Today we're gonna be talking about the Diddy case.
Uh I'm solo right now, but we'll see what ends up happening, guys.
Let's get into it.
Oh.
Special agent with homelands investigations, okay, guys.
HSI.
This is what Fed Reacts covers.
Defender Jeffrey Williams, an associate YSL did commit the felony.
So here's what 6ix9ine actually got.
Secretary.
This attack shifted the whole US government.
This guy got arrested.
Espionage.
Okay.
Trading secrets with the Russian.
John Wayne Gasey, aka the killer clown, okay?
One of the most prolific serial killers of all time.
Killed 33 people.
Zodiac killer is a pseudonym of an unidentified serial killer who operated Northern California.
Serial killers guy.
They really get off on getting attention from the media.
Many years, Jeffrey Epstein sexually exploited and abused dozens of minor girls at his home.
It was OJ working together to get Nicole killed.
We're gonna go over his past, the gang time so that this all makes sense.
All right, what's up, guys?
Welcome to Fed Reacts, man.
Um guys, uh let me know is audio good.
Give me ones and chaff audio is good.
We should be good on audio.
We should be good on audio.
We're live on all the platforms.
Twitter, Council Club, Rumble, YouTube, etc.
Give me ones if we are good.
You guys can hear me loud and clear, and we are gonna get this thing going.
All right, sweet.
I see a bunch of ones.
All right.
Good, good, good, good, good.
All right.
Um, so let me go ahead and just fix this real fast.
Uh yeah, sorry guys for the delay, man.
I really apologize for that.
I've been waiting for AC.
Um, last he told me he was on a clubhouse chat with WAC 100 or something like that.
Um, but you know, it is what it is.
It's taking too long.
So I wanted to give you guys um some update.
We're gonna talk about the Diddy case.
There has been some new developments on it.
Um, but what I'll do is, as always, I like to give you guys the full background on what's going on.
So you guys um, you know, whether you watched my last episode where I broke this down or you're watching this one, you'll have an idea of what's going on.
I always like to do the full uh background, but let's see here.
Let me make sure I don't have anything I need to read.
Uh we got a chat from Didi Don says uh from Castle Club, which by the way, guys, get into Castle Club, Castle Club.tv got almost 7,000 members in there strong.
Um go support over there if you guys met rock with the mission.
Um we're doing everything over there, whether it's um, you know, doing the zoom calls, behind uh behind the scenes exclusive content, all that stuff, um, extra content on IRLs, etc.
It's all there on Castle Club.tv, man.
Go check it out, check us out over there.
Um, but yeah, so uh, and I also prioritize the chats as well on Castle Club is uh as well.
Okay, so I see we're good on Castle Club.
Sweet, sweet, sweet.
Good, good.
This makes me very happy.
Uh oh man, where'd the chat go?
I had it here.
Where'd I put it?
Okay.
Um says, Myron, can you make a video or playlist talking about history?
What do Democrats stand for?
What do Republicans stand for?
Different lives we've been told about history by books and government that are false.
Uh things for the for that nature.
I know zero to nothing on history and geopolitics.
Just want to learn, but not the wrong things.
Or do you already have videos on these topics?
Um, you know what, dude, I could do that for you guys.
I I can do that.
Um, I think there has been some demand.
As you guys know, we're not gonna be doing after hours on Monday nights anymore.
We're gonna be doing a um a more of a news show, news show.
It's gonna be fresh of the news.
It's gonna be on Monday nights at 10 p.m.
Um, so we won't interfere with any of the other, you know, political commentators.
We're gonna talk about geopolitics, we're gonna talk about American politics, we're gonna talk about what's going on, um, trending events, etc.
We're gonna cover a bunch of different things.
As you guys know, I'm really active on Twitter, uh, right, because I'm banned on Instagram, which that's a whole other thing.
Some losers paid to ban us.
Um, hopefully we'll get it back soon.
But um, but yeah, man, I I think it's very important to talk about this stuff.
I know some people have some questions about, oh, why do you um talk politics, etc.?
Well, guys, you gotta understand that you need to understand what's going on in the government, what's going on in the United States, what's going on in the world, because that can impact you.
Okay.
Um, I don't know if you guys remember, but as soon as the Russia war started, right?
What ended up happening?
Immediately, the prices of goods went up.
You need to know what's going on, guys.
You need to know need to know the reality of the world that you live in.
it's very important for you as a man, especially to be aware of this stuff.
You're not a hot girl.
You can't get by on your looks and be on a yacht and get saved by somebody.
As a man, you need to know everything that's going around you.
You need to be competent, okay, so you can go ahead and navigate the world correctly.
All right.
Um, and that'll play into your money as well.
Why do you guys think I'm investing so aggressively into real estate?
I understand what's going on in the world.
I understand that the US dollar is not strong right now.
I know it's strong compared to other currencies, but it's a fiat currency not backed by anything.
It's backed by oil.
And guess what happened?
Saudi Arabia just decided we're no longer gonna be on a petrodollar anymore.
So what's the most inflation-proof methodology to store your money?
Real estate.
One of the best ways.
Cryptocurrency, et cetera.
But you're not gonna know this unless you pay attention to news, see what's going on, watch the markets, watch what's going on in the in the election.
It's an election year, of course.
Watch what's going on with world conflicts.
We're on the verge of World War III, man.
You know, like this stuff is important, man.
So we want to red pill you guys, not just on girls and dating, but on how the world really works.
This is the truth when it comes to all different endeavors, man, because we could sit here and talk about girls all day, but you know, we got we're a higher IQ audience than that, man.
You know, we do the true crime thing, we cover the news, cover dating, cover girls, cover um intersexual dynamics.
That's all good and stuff, but um, I think it's very important to be able to cover other topics as well and be well diversified, guys.
Being well diversified is super important.
Uh, so anyway, okay.
So um, anything else here?
But yeah, I could do that for you, Didi Don.
I could definitely do that for y'all.
Do like uh a whole crash course on certain topics that they've lied to us about, which there's a bunch of them, trust me.
Um, Uncle Luke says, I'm glad you guys are limiting after hours and are folks on more important things.
Modern women are only part of the problem in the West.
Yeah, absolutely.
Thank you, Uncle Luke.
Uh also, Mark, can you do a Friday night IRL at the gun range?
But without Neon, I think that would be hella entertaining.
Uh, I'll do one eventually.
Uh, when can we get AC back on the pod?
I thought Tommy was supposed to join for the JFK Saturday.
He was really well informed.
It was crazy.
Yeah, uh, I think he had to go take he had to take care of his daughter, guys.
He couldn't, he couldn't make it um for the last stream that he was supposed to show up on.
But it's all good.
He's gonna be uh he's gonna come back.
Um, which by the way, if you guys didn't see that JFK assassination video, bro, you guys need to go see that.
That was one of my four most favorite interviews we did.
I brought Corey Hughes on.
We talked about JFK, who was really behind killing him.
And uh just put it this way, it's on Rumble.
It's not on YouTube.
It's on YouTube, but like we well, most of it is gone off YouTube.
So it's on Rumble.
Go check it out on Rumble, guys.
Okay.
All right.
So uh today we're gonna be talking about the Diddy case, guys.
We're gonna talk about updates of what's going on with it.
Um, I think we're cool.
Yeah, we're live on all platforms, guys.
We're live on Rumble, YouTube.
We're not up on Twitch right now, because you know who cares about Twitch.
All right.
So let's get into it, my friends.
Enough yapping.
Uh on.
Sorry, guys.
I'm like still not as good with this thing as everybody else.
Okay, cool.
So uh let me move my mug out the way.
Move it over here.
All right.
So for those of you that live under rock, because I understand that not everybody in my chat is aware of hip hop and knows what's going on.
So let's go ahead and talk about this real quick.
Who is Sean Diddy Combs?
Sean Love Combs, born Sean John Combs, November 4, 1969, also known by a stage named Diddy, formerly Puff Daddy and P. Diddy.
Yes, if you guys were wondering, yes, this is Puff Daddy.
Same thing.
He's gone by many different monikers throughout the years.
Is an American rapper, record product uh record producer, and uh record executive.
He's credited with discovery and cultivation of artists such as the Notorious BIG, Mary Jar Oblig, and Usher.
Combs won a Grammy Award from 13 nominations, has three Grammy Awards from 13 nominations, two MTV music video awards, and a Guinness World Record for a most successful rap producer in 1997.
Born in Harlem and raised in Mount Vernon, New York, Combs worked as a talent coordinator at Uptown Records before funding his own record label Bad Boy Records in 1993.
He embarked on his recording career following the mainstream success of his first signee, the notorious BIG, for whom he served as a manager and hype man.
Released in a wake and memory of his own song murder, Combs' debut studio album, No Way Out, 1997, was met with critical acclaim, peaked atop the Billboard 200 and received the sep, uh uh received Septual Platinum certification by the Recording Industry Association of America, R-I-A-A.
It's two preceding singles, Can't Nobody Hold Me Down, featuring Mace and I'll be missing you with Faith Evans, featuring 112.
Both peaked on the Billboard 100.
The latter became the first hip-hop song to debut atop the chart.
His second and third albums forever, 1999, and the side continues, 2001.
