDC. What about it?
Speaker 2 (32:58):
Did you ever super supervise any special offs with the
prosecutors dressed up in disguise to spy on a jailmate,
not at all.
Speaker 15 (33:10):
There are not enough resources for agents to be posed
as correction officers to despise specifically on mister Cone's The
allegations are far fetched.
Speaker 7 (33:21):
I will call them hell. Mary.
Speaker 15 (33:23):
I believe he's getting the same attention in all other
offenders that are waiting trial or waiting to be sent
to a.
Speaker 7 (33:30):
Prison, just like anyone else. Now, I will say, uh,
there are operations.
Speaker 15 (33:36):
There are special operations that does occur in federal facilities
and state fiel facilities and county facilities all across the country. However,
it would have this operation would have to go all
the way up through the DJ and get clearance for
you know what we call Office of Enforcement operations process. However,
(34:01):
I just feel like he's paranoid and I just don't understand.
Speaker 7 (34:06):
I don't think he knows where the.
Speaker 15 (34:08):
Next a shot at him is going to come from,
because he's done so many people, done so many people wrong,
and so awsu to come in his way.
Speaker 7 (34:20):
In a paranoid state, really just trying to figure out
where the next shot at him.
Speaker 2 (34:24):
Is going to come Okay, hold on, hold on, uh,
doctor Hendrix, let me just correct you. Okay, nobody's taking
shots at Diddy. He's accused of sex trafficking. There are
nearly fifty civil lawsuits against him by alleged rape victims. Okay,
it's the opposite than what you're saying. Now, Now hold
(34:46):
on a moment, let me understand this.
Speaker 1 (34:51):
Nobody needs to.
Speaker 2 (34:51):
Dress up in disguise to spy on Seawan comes he's
in jail. The phone call are monitored. Everybody knows that.
That's why when an inmate calls me on the phone,
which they do to give me information, it's a collect
call and you hear a recording saying this call is
(35:13):
from the MDC. It's being recorded. Hello, So nobody is
tapping the phones. They're openly being monitored. And as far
as spying into his jail cell, that's why there aren't walls.
Speaker 1 (35:27):
Isn't that true, doctor Hendrix? So you can look in
there whenever you feel like it to see what did
he's up to.
Speaker 2 (35:34):
Nobody's spying on him. It's jail, doctor Hendrix, right, And.
Speaker 7 (35:40):
You know there's a thing of what we call sound
correctional judgment.
Speaker 15 (35:43):
I mean, obviously you wouldn't wake up an a fender
in the middle of the night to go search us.
Speaker 7 (35:48):
Now, unless there was a specific reason to do so.
Speaker 15 (35:51):
And like you said, all the calls are monitored, and
when he's actually on the phone with his attorneys, he's
not on in a inmate phone. He's on a phone
a counselor or a case manager or another staff member's office,
and the staff are not an earshot of the conversation.
And he is able to have that conversation with his
(36:11):
attorneys without staff or others monitoring a legal what we
call a legal call between him and his attorneys that
are assisting him in his case. He has no rights
in terms of privacy. I mean staff can actually come and.
Speaker 7 (36:31):
Search him physically.
Speaker 15 (36:33):
They can look through his materials as long as it's
not legal materials. They can go and look through those
that information at any time, of course, using sound correctional
judgment to make sure that they're running a safe and
orderly institution. Again, I think this is just noise on
his part because allegedly he's done so many people wrong.
(36:53):
I don't think he has many allies, and he's just
trying to figure out how he's going to get out
of this, making up stories in my opinion, to try
to get some sort of public sympathy ahead of the
trial that's coming up in May.
Speaker 2 (37:07):
Doctor Hendricks, I think you're right. I think he is
being spied on. But it's not a big secret. He's
in jail and there is no right to privacy. When
you are in jail, your phone calls are monitored. And
again that's why there aren't walls around you, so the
wardens can look in and see what you're doing.
Speaker 1 (37:27):
So, you know what, Diddy, suck it up, man.
Speaker 2 (37:30):
Now here's a suggestion as to how you don't get
Fed's spying on you. You don't have a female drug
mule in your seven thousand dollars a night hotels suite
the night you're arrested.
Speaker 3 (37:51):
Listen on the night of once revered rap mogul Sean
Diddy Comb's arrest, authority's reportedly discovered a woman waiting for
Combs in his seven thousand dollars a night New York
hotel suite. She was found carrying multiple bags of a
pink powdered drug commonly known to contain two c B
keatemine in ecstasy, and admitted she intended to supply the
drugs to Combs. Many are calling.
Speaker 12 (38:12):
For the release of the didty list, or the names
of those with known connections to his racketeering and sex
trafficking plots. The last set of similar documents from the
Jeffrey Epstein trial were released in January last year. Nearly
one hundred and fifty celebrities, politicians, and even royals were
named in the four thousand, five hundred and fifty three
(38:33):
pages of documents made public.
Speaker 2 (38:35):
How has Sean Combs insinuated himself in the same sentence
with doctor Martin Luther King Junior, John F. Kennedy, Robert Kennedy?
How has this happened? Sidney Sumner? Are there serious demands
that the Diddy list be released along with JFK files
(38:59):
the assassination Nancy?
Speaker 4 (39:01):
There absolutely are. Those requests have been going on for
months now, and social media has come up with their
own list of people they think are involved.
Speaker 2 (39:09):
As a new documentary is dropping, I don't expect the
federal prosecutors to be lounging watching discovery, but maybe they
should because these documentaries that we have seen dropped could
reveal new potential witnesses, and the FAS have made no
(39:31):
secret of it. This case isn't over and they plan
to add more charges. Take a look at the falladity.
Speaker 10 (39:38):
This is the first time I was speaking about it.
Speaker 7 (39:41):
That's something that I'll never forget.
Speaker 2 (39:43):
Actually that from my friends at Investigation Discovery too. Veteran
trial lawyer Joshua Ritter joining us out of LA I
would subpoena this witness in a New York minute.
Speaker 6 (39:54):
Yeah, And if they're actually going to bring these charges,
they're going to have to, because that's the point you
made earlier. There's a far cry from what you say
in a studio during a documentary and what you can
actually testify to in court and corroborate and have backup evidence.
I mean, we don't handle things in a court of
law by having one person making a bald accusation with
(40:15):
nothing to support it and the other person having to
just defend themselves.
Speaker 2 (40:19):
So they're going to have to do some state doesn't
have to put up corroborating evidence for any witness.
Speaker 1 (40:25):
Credibility is in the sole province of the jury.
Speaker 2 (40:28):
Let me remind you, Joshua Ritter, you don't have to
have a lie detector test or a corroborating witness or
a video. If this witness says that happened, he can
testify to that. In court, the jury can determine whether
they want to believe him or not. I don't even
know what you're talking about.
Speaker 6 (40:43):
I'm talking about the defense having a field day with him.
If he's just going to get up there and say
this is what happened to me with nothing to support that,
nothing to corroborate it, they're going to have a field
day with him. That's not how That's not what the
prosecution is willing to base their case upon. Is the credibility.
Credibility of one witness? You know as well as I do.
The US Attorney's Office is not going to come into
(41:04):
court with something as simple as one person making an
accusation and nothing well, guess.
Speaker 2 (41:10):
What rhetor from what I can tell from what we've
seen on the witness list.
Speaker 1 (41:14):
There's a lot more than just one witness. We wait
as just as unfalls. Goodbye friend,