Both peaked at number two on the Billboard 200, despite mixed critical reception, while it's fourth, press play in 2006, peeked the top the chart once more.
Combs then formed the musical group Diddy, Dirty Money, with Diddy RB singers Kalina, Harper, and Don Richard to release a collaborative album, Last Train of Paris 2010, which peaked at number seven and was supported by the single Coming Home, featuring Skylar Gray.
His fifth studio album, The Love Album, off the grid 2023, was met with moderate, critical, and commercial response and served as his first release without a major label.
So why do I read all that?
I read all that to let you guys know that this guy isn't legend in the music industry.
Um, you know, at the end of the day, when this is all said and done, he's gonna go down and was the best music producers of all time.
He's gonna go down as a hip hop legend, he's gonna go down as someone that um founded a lot of hit artists that you guys have come to learn and love, whether it's Biggie or Usher being involved with Mary J. Oblage, etc.
Um, the guy is accomplished.
The guy, you know, there's a reason why there's a medical media spectacle around this um case, and it's because this guy has quite a bit of accomplishment in the music industry.
That's why I'm gonna make sure I read that for you guys, because not everyone is, you know, that watches me is well versed on hip hop, which understandably so.
It is a degenerative genre of music, so I get it, right?
So, as you guys know, right, fast forward to late last year, what ends up happening?
Diddy gets hit with this lawsuit by who?
Cassie Ventura, right?
Um, and this was filed um on November 16th, 2023.
At the end of last year, and I remember when this news first broke, right?
And here's Cassie Ventura for some of you guys that are wondering.
Cassandra, and she's the one that kind of kicked us all off, okay?
Cassandra Elizabeth Ventura, born August 26th, 1986, known mononymously as Cassie is an American singer, dancer, actress, and model born in New London, Connecticut.
She began her musical career after meeting producer Ryan Leslie in late 2004, who signed her to his record label Next Selection Lifestyle Group.
In 2006, Ventura released her debut single, Me and You, which was discovered by rapper Sean Diddy Combs.
Leslie agreed to partner his next selection imprint with Combs' Bad Boy Records for the commercial release of her debut album.
The song marked his first of her two entries on the Billboard 100, uh, peaking at number three by July 2006.
And for some of you guys that are wondering, it's this song right here, which I'm not gonna play because I don't want to get hit with um with copyright.
But this song to this day, they still play this.
Okay, guys, and this is the music video.
Feel free to go check it out.
You know, but this is uh this is the song, all right.
Uh but yeah, this and and obviously she had some other hits as well, but this was like her biggest one.
This one, I mean, you hit top three on Billboard, you're pretty much getting played all across the country.
You're gonna be on radio spins like every fucking hour.
All right.
And I remember 2006, what was I doing?
2006.
I was working at McDonald's, guys.
Uh in 2006, this song was out.
Jim Jones, we fly high.
I was in McDonald's, fucking, I was a flippin' burgers.
I was 16 years old at the time.
I was uh I was doing drive-throughs.
Uh I was working at the drive-thru, get in trouble there, messing up orders and shit.
So, uh, and I think I've told you guys my stories about uh McDonald's and I got fired.
But uh, that's a story for another day, if you guys want to go ahead and check that out.
Um, but yeah, dude, 2006, man.
So anyway, her and Diddy guys end up having a very long-term relationship, right?
And next thing you know, she files this lawsuit against him.
Now, originally he was gonna fight it, guys, but then he ended up settling a day later.
I think he settled for like what he said, uh, for an undisclosed amount.
Let me see here.
Let me see if it's on here.
Um, let's see here.
Okay.
One day after final lawsuit, the parties announced that they had reached an agreement to resolve the case and did not disclose the terms of the out of course settlement.
Okay.
It in May 2024, CNN published a video of Combs grabbing Ventura, punching her, and then throwing her to the ground and kicking her and stopping her in a hotel.
Okay.
I think you guys have all seen this video.
Um I'm not gonna show the whole one, but you just go, Diddy Hotel, Cassie.
And this is the video right here, right?
Uh, where he like attacks her.
I mean, if it's on YouTube, let's see.
Oh, hold on, let me unmute this for you guys.
I'm sorry.
You're about to see is extremely graphic.
The surveillance footage that was captured in the man chased her down in a towel.
Like, bro, what the fuck, man?
Inside of a Los Angeles.
And this is at the Internet Continental Nutsell Hotel.
I think this was in LA, if I'm not mistaken.
Yeah, Los Angeles.
Yep.
Angels Hotel.
March of 2016.
In 2016, allegedly shows Combs grabbing their friend Cassie Ventura in a hallway.
A now settled lawsuit, filed by Ventura, claimed that she was trying to leave the hotel.
After a drunken Combs punched her.
The video agreed to show Combs chasing her down the hall, throwing her to the ground, and then repeatedly kicking her.
So far there's been no comment from Combs or his attorney.
And actually, he did give a comment.
Let's go ahead.
IG video IG video.
This was his comment.
It's so difficult to reflect on the darkest times in your life.
Sometimes you gotta do that.
I was fed up.
I mean, I hit rock bottom.
But I made no excuses.
My behavior on that video is inexcusable.
I take full responsibility for my ashes in that video.
Disgusted.
I was disgusted then when I did it, I'm disgusted now.
I went and I sought out professional help.
Had to go into therapy.
Going to rehab.
Had to ask God for his mercy and grace.
I'm so sorry.
But I'm committed to be a better man each and every day.
I'm not asking for forgiveness.
I'm truly sorry.
And obviously they went crazy on him, right?
After, right?
Apology videos almost never do well, uh, unfortunately.
Um, you know, I mean, hey, it like I get it.
You know, shit happens.
Uh, obviously doing that is ridiculous.
Um, you should never put your hands on a female.
I I don't even like, you know, you even hell, you guys have seen me where girls would put hands on me on the show, and I still don't do nothing.
You know, that's just the world that we're in, man.
Like, it is what it is.
Uh, I get the girls to fight for me.
So uh, no, but all jokes aside, um, yeah, I mean, it guys, this is what happens, right?
With you know, alcohol substance abuse.
You know, I tell you guys all the time, I don't drink.
Uh, you know, I might drink okay.
So last time I drank was when we had the yacht party.
And then prior to that, the yacht party, when did we have that?
A couple months ago?
Prior to that, last time I consumed booze was January of the year prior, so like almost 18 months.
Uh, and that was for our mil one million subscriber party.
So, you know, for me, it's it's rare, right?
And and I tell you guys, right, like don't make the occasion to drink, drink for the occasion.
Uh, and I really want you guys to like take that in.
Because I know some of y'all are like, man, I got a party, I gotta live life a little bit.
Cool.
You gotta live life a little bit.
Don't drink all the time, right?
And you guys gotta understand, like, did he partied a lot, right?
They know about his parties, uh, the drug use, the alcohol.
You do dumb shit, right?
And look what he just did on camera, right?
And that was on camera, he's abusing his his girlfriend, drunk as hell.
It clouts your judgment, and you you make mistakes that you can't come back from.
So um, you know, not to be on my moral high ground here or whatever, but this is what drugs and alcohol does to you guys.
I've never done a drug in my life, that's why I tell you guys not to do drugs.
It's not fucking worth it.
And then Booze is literally the devil, man.
It really is.
That's why if I am gonna do it, it's gonna be rare, it's gonna be with friends, it's gonna be trustful people, having a good time, celebrating something.
I'm still not gonna get fucking inebriated.
Uh, but but yeah, but uh in general, man, your boy Myron, I don't drink, bro.
Uh, I think since since like 2021, I've maybe drank maybe three or four times, if that.
So it's really not worth it, guys.
Um, so obviously that was the explosive um lawsuit that kicked us all off.
Then he gets sued by this guy, okay?
Little Rod, right?
Now, um, a little rod right here.
Let's uh let me get him up real fast.
Oh Rod Boom.
So this is him.
Uh we got okay.
I guess this is the Instagram.
Do they not have a okay?
We'll read the article.
Um Lil Rod's Diddy lawsuit went from a GoFundMe to a $30 million scandal.
For years, it's been uh it was a mere hands-off remarks heard across certain corners of the music and fashion industry, specifically the hip-hop and sportsware spaces where Diddy Sean uh where Sean Diddy Combs emerged in the mid-90s and for a while seemed to own the rumors of his excessive tactics uh excesses and tactics would bubble to the surface in a tweet or radio show revelation.
But what seemed implausible about such a high-profile player has now materialized into headline making allegations of volume, self-traffing and minor sexual misconduct, forced druggings, and compromising footage of celebrities held as black male.
Since November, there have been five lawsuits leveled against the rapper Turn Mogul, who is now at the center of a federal investigation.
We're gonna talk about the federal investigation too.
We're keeping it similar first, guys.
One bombshell lawsuit that will, at bare minimum, mangle Diddy's career came from a young man who was welcomed into his inner circle and according to the producer, exited the moguls Maloo as he was allegedly groomed, abused, and exploited.
He also claims the nearly billionaire combs stiffed him on payment, publishing shares and royalties.
Okay.
In 2022, Rodney Jones Jr. musician and producer known as Little Rod was hired by Combs to work on what would become his 2023 album, The Love Album, off the grid.
Diddy's first studio record since 2006.
Jones had segued into hip-hop production from early gospel work in Chicago.
He grew up playing music with his local church, sitting behind the drum kit from the age of five.
By 13 years old, he was recording his studios in front of a piano or uh on the bass guitar, which became his specialty as he told the death of Cloud Chaser TV in an interview.
By 18, Jones had performed on 30 plus albums.
By 20, he had moved towards RB and hip-hop.
Oh, sorry, guys.
Um RB in hip hop studio session.
Soon enough, his resume featured credits on tracks by Jack Harlow, Mary Jarry Blige, Anti Payne and interviews about his work.
Jones' passion for music production and artistry is apparent.
I love the whole creative process.
I just love it.
Jones told the outlet when asked about the joys of being an artist.
The best thing that ever could happen have happened to me was having a fall and getting back up.
Look, whenever I lose, I try to figure out why did I lose and how can I strengthen also?
What was the message?
So Jones complains state that he was ultimately credited with producing nine tracks of the album, the fruit of the 14 months ending in November 2323, spent working with Combs in the studio.
The album features a vast list of A-list guest stars.
One would expect from a top industry player's big return.
Over the year plus, he spent helping make uh make it.
The artist and producer developed an unconventional relationship.
Jones was living and traveling with the rapper, but also became his videographer in a day-to-day wading into the jet inner circle of one of the music business's biggest names.
What happened over these months now?
Oh, god damn it.
Sorry, guys.
Let me get rid of these.
God damn advertisements.
Okay, let me make this a bit bigger.
Okay.
What happened over these months and how it led to a high profile FBI raid?
No, it wasn't a high-profile FBI raid.
Hollywood reporter.
Well, you guys know better than that.
Being on Fed Reacts, you know it's not a fucking FBI raid.
It wasn't FBI at all, but people are fucking stupid.
Stupid.
And they don't know shit.
We're going to talk about that though.
On Diddy's properties, is at the center of the lawsuit's accusations.
The raid was called a gross overuse of military level force by Diddy's attorney, Aaron Jones.
Jones case was filed on February 26th in New York federal court, and he seeks 30 million in restitution.
In a lengthy filing, Jones levels damaging allegations against Diddy saying, God damn it.
See, I can't even highlight it.
Uh saying that while working with him, he was sexually assaulted, allegedly forced by Combs to engage in sex acts made to list solicit sex workers, drugged, humiliated, and says he was repeatedly groped on his anus and generals while in Diddy's orbit.
Jones also claims he's being cheated out of over 50,000 for his work on Combs' album, and among his many allegations and accounts of troubling situations.
The following also states that his life has been detrimentally impacted ever since he traveled with Combs back and forth to the Moguls' homes in Los Angeles, New York, Florida, and to his yacht in the U.S. Virgin Islands.
While under an implied work agreement, the Mogul has also threatened the producer for more than a year, he says.
And here is the lawsuit, if you guys want to look it up, right?
Out in the Southern District of New York.
Also, I want to let you guys know that this lawsuit was filed that interesting enough, if you guys look, Southern District of New York, the civil case for Cassie was filed.
Southern District of New York, the civil case was for Little Rod was filed as well, right?
Um, and obviously, right, they even had this trigger warning here.
And here it is.
And there's like pictures of it, right?
The defendant, his son, Right.
Uh these are his uh people that work for him.
Um Ethiopia.
Oh, what's what's this guy, Lucas?
Guy uh defendant uh CEO of defendant uh of Universal Music Group, okay.
And then we got here Lucian uh uh Ethiopia.
What's she former CEO of defendant, Motown Records, okay.
Um, and then we got uh Christina Koran.
I think this is his assistant.
Yeah, chief of staff, yep.
And then obviously, this is a different records, right?
They talk about who Rodney is.
They got pictures and all this shit, Mr. Jones, the child prodigy, right?
Summary of events, and then they got more pictures, right?
Like, holy crap.
So it goes here.
Mr. Jones says several corroborating witnesses speak uh who spoke with the writer anonymously due to fear of retaliation, Mr. Combs, they haven't agreed to speak publicly when subpoenaed.
Mr. Jones has a clothing it wore that day and believes it may still have the stains and DNA of G's blood.
The following are screenshots of the aftermath of the restroom where G was shot by either Mr. Combs or J. Combs.
Holy.
Okay.
So let's look here real fast.
Mancha outside party at Hollywood recording studio.
And this happened September 12th, 2022.
Someone was shot.
And he's saying that apparently Didi was involved in this.
Right.
Um, let's read through this then.
Let's read through this civil case.
This not the whole civil case, we're just, I want to read the shooting.
Because it's actually very important.
Because, and I'm gonna tell you guys why this is important here in a second.
So, honor about September 12, 2022, Mr. Combs held the writers and producers' camp at Chalice Recording Studio at 845 Highland Avenue, Los Angeles, California.
Present at this camp where Mr. Combs, his son Justin Combs, and Justin's friend named G. Mr. G is a 30-year-old tall African American male.
In addition to these individuals, other musicians were present at the camp.
This writer has spoken to several musicians who attended the camp.
One evening during this camp, Mr. Combs, J. Combs, and G were in a heated conversation.
That conversation was moved out of the studio and into a restroom adjacent to where Mr. Jones was sitting.
Mr. Jones was approximately two feet away from the bathroom when gunshots rang out.
Mr. Jones recalling here are multiple gunshots.
Mr. Jones immediately went into a state of shock and feared that he would be shot next.
Mr. Jones genuinely believed that he would be shot through the door due to how close he was.
After the shooting ended, a crowd gathered around the restroom.
When the door finally opened, Mr. Combs and Jay Combs exited.
G was lying on the restroom floor in a fetal position, holding his stomach and bleeding out his legslash hip area.
Everyone stood around looking upon G. First, about a lack of aid to G, Mr. Jones dropped everything, ran to G, and immediately began placing pressure on G's gun wound to uh G's gun wound to his stomach.
As he was applying pressure to his stomach, Mr. Jones realized that G was gushing blood from another area near his leg/slash hip.
He decided to lift G up and place him to sit on the toilet.
Mr. Jones asked uh the crowd to call the ambulance.
Mr. Jones lifted G and brought him to the ambulance at the studio's front.
At this time, Mr. Combs and Justin disappeared to another part of the studio.
Mr. Combs gave strict instructions to inform the police that he had nothing to do with the shooting.
He also forced Mr. Jones to lie to the police by telling them that G was standing outside the studio by a drive-by assailant.
Oh Lord.
Here we go.
He's using the YW Melly.
He's using the Y and W. Melly excuse.
Why is it always a fucking drive-by, man?
With these guys.
And then obviously, here's the uh here's the news article.
And then Mr. Jones has several corroborating witnesses who spoke with this writer anonymously due to the fear of retaliation, etc.
And then here's the pictures from the shooting.
Right.
So here's the aftermath.
Clearly, G was not shot outside of the studio as Mr. Combs instructed a scene to report to law enforcement.
Mr. Combs and defendant's LR, MR, UMG, and CRS provided private security for the writers camp at the defendant CRS.
The security was porous and lackluster at best.
The fact that either Mr. Combs and J. Combs were allowed to enter CRS with guns, and those guns were not confiscated by security, is a clear breach of duty by Mr. Combs defendants, LR, MR, and UMG to report uh to protect Mr. Jones and the other attendees of his writers' camp.
As a result of this shooting, Mr. Jones is severely traumatized.
Mr. Jones now suffers from PTSD, severe anxiety, depression, and insomnia.
Okay.
So now they're going into how he was sexually harassed, assaulted by Mr. Combs.
Attempted to groom him to engage in uh gay sex.
Let's see, what else here?
This is uh a still, it looks like from somewhere.
Yep.
Uh okay, the the writer is a possession.
Okay.
And obviously it's blurted out.
You can't see nothing, which thank God we don't want to see that anyway.
Um, thanks again, Mr. Jones is sexually assaulted by young Miami's cousin.
And then here's some pictures.
Once again, Mr. Jones pushed her off the following are images of the video of young Miami, her cousin, Mr. Jones, and Mr. Combs.
Trafficking and Victims Protection Act.
Right.
So, yeah, man, he's coming with the receipts.
Oh, this booby trap on the river.
Oh, this is Miami.
Yeah, yeah, you left.
As part of Mr. Jones' sex worker recruitment tools, Mr. Combs provided Mr. Jones with an exclusive bad boy baseball cap and required him to wear it to Booby Trap on the River as a signal to any sex worker reproached that Mr. Combs was at town and had sent Mr. Jones to recruit them.
Mrs. Jones had no desire to visit Booby Trap on a river, Mr. Jones.
Yeah, that place sucks.
I ain't gonna lie.
Had no desire to solicit sex worker from Booby Trap on the River.
Mr. Combs uses power and influence to intimidate and force Mr. Jones.
It's listening to sex workers from Booby Trap on the River.
As detailed below, Mr. Combs used many Texas, maintained Dominion and control of Mr. Jones.
And these are some of the girls, I guess, that he got involved with.
The font Instagram photos of two of the sex works that Mr. Combs required Mr. Jones to solicit and have sex with at his home in Miami, Florida.
And then these are some of the chicks.
Right.
Here's some more.
I guess that's one of the girls.
Right.
And then Mr. Combs has a pass off Mrs. Jones to Cleveland Gooding Jr.
Oh Lord, bro.
What the hell?
Oh man.
Okay, yeah.
So you could see here, here's Cuba Gooding Jr., right.
And then here he is with him.
And he's saying basically, as evidenced by the video, which screenshots are embedded below.
Cuba Gooding Jr. began touching groping and finally Mr. Jones like his upper thighs near his groin and the small of his back near his buttocks and his shoulders.
Mr. Jones is extremely uncomfortable and proceeded to lean away from Mr. Gooding Jr.
He rejected his advance, and Mr. Gooding Jr. did not stop until Mr. Jones forcibly pushed them away.
The following is a screenshot and encounter Mr. Cuba Gooding Jr.
For some of you guys that are unaware, right?
Cuba Goodney Jr.
Obviously a very accomplished actor.
Here he is.
Born January 2nd, 1968, is an American actor after his breakthrough role as Trey Styles and Boys in the Hood.
Famous movie.
He won the Academy Award for Best Supporting Actor Playing a Football Star in Jerry McGuire, 1996.
His other notable films include Outbreak 95, As Good as a Guest 97, What Dreams May Come, 98, Men of Honor 2000, Pearl Harbor, 2001, Rat Race 2001, The Fighting Temptations, 2003, Radio 2003, American Gangs for 2007, The Tusky Uh Tuskegee, Tusky Airmen 1995, The Butler 2013, and Selma 2014.
They voiced Buck The Horse in the Animated Uh Feature Film, Home on the Range 2004.
For his betrayal of OJ Simpson, FX drama series, The People vs.
OJ Simpson, American Crime Story 2016.
He earned a nomination for the primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Lead Actor in a Limited Series or movie and co-starred in the FX series American Horror Story Roaneg 2016.
He played Billy Roberts in the HBO film The Tusky Airmen 1995 and Dr. Ben Carson in the TNT film Gifted Hands.
Why do I read this, guys?
Well, I read this to let you guys know that obviously these are some very high-profile individuals that are in uh named in this lawsuit.
You got Diddy, you got Cuba Gooding Jr.
Um, it is wild.
You got random 304s from Booby Trap on the River.
I'm gonna tell Fresh to stop going over there, man.
They put pictures of the spot, too.
That's crazy.
They put pictures of this bitch.
Uh for some of you guys that are wondering.
That is a strip club here in Miami.
Uh it's over uh it's up north, man.
It's by uh it's a little bit further up north, but it's it's the reason why they call it on the river is because it's right on the Miami River, right?
Very popular spot.
I don't like it, but a lot of the rappers go there.
I've been there maybe two, three times in my life.
Um, I'm not a fan.
You guys, I I just hate strip clubs in general, bro.
It just brings very low vibrational, low IQ people.
Uh let's see here.
Oh, we got a chat from Tri Viz Yun.
Ah!
Let's go!
Shout out to you, my friend.
I appreciate that.
Uh, let's see here.
We deserve less.
Is it frowned upon to join Cast Club as a female?
Uh no, go ahead and join.
We got something that we're gonna set up for the ladies as well.
I'm gonna have probably lady-only Zoom calls, right?
To kind of uh separate it for you guys.
But yeah, ladies, go ahead and join the cast club.
Are you still going out to roll out lower prices for CC?
We had it.
We just ran a discount, bro.
We just ran a discount.
We're probably not gonna do, we're not gonna do a monthly discount for the rest of the year.
So only thing that you'll be able to do is uh do the annual.
The annual, I think right now is 315, which obviously you save 100 bucks by doing annual.
Uh let's see here.
Let me see if there's anything else.
Yes, I don't think Diddy is uh I said Diddy.
I don't think uh academics live, guys.
Yeah, he's still not live.
Uh so yeah, it is what it is.
He said 9:30 p.m., but yeah.
The show goes on, man.
Uh so anyway, my bad.
I got my own stream here.
So back to the little rod thing.
So then he's talking about the love album, how he didn't get paid for it.
Okay.
Um more pictures threatened.
Okay, Mr. Combs uses power to intimidate and influence threaten uh and intimidate Mr. Jones, right?
He's referring to uh the Shine shooting.
Obviously, you guys know this is from a long time ago when he got in the shooting in Manhattan with Shine, which Shine ended up doing like 10 plus years for this.
And you know what?
Because I love giving you guys context, so you guys know who I'm talking about, because I don't like talking about people, and you guys are like, who the fuck is that?
Oh, shiner, what the fuck?
I bet.
Here we go.
Shine.
Moses Michael Levy Barrow, born Jamal uh Michael Barrel, best known by a state's named Shine, November 8th, 1978, is a Belizean rapper, politician, a philanthropist.
He's leader of the opposition in the Belize House of Representative.
He's a politician now, guys.
Went from convicted felon to politician.
Uh he was a rapper.
And he did 10.
Let me see if I'm right here.
Uh okay, shooting and trial, boom, boom, boom.
Yeah, from 01 to 09.
So he got okay.
He was sentenced in June 1st, 2001 to 10 years in prison without eligibility for parole.
So, and as you guys know, New York has very strict gun laws.
Uh, but there's a bunch of people that said that Diddy actually shot the shot, but Shine took the heat.
Because Diddy got in a uh altercation with some people in 1999.
God damn, bro.
And this is back when he was with J-Lo.
Oh man.
So let's see here.
So obviously an intimidation, Fahim Mohammed, right?
Saying that this is the guy that was intimidating him.
Uh, and then he's saying that people that work with him, what'd they do?
Uh, so they aided a better profit off Sean Combs Rico Enterprise.
See, okay.
Right.
So, as you guys can see here, right?
A lot of these crimes occurred a while ago, right?
2016, you know, 90s, early 2000s, all this crap, right?
And the only way that they're gonna be able to bring some of these crimes together, right?
I'll go ahead, uh, go into main cam here so Angie could clip this.
The only way that they're gonna be able to bring these crimes together, guys, is they're gonna need to use the RICO Act.
And the reason they're gonna use the RICO Act is because Rico, you're able to tie all the crimes together, right?
Because you identify the criminal organization as a continuing criminal enterprise.
Okay.
So whenever you're able to charge things under under RICO, you don't have to worry about statute limitations because you can articulate, yo, he's been committing these crimes since the 90s, and he's been doing it up until now.
So all those crimes that normally would have not been able to be used under the uh because of statute limitations, can now be used.
Now, of course, they have to be crimes that fall under the RICO Act, right?
Because there's only certain crimes that fall under it, which we'll go ahead and go over real quick.
We'll go ahead and get some education.
RICO, federal Law crimes.
So gambling, murder, kidnapping, extortion, arson, robbery, bribery, dealing in obscene matter or dealing in control substance or listed chemical.
Let's see here.
Yeah.
So 18 USC 1961, obviously, this is Rico.
And interestingly enough, you know, this is a crime that was created.
Quick little recap on Rico.
It was a law that was created in the 1970s, guys, to combat Lacosinosha, the mafia.
And if you guys haven't already, please go watch my mafia series where I break down all the mafia families, you know, really educational stuff.
I talk about all the crime families.
I haven't go into some of the um Florida ones, the Traficantes, et cetera.
But that's all of the conversation.
But the point is that the RICO laws were designed to go after the mafia because the mafia was an insulated organization where the bosses, right, were ordering all the hits from the top.
And then you had the guys at the lower levels committing all the crimes, but they were never able to wrap these guys up at the top to the crimes because they were just the ones ordering them.
So they were almost operating in a compartmentalized fashion to distance themselves from the crime.
So what RICO effectively did was it allowed them to charge everyone under the pretense of an illicit business.
That's why when you look at Rico's um indictments, they always use um criminal enterprises.
And you know what?
I'm on an educational role right now, giving you all this sauce.
I'm gonna go ahead and pull up an example of a Rico indictment for you guys right now.
So let's go, Rico Takashi 6.9.
Right?
That's the easy one to pull up.
Um let's go ahead.
Because I know that one, I can get that up easy on Wikipedia.
Um let's see here.
Dude.
Oh, I said wiki.
My bad.
Indictment.
PDF.
Boom.
Right.
So you go here.
This is actually an HSI case as well.
Give me one's in the chat if you guys are learning.
So here's an example of a Rico indictment, right?
And I'm gonna pull this up for you guys right now.
We're cooking today, boys.
So here we go, right?
Southern District of New York, once again, Southern District of New York, as you guys know, I've told you this many times, very aggressive district.
They charge a lot of the big cases, right?
You can see um 6ix9ine is in this as well, right?
Daniel Hernandez, obviously, their main target was Jamel Jones, AKML murder because he was the head of the Bloods.
But boom, right there, off rip.
The enterprise at all times relevance in his indictment, Jamel Jones, etc.
blah, blah, blah.
They're gonna name them, right?
Uh, an associate of the gangster bloods nine trade or the enterprise, a criminal organization's members of associated gazin, among other activities, acts involving murder, robbery, and narcotics trafficking, nine trade operated, and remember, guys, we talked about this.
Murder, robbery, and narcotics are crimes that fall under racketeering, okay.
Uh so nine trade, including its leadership, its members, and his associates constituted an enterprises defined by Title 18, United States Code, Section 1961, right?
So this is how they're able to get you on crimes that were past the statute of limitations when they hit you with Rico because then they're able to say this is a pattern of criminal activity, racketeering activity, and then bam, they're able to bring all those crimes in because it's a criminal enterprise.
And that's how these laws were able to topple the mafia.
Because the Rico laws, you get football numbers.
We're talking 20, 30, 40 years, right?
Casanova recently got convicted, uh, pled guilty, if I'm not mistaken.
He's doing like 20, right?
And that's pleading guilty.
So the high sentences, federal time, you're doing 80, 90% of your time.
It incentivizes people to cooperate.
And then when people cooperate, what do they do?
They give information on people that are higher than them.
That's what 6ix9ine did.
That's why he was able to get out so quickly.
He provided information on a bunch of guys that were higher than him.
Because as you guys can see here, I mean, hell, you can see it right here in indictment.
And I've said this before many times.
Look at where 6ix9ine falls in the indictment.
Right in the fucking middle.
Okay?
Now I'll tell you guys why that's important, okay?
If you're gonna be a criminal, okay, I don't advise it, but if you're gonna be a criminal, don't be the top guy, but also don't be the lowest guy.
Why do I say that?
Because if you're the top guy, you're gonna be at the top of the fucking indictment, like your boy Jamel Jones, aka aka Mel Murder, right?
Who was the um the top blood for Many years.
He's been referred to in in rap songs.
Jim Jones, right?
Is tight with this guy, et cetera, right?
You're gonna be at the top of the indictment.
But you also don't want to be the bottom guy, because as the bottom guy, you don't have enough information that might be helpful to you should you decide to cooperate.
But when you're in the middle, why 6ix9ine, right?
And I'm not saying this is where he stood in the organization.
I just find it funny that he's literally in the middle of the indictment, right?
Because I've talked about this before.
When you're in the middle, you're in a position where you got people above you and you got people below you.
So you're privy to information from both sides.
And then 6ix9ine, the reason why he got such a sweet deal, guys, was because he was the financier.
And when you're the financier and you're dealing with the money, you automatically have to deal with the top guys as well as the lower guys to some degree, right?
So that's gonna put you in a beautiful position to be able to provide information on the top dudes and the lower dudes, and that's why 6ix9ine got less time than people like um the guy that uh that went ahead and did this did the shooting for him on Chief Keefe.
I forget his goddamn name.
What was his name?
CUDA, who'd a B. He went ahead and told him 10,000 to go shoot at Chief Keefe.
And that dude got more time, the 6ix9ine.
But why is that?
Even though 6ix9ine was in the manager role above him.
It's because 6ix9ine was able to provide information on all these guys above him and guys below him, and he ended up getting a way sweeter deal.
So if you're gonna be a criminal, guys, be the financier and have all the information so that you could go ahead and inform on everybody and get your way out like 6ix9ine did, okay?
And don't have a criminal history.
All right, down to Marco Friology.
Dominic, that's how you do it.
All right, give me ones in the chat if you guys are learning.
Give me one's in the chat if you guys will learn it.
About hierarchies, criminal stuff, RICOs, etc.
And we're gonna get back to this Diddy thing here in a second, but I really want you guys to understand.
Give me ones if you guys understand Rico.
Okay?
Give me ones in the chat if you guys understand Rico and understand the way that it works now and uh how it will be used or not be used in um uh to pull crimes from a statute of limitations perspective.
Perfect, perfect.
Cool, cool, cool.
All right, so it's making sense for y'all.
All right, cool, cool, cool.
Perfect, perfect.
Okay.
So now that you guys know what Rico is, and you guys know that they charge it as an organization, you can see it right here.
They put it in the fucking lawsuit, which this is a civil case, by the way.
Guys, this is not even a criminal case, this is a civil case.
But again, this is going to be used later on, right?
To establish that Diddy has a criminal organization where he's shooting at motherfuckers, running away, telling people, hey, if you don't, you know, follow what I say, you're gonna have to deal with consequences, grooming, sex trafficking, et cetera.
Because the sex trafficking guys can occur when you're moving people interstate.
Okay, this is how Diddy, uh, not Diddy, uh, this is how R. Kelly got jammed up.
And by the way, the same prosecutors are going after Diddy are the same ones that worked on the R. Kelly case, FYI.
And they charge R. Kelly, if I'm not mistaken, under the Rico Act as well, because his crimes occurred a long time too.
Uh let me see here.
Let's see.
R Kelly indictment PDF.
Is this a special one?
No, hold on.
Because he got indicted a few times.
What the hell?
Bruh.
All right, whatever.
You guys get the point.
You guys get the point.
So, um, so why do I say all this?
Okay.
So the Cassie um lawsuit and the Little Rod lawsuit basically put a shining light, guys, on Diddy's nefarious activities.
Okay.
His nefarious, you know, sexual activities, violence, etc.
Okay.
So I brought it to light.
And when you bring things to light, guess what ends up happening?
You start to get the attention.
Every eye open up Of the feds, right?
Especially if you're a big artist and they could get a little bit of clout off of indicting you.
Right?
So next thing you know, boom.
They get he gets raided, right?
Who rated him?
Well, HSI, guys.
It's the agency that I used to work for, actually.
Home Land Screen Investigations, all right.
Ended up raiding him.
Uh this was when?
Three months ago, March 26.
On or about March 26, 2024.
Right?
So you guys can see here?
Again, we are seeing Department of Homeland Security investigators in a this home now.
Lagging like crazy.
Let's go to Haley Winslow, who's live on the ground right there.
Haley, what do we know?
And this is when it first broke out.
Sandra, this is gonna turn into a huge scene that is gonna be an all-day thing, and it involves, yes, P. Diddy.
The home is actually registered to Bad Boy Films, which is a division of Bad Boy Entertainment.
Uh basically his company, and the home's registered to that and to his daughter.
Now from Sky Fox too up there, he got some shots of a few people coming out of the home.
Those people have been detained.
Now we're trying to still connect the dots.
We do have some sources on scene here that we're getting this information from.
We were actually the first ones here with about thirty different law enforcement at least.
There are three bear cats on scene here.
This just all unfolded, Sandra, I would say less than ten minutes ago.
We got here even before the crime scene tape came up.
So uh we're just down the hill.
If you look up this street where Tony is right now to the right, you'll see one of those bear cats and law enforcement other side of this bushes basically is that home that is registered to Bad Boy Films, which is part of Bad Boy Entertainment.
And the home in particular is registered not only Bad Boy Films, but to one of P. Diddy's daughters.
Now we are hearing from law enforcement sources that this involves sex trafficking, but we don't yet know to what extent or the details about that.
But you better believe we will be on this all day, keeping you updated with the very latest.
We're now recording live here on the scene in Holmby Hills.
I'm Hailey Winslow, Fox News.
Haley, thank you.
And you can see from that ground shot a very active scene right there, a perimeter put up already.
Nope, just the uh just these uh the guys on the ground down there, the the heavily armed uh officers that made their way inside, they actually are kind of just milling about or holding the perimeter as it would be the non-essential, or you can see them making their way back over to these armored vehicles, probably doing a little debrief about what they saw.
In in any type of these situations, it really is, you know, you've got these armored officers that go in first, but I would venture to say the investigators or the people that are know what they're looking for, probably still out there on the streets and they're waiting for that all clear to make sure that there is absolutely nobody on this property.
And again, this is just uh a precaution.
They don't want to have any kind of issues, maybe somebody's hiding still, maybe just scared.
And it you know, it doesn't have to be nefarious, uh in just because they don't know what's going on and they just don't want to have somebody pop out of a a closet or a bathroom or any any one of these rooms while they're doing that investigation, and then other problems can ensue.
So that's basically why we're seeing that large presence.
They keep walking through there, and like you mentioned, this is an extremely large home, and probably with many rooms and a little secret area, so they want to make sure that everything is cleared before they allow those investigators in to start doing that investigation, whatever it is that they're looking for.
But you can see a number of those officers making their way back into that major.
This is the big main house, as it would be, making their way back inside.
And I would venture to say that they're gonna just go through every one of those rooms and make sure that there is nobody in there.
I don't think they're those those guys that we're seeing, guys and gals that we're seeing in those heavily armored uh gear and equipment.
I don't think they're actually searching for any items that could connect home uh whatever the investigation is.
I would venture to say that those are gonna be the guys that you're seeing right there, and they're waiting for that all clear.
And then this group that you see there, those are the ones that are actually gonna go inside.
They probably have, like you said, they probably have ideas where what they're looking for, where they might be.
So but right now it is still a wait waiting game to make sure that everybody is out of this building and that it is secure.
So as you can see, obviously huge presence, they're searching his house, etc.
Big deal.
And just so you guys know, um, and sorry about that, guys.
I know there's a little bit of confusion for for YouTube right now.
So I what I did was I went ahead and like deleted the other video, and we got this current video up right now.
Fusion.
Oh so sorry about that.
Um, so we should be good now.
Actually, matter of fact, I had the wrong chat the whole time while I was live, so I'm gonna fix that real quick.
But um, but yeah, so what I'm gonna do is I'm gonna actually pull up chat.
Do you guys want me to show you an example of a search warrant?
Give me ones if you guys want me to give you an example of a search warrant, two is if you guys don't want me to.
Um, I said I'm trying to make this a more educational show, show you guys stuff that other people aren't necessarily showing you.
Um, so let me know if y'all want me to uh to do that.
Sweet.
All right.
Looks like there's mostly ones.
Uh or twos if you guys don't want me to.
Sorry, two of you don't want me to.
Okay, here's a good here's a here's one.
So, okay.
This is the Trump warrant, okay.
I have actually broken this one down, but we're not gonna read the entire thing, but I'm just gonna show you guys what goes into a search warrant, okay?
So obviously, this is um, let's see here.
Okay, let's break this thing down.
Okay.
So here's the uh attorney that signed off on it, right?
Here's a search and seizure warrant, right?
This is what you're gonna like leave at the house.
This is August 19, 2022.
This is the sign the judge, Bruce Reinhardt, U.S. Magistrate Judge, West Palm Beach, Florida, August 5th, 2022.
This is when he signed it.
Okay.
And then they're gonna go, they put here, okay.
Um identify the person to describe the property, research, and given its location.
It says see attachment A. Okay.
So keep that in mind.
There's an attachment A. And then I find the affidavits, earny recorded testimony, established probable cost to search and seize the personal property described above.
Attachment B. Okay.
So attachment A, guys, describes the person or property to be searched.
Attachment B is the affidavit.
Okay.
So here's attachment A. Property be searched.
The premises to be searched, 1100 Ocean Boulevard, Palm Beach, Florida, blah, blah, blah.
Further described the resort club, residence, et cetera.
Right.
This is um this is what's going to be searched, right?
Then attachment B, one day I'm gonna pull out one of my search warrants for you guys from back in the day.
Because I used to write these, I've written hundreds of these things.
Now, this this is the attachment B property be searched, right?
What it is, right?
Property, excuse me, property be seized.
Right?
This is the property be searched.
Attachment A. Attachment B is property be seized.
What they're gonna take.
Any physical documents or classification markings along with containers, boxes, etc.
If you guys remember, this was the classified documents case from Trump, right?
So um, so obviously they're gonna put here what they want information, including communications, any form regarding the retrieval storage or transmission, now it's the defense information.
Remember, they're looking for classified documents, right?
So they're gonna put here what they're looking for.
So in Diddy's case, more than likely, if I was to estimate what was an ass search warrant, hey, we're looking for surveillance footage, we're looking for documents, we're looking for bank records that might show him paying people off, etc.
Right.
Now, this is a receipt for property.
This is what they took, right?
This is the FBI.
Now, this is uh agency type thing.
So this is a receipt of what they took, right?
Boxes, etc.
These are the agents' names, right?
More receipt for property, right?
So the attitude the attorney signs for it.
So the agents take it, and they're like, okay, look, I'm doing this in your witness.
Here's the receipt.
Boom.
This is what we took from you, right?
And these are uh Trump's attorneys that sign for it.
Christina Boab.
Right?
Oh, what the fuck?
Where's the affidavit?
Can we not find an affidavit?
You know, Trump affidavit.
Nope.
Okay.
And then this is the affidavit.
This is attachment C, guys.
Attachment C. So A is what's to be searched.
B is what is to be searched.
B is what is to be taken, right?
And then attachment C is the affidavit with all the facts.
So in this case, here's the F uh, you know, like I told you guys before, whether it's a criminal complaint or a search warrant, here we go.
Introduction, agent background, my name is XYZ.
I'm from the FBI.
This is what I do.
And then they go into the facts, source of evidence, statutory uh authority and definitions, why they can do this, right?
793, right, which is the espionage act, right?
And then they go into the probable cause, right?
How the case started, narrow referral, right?
And then they just boom, go into all the facts here.
Right?
A lot of this affidavit is redacted, by the way, because they definitely have informants, right?
They definitely have informants.
So yeah.
So now you guys know what it is, right?
So you got the warrant, right?
So part one is this is the warrant.
This is the actual document that the judge signs, right?
That's on top of everything.
Then it so search warrant on top, attachment A, which is the property be searched, then attachment B, property be seized, and then attachment C, the affidavit that outlines all the facts.
Give me ones in the chat if that makes sense for you guys and you learned something.
Give me twos if it doesn't make sense.
If it doesn't make sense, tell me why it doesn't make sense.
but we're going deep in the woods here with the with the sauce Yes, attachment C is the affidavit.
Now, I'm bringing this affidavit back up because I want you guys to see all the probable cause that goes into, okay, someone said too technical, kind of too technical, but cool.
That's fine.
I'll take two technical.
Right?
Look at all the probable cause, right?
We're on paragraph 24.
We end up going all the way down to a paragraph...
82, pretty much.
Excuse me, like uh no 79, right?
So why do I sell this?
I say this to tell you guys, it is not easy to get a federal search warrant, guys.
And not only is it not easy, because here's here's the process of what it takes to get a search warrant.
I'm gonna, as someone who's written hundreds of these, this is uh this is how it goes.
Step one, you're gonna call the AUSA, the federal prosecutor, you're gonna say, yo, I want to get a search warrant.
I have XYZ reason to believe.
Uh uh AUSA is gonna say, okay, what do you got?
What's your probable cause?
You tell your AUSA your probable cause.
Then they're gonna tell you, eh, that's enough.
Or they're gonna say, or they're gonna say, eh, it's not enough.
Or they're gonna say, okay, we need to beef it up a little bit because a search warrant for a home, guys, is very difficult to get.
Why is it difficult to get?
Because according to the Fourth Amendment, guys, the home is at the top, okay?
And for all my non-American viewers, let's go real quick with what the Fourth Amendment is.
Okay.
What is the Fourth Amendment, guys?
The Fourth Amendment protects people from unreasonable searches and seizures by the government.
Okay.
So we're gonna read it officially.
No, not in simple terms.
I want it like...
No, not the Fifth Amendment.
The rights of the people, right?
This is directly from the Constitution, the right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects against unreasonable searches and seizures shall not be violated, and no warrant shall issue but upon probable cause, supported by oath or affirmation, and particularly describing the place to be searched and the persons or things to be seized.
Guys, that is why attachment A, attachment B, and attachment C are so critical.
The place to be searched, what's to be seized, and the affidavit supporting why you need to go there.
Okay.
So you contact the AUSA, the federal prosecutor, right?
Hey, um, go to main cam here.
You contact the AUSA, assisted United States attorney, right?
This is how you get a federal warrant.
Hey, I want to search XYZ house.
Okay.
What fat what's your facts?
I got an informant that tells me this, I got that, blah, blah, blah.
Okay, cool.
Write it up.
Now, depending on where you are, some AUSAs write the search warrant for you.
Me, I wrote all my own words.
I'm not having no fucking A. That's an insult.
I'm writing my own goddamn words, okay?
I wrote the affidavit part, send it to AUSA, they make their corrections, blah, blah, blah.
Right?
Because obviously it needs to fit certain legal parameters.
Then he sends it up to the USA, United States attorney, all the way up to the presidentially appointed position, right?
If I'm not mistaken, the USA.
Then he approves it, then they send it to the judge.
Once the judge gets it, the judge reads it.
Then the judge, if he feels there's probable call enough probable calls, he'll sign it.
And then you'll be there.
Hey, is everything here true and correct to the best of your knowledge?
So help you God, right?
And you have your right hand in.
He needs to obviously he swears you in.
Yes, it is.
You signed the uh you signed the affidavit, he signs the warrant, boom, you got you're ready to go, you go hit the house, right?
But it's not easy to get a federal search warrant, guys, because like I said before, the Fourth Amendment, which I have here, right?
Is um to protect people in their house papers and effects.
The house is at the pinnacle of the Fourth Amendment, is designed precisely to protect your home, the most important one, right?
You don't need as much probable cause to go through, you know, someone's watershed as you would for their home, right?
Or their phone, even, right?
Because the home is considered the most um sacred place, you know, it's considered your castle.
So I sell this to say that that is why I know for a fact that that HSI got a warrant for his house.
They got some fucking probable cause.
And guess where that probable cause came from?
It came from Cassie, guaranteed, right?
She definitely cooperating with them, and it definitely came from your boy Little Rod, right?
This dude.
Wait, where's he at?
This dude right here, right?
Guaranteed.
Right?
And on top of other people as well, which we're gonna talk about here in a second.
All right.
So obviously, they went ahead and raided the house.
We all know what HSI is.
I think I've explained this plenty of times.
The agency I used to work for.
Um they do investigate sex trafficking.
That is one of the crimes that they investigate.
Matter of fact, they also uh they also did the R. Kelly case, by the way.
I think if I'm not mistaken, it was either the HSI New York or HSI Chicago office that led that investigation.
Um, so yeah.
And then obviously you guys can see, right?
They went out there, HRT team, etc.
They all went out there.
Um, they changed their vests.
Their vests are no longer this is what an old HS.
This is what, see, they changed it to look more like the FBI.
This is what the old vest used to look like, guys.
This is what my vest used to look like, right?
Here, let me put this shit on camera for y'all ninjas.
This is what my old shit used to look like, right?
This is just a carrier, by the way.
This is an actual vest.
This is my old carrier.
So anyway.
Uh, good times, good times.
So, but yeah, you guys can see here in this video that they switched it to look more like the uh the FBI vest with the green.
Because if you go on here on their website, let me see here.
They they changed up the website, man.
That's good.
The website before is trash, man.
I'm glad that they're fucking finally improving their shit.
What is this?
Under was it under careers?
How to apply, maybe?
Where the fuck was it?
Maybe special hiring.
What's it this?
No.
HS Academy?
No, that's not what it is.
Yeah.
I can't find it.
Someone had the picture of it.
Our priorities, maybe.
All right, whatever.
Anyway, You guys know what it is.
So, yeah, this is what they were doing.
Um, so obviously they did the raid.
It's been a few months now.
So, quick updates.
They have convened the grand jury, guys, okay?
And what does that mean when they uh can uh convene the grand jury?
What that means is they had the grand jury meet.
They had the grand jury meet, which is basically, you know, uh, you know, just like a regular jury, but this one is for the purposes of finding probable cause versus finding someone guilty beyond a reasonable doubt.
They had the grand jury meet, and the grand jury convenes and they hear witness testimony, okay?
So people have been coming forward, testifying, okay, about testifying about their run-ins with Diddy or the crimes they may have witnessed.
Okay.
So um, so that's not good for Diddy.
Because what that means is is that there are um witnesses coming forward, and that is all doing what?
Establishing probable cause.
Once probable cause is established, an indictment is gonna come.
All right.
So we will go ahead and uh react to this video from Law and Crime Network.
Shout out to them.
Uh, where they're talking about this as grand jury probe confirmed as new lawsuit emerges.
Okay, and this came out two days ago.
And just so you guys know, they can be I first got news that they convened their grand jury about a month ago, that they had their first grand jury meeting, and they've been doing it since, right?
To bring witnesses in and hear their testimony.
Give me ones in the chat if that if if I explain the grand jury process for you guys, and that makes sense.
Give me ones.
If it doesn't make sense, give me twos and tell me why it doesn't make sense.
I'm gonna make sure you guys understand everything before we continue on.
And I know some of you guys might get annoyed.
Oh, bro, why do you keep asking?
Is because I want you guys to really learn this shit, understand this shit, so you guys are able to look at stuff critically and understand what the fuck is really going on.
Okay, uh, if you're gonna say two, tell me why you don't understand.
Don't just say explain, please, explain what.
Okay, what's the difference between a grand jury and a regular jury?
Good question.
So, a regular jury, guys, is you're going to trial, you're fighting the case, they do a voidier, they get a try, they get a jury out, the jury's gonna hear the case.
You know, jury of 12, right?
So they're gonna hear the case.
And that is specifically for that criminal case.
A grand jury is a group of people that hear criminal cases, okay.
Um, they hear criminal cases, and they're just establishing probable cause.
Okay.
Finding someone guilty beyond a reasonable doubt is all the way up here.
Finding probable cause is down here, guys.
Okay.
So the thresholds are completely different.
Grand jury is just finding probable cause, right?
Which is run by an AUSA.
They present the facts, and remember, you're only hearing the prosecution side.
Okay.
The jury is hearing both the defense and the prosecution, and it's a trial, right?
Uh, let's see here.
Yeah, and that's where the term you can indict a ham sandwich comes from.
Because you only hear the the um uh no, there's there's federal and state grand juries, by the way, guys.
So um, let's see here.
Yeah, grand jury decides if there's enough for to rest.
Exactly, exactly.
We don't know the actual charges yet, Mr. 707, but we do suspect that it's gonna be um, I suspect it's gonna be RICO hit with uh RICO and then sex trafficking crimes underneath that is what I suspect.
Uh so my to get to a grand jury to give you a trial is very easy.
No, it's not no, because the AUSA has got to run the grand jury procedure.
They convene the grand jury and then the agent comes in and testifies, or the witnesses come in and testify for the government, right?
Sometimes the defense prosecute uh testifies, but they never say anything, they typically take the fifth.
So if they're subpoenaed to testify in front of the grand jury, a lot of times they're gonna say, I'm not saying shit, and take the fifth, because obviously they have a right to not incriminate themselves.
So um, let's see here.
So that's what uh that's the difference between a grand jury and a regular jury.
So does that make sense, guys?
Give me ones in the chat if this all makes sense.
Grand jury, the process, bringing witnesses in, because this is important for you guys to understand so that we can get into this video here.
Thank you.
Hearsay is allowed in grand jury, guys.
Hearsay is allowed, but hearsay is not allowed in trials.
So again, remember, grand jury is just probable cause.
Jury trial is up here because now it's beyond a reasonable doubt.
This is just probable cause.
Grand jury, probable cause, low threshold.
Uh jury trial, reasonable doubt.
Beyond a reasonable doubt, excuse me.
Way higher.
Young here, the reason why you only hear the prosecution in the grand jury is because the grant the the prosecution is the one bringing the case forward.
So they had the burden of performance is on them to bring the facts.
And then they could call defense witnesses in, but no, I mean, bro, whenever they do that, they they just say, I'm not talking.
So the defense never says shit.
Uh okay.
Yes, hearsays allowed in grand jury, guys.
Hearsays absolutely allowed on grand jury, it's allowed in search warrants, etc.
I mean, look, look.
If you guys, just so you guys understand, hearsay is allowed in.
For example, let's go.
Trump search warrant.
Right.
Like all these facts, guys.
Is hearsay?
All this probable cause comes from informants.
That's hearsay information, guys.
Right?
It's coming.
Matter of fact, hold on.
Hold on one second.
You know what?
Let me do this even better.
Um, let's go with um criminal complaint.
Right.
This is a Boston Marathon bomber, right?
Okay.
Okay.
So right here, what does this say, guys?
This advantage is based upon my personal involvement in this investigation, my training, my experience, my review of relevant evidence and information supplied to me by other law enforcement officers.
It does not include each and every fact known to me about the investigation, but rather only those facts that I believe are sufficient to establish requisite probable cause.
So, what does that mean, guys?
Hearsay is allowed when you're establishing probable cause, but it is not allowed in a trial.
Okay.
So cool.
Give me one chef that makes sense, and then we're gonna move on to the video that we're gonna play.
This is a very informative episode, by the way.
We got what 4,000 ninjas in here watching?
2800 on Rumble and then 1800 on YouTube.
Shout out to all you guys.
Guys, Castle Club.tv if you want to support the mission.
As you guys know, we are demonetized, so I'm doing this for absolutely free.
Because I enjoy educating you guys and teaching you guys this stuff.
So if you guys really want to support, Castle Club.tv is the best way to support so that we can keep the mission going.
Because I'm telling y'all, man, Fed Reacts is not monetized whatsoever.
I actually lose money doing this.
I'm working for free right now.
But I think it's important to give you guys this info, educate you guys, give you guys a different perspective.
Because ain't nobody else on YouTube ran as much search warrants as I have or has this kind of knowledge.
So Castle Club.tv guys, go support the mission.
Anyway, uh, let's go ahead and get into this video from Law and Crime.
It's 30 minutes long.
We're not gonna watch the whole thing, and we're gonna play it on faster speed.
Um, but yes, PDD grand jury probe confirmed as lawsuit emerges.
And we've known this that they've been gathering the grand jury for a bit, but it seems that they've been doing multiple meetings.
Did he combs is now the subject of a federal criminal investigation?
And he was just hit with another lawsuit, and he's planning to sell his massive mansion.
Well, we're gonna discuss some massive new developments of the ongoing legal side of the music producer, all with renowned celebrity attorney Radford Cohen.
Welcome to Sidebar.
Presented by Law and crime, I'm Jesse Weber.
All right, there are some more interesting things happening right now in the Sean Diddy Combs story that we want to talk to you about.
Is it that I don't know, Combs is reportedly now the subject of a federal investigation?
Or how about the fact that there's a new Well, we've known that since they did the search warrant.
Feds aren't gonna do a search warrant in your house unless they have a case open and there's an investigation going.
And the fact that they were able to even do the search warrant tells me that they had informants inside the house that gave them real-time information, which is why they were able to get the probable cause to even go in there.
Or that it's being reported he's trying to sell his house for 70 million dollars in the middle of all this, or how about the fact that a key figure Yes, there's been rumors, guys, that uh Diddy has been trying to sell a lot of his assets and become liquid because he has a legal team on the criminal side as well as a legal team handling all the civil cases.
As you guys know, he's he's involved in like five plus lawsuits.
Okay, so he is liquidating a lot of his positions and being cash heavy right now, so he can go ahead and defend himself.
Seemingly wants to testify against him, obviously, a lot to talk about.
We're gonna get into it all.
But this is an interesting time for Sean Diddy Combs.
And we have extensively here on sidebar.
He's currently facing multiple, multiple laws of the city.
Someone said that he's broke.
Diddy is not broke, guys.
Diddy is not broke.
He's uh, if I'm not mistaken, Dickie's a billionaire, my guys.
Let's see here.
Yeah, about one billion.
So it's it's probably more.
It's probably more.
I've realized that the the the this stuff is uh a lot of times inaccurate.
It's probably more here.
I want to start with what I think is arguably one of the biggest developments, and that is that it's being reported that Sean Combs attorneys were notified last week that he is the subject of that federal investigation by the Southern District of New York.
I mean, come on.
Uh I mean, there's a bear should in the woods.
Of course he's a subject of the criminal investigation, and the feds told him that.
Because obviously they did a search warrant in his house.
They're not gonna do a search warrant on his house, and I know this because I used to work for HSI.
I'll tell y'all this right now.
You're not doing no fucking search warrant on a house unless you got a case number open, you got some reports written, you coordinating with the AUSA, you got a couple of informants.
Come on, man.
Come on, I used to do this shit for real.
So no, of course he's the fucking target of the investigation.
The case, I guarantee you, the fucking case is probably called P. Diddy et al.
Let's fucking go.
Dumb Domonko.
I mean, we got the fucking case number.
Bro, hold on.
Hold on, ninjas.
Look.
This is why I'm the best.
Nobody can stop me at this.
Look, look, look, look, look at this shit, man.
Right?
You go, let's go.
Fed reacts, right?
You go to my older video.
Right, you're gonna go in here.
Where is it?
No, not national security.
Right, you go into Diddy, right?
Here, I put timestamps for y'all ninjas too.
I'm trying to find the case number here.
Am I...
Right.
Boom.
So I went ahead and zoomed in on the picture for y'all.
Look, I got the case number here.
Fifteen means trafficking, right?
This is uh this is an evidence seizure bag, by the way.
Right.
And then HQ, which means that the case came from headquarters, fiscal year, and then 001.
But if I'm not mistaken, this was a New York case originally.
So 15 is the code for human trafficking.
So come on, man.
You I can't be able to do that.
You're not gonna do a fucking search warrant on a house unless you got a case open.
Period.
All right.
You got a case open, you got an AUSA on board, you're going after someone high profile like this.
You absolutely, you know, have the office involved.
Everybody knows in the office what you're doing, right?
So, like, bro, uh them the them the feds saying, Yeah, we're the he's the subject of investigation.
Come on, man.
Come on, dude.
They they yeah, there's a bear shouldn't have fucking woods, of course he's a subject of investigation because they're not gonna waste their fucking time and convene a grand jury and go through all the stuff that they've done and write search warrants, etc.
I mean, they already got a case number.
So yeah, it's it's man.
And you're not opening a case with the feds.
This isn't like regular police.
Let me make this very clear for you guys.
So when the regular police, right, you let's say you call the police.
Oh, someone, you know, stole my dog's leash.
Okay, all right.
You know, they sit there and they write their fucking thing and you say, Can I have a case number?
Yeah, they'll generate some bullshit case number for your missing leash.
The feds aren't generating case numbers for no reason, guys.
They're not generating a case number for your dog leash.
When they're generating a case number, they're trying to come and arrest you and take all your money.
All right.
They don't open cases for nothing.
What does it mean to be the subject of a federal criminal investigation?
So there's several levels to federal criminal investigations.
One of them is being a subject.
That means that this guy's an entertainment attorney.
Let's see what he knows.
They're looking into uh criminal allegations against an individual, but it's not as high level as uh say a target.
A target is essentially they're very close to getting an indictment.
They're going to get an indictment, and they invite you to come in to speak to them before they get the indictment or to work out a deal before they arrest you when you know that you're a target.
And they never they don't necessarily always tell people, hey, you're a target or a subject.
They usually send those letters out to see if they want you to come in and cooperate or they have to be.
Yes, that is true.
They're only gonna give you a target letter or whatever else like that, right?
Or hit you with the information.
Remember, guys, I explained to you guys what an information is with Julian Assange last week.
They're gonna give you a target letter or an information if they have an idea that you're gonna cooperate, or you're not at the top of the total pole.
They're saying that because they don't want to disclose that he's the target right away.
Because but he is, dude.
He is.
They searched his house.
He's obviously the main person in all the lawsuits.
And guess what?
In all these lawsuits, these people are absolutely cooperating with the feds as well on the criminal case.
And all that information in these civil lawsuits can be used in the federal criminal case.
I think the fact that they sent the letter saying that he's a subject, I think they already knew that.
When your house gets raided by the feds, you are either a subject or a target, more likely a target than a subject.
It's definitely a target, bro.
Interesting that they sent out this letter saying that he's a subject, but I think that his lawyers are already speaking to the Southern District of New York and they know kind of what's going on and that there's a federal They absolutely know.
And as a matter of fact, I was talking with Diddy about this.
Uh not did I was talking with academics about this.
Um, his lawyers, guys, are disclosing to the feds when he travels.
Okay?
Like literally, if he's getting on a plane and traveling, etc., and that's a part of the reason why he's selling what I think he's selling the LA home.
That's another reason why he's selling that home so that he can be in one location where they can find him at all times.
And I know why he's doing this.
He's doing this very smart guy.
They know an indictment is coming.
They know.
I told you guys this before, I predicted it by the end of this year, or you know, at the absolute latest, maybe early 2025, there's gonna be a federal indictment on Diddy and a bunch of his co-conspirators.
However, however, um, Diddy, right, being the smart guy that he is, he knows that these charges are pro his legal team knows that these charges are probably gonna be pretty serious.
Human trafficking, etc.
These types of charges, you normally don't get bonded for them, guys.
However, if Diddy's able to display, look, we're cooperating with you guys from the beginning.
We've been notifying you guys every time he travels for business.
We're letting you guys know what he's doing.
We're obviously giving you guys courtesy calls, et cetera.
What are they establishing by this?
They're saying, look, he's not a dangerous society, he's traveling for work, he's cooperating fully.
He's not a flight risk.
Most importantly, he's not a fucking flight risk.
Okay.
Then, when he does get indicted, and he does have to go there for his initial appearance.
What his attorneys are gonna go ahead and try to negotiate, which I guarantee this is gonna happen.
They're gonna say, look, we've cooperated with you before.
We knew that this indictment was coming.
Look, our defend our client is gonna surrender.
Please don't knock the door down, please don't make it a media spectacle.
They'll come in with the raid teams and all this other shit, right like this, right?
Um already speaking to the Southern District of New York and they know kind of more likely a target than they don't want this shit again, right?
They don't want the HRT coming in, which uh, you know, I said HRT.
Yeah, uh SRT, right?
Special response team.
They don't want them to come in, right?
They don't want uh Homeland Security like the SWAT to come in.
They want us to just, you know, go ahead, surrender willingly, go into the office, not make him getting taken out in cuffs or none of that stuff, because it's bad for image perspectives.
Remember, guys, did it as an A-list celebrity?
Okay, world-known.
A-less celebrity.
When you're A-list celebrity, you gotta go ahead and make sure that your um images of a certain way.
Obviously, this is already a black eye on his um on his image, but it would be worse for him to be in handcuffs.
You know how many fucking, you know, paparazzi are gonna be out there trying to get an image of him in handcuffs.
They don't want that.
So they're positioning right now.
Look, we know he's gonna get indicted.
Is he a target?
Is he a subject?
Whatever, whatever.
He's traveling here, he's traveling there, he's not a flight risk, and they're using this to negotiate.
Please, when he's indicted, let us know.
He will self-surrender, and we're going to push to get him out on bond.
Now, why is this important?
Because, guys, if he's out on bond, he could be out talking with his lawyers, he's not in jail.
Um, he could be with his family, he can still work, he can still earn money.
Um it's much easier to fight your case free than for behind bars, obviously.
So that's the other thing they're gonna they're gonna try to push for is for him to be out on bond, they'll surrender his passport, etc.
And he'll be able to get arrested, not go in cuffs, self-surrender, and be out on bond, which is gonna be a huge advantage for him versus someone like R. Kelly, that you know, he did spend a considerable amount of time in jail fighting his case, which sucks, right?
So he wants to be free while he's out, and here's the other thing too.
He doesn't have to push for a speedy trial.
If he doesn't have to push for a speedy trial, case might take a few years, right?
So he is trying to elongate his freedom.
Right?
And I think that's why is uh I think that's his defense team's strategy is to cooperate from the beginning, self-surrender, when the bond hearing comes, push to get um get out on bond, right?
The government probably won't object to that because he did cooperate from the beginning, and that's it.
Wants to fight the case outside.
I think it's I think him and his legal team know it's coming, and uh they're preparing for the worst.
And the subject, it's interesting that they sent out this letter saying that he's a subject, but I think that his lawyers are already speaking to the Southern District of New York and they know kind of what's going on and that there's a they definitely are.
I got insider information on that.
Shout out to academics on that.
A federal uh a federal indictment that could be on the horizon.
And it can sway.
You can be it could be a subject and it could be upgraded to a target.
Do you notify Combs, is it legal team because the idea is you say they bring him in that they want to work out uh a deal, or is it because, hey, listen, we're looking at some things we'd like to give you an opportunity to explain yourself.
Is that more what we're looking at?
Yeah, usually the latter.
When you're a subject, it's like they're not asking you to come in and give them uh, you know, a reason to charge you with a lesser crime or things of that nature.
That's more of a target.
When you're a subject, usually what happens is they're saying, hey, we're looking at these things.
Do you have any evidence to give us to the other side of this?
And generally they don't do that a lot.
I think they're doing it in this case because it's a high profile case.
They don't want to say they never gave him an opportunity to present any evidence that they could present to a grand jury.
Which uh which he's you know, obviously that he's not gonna go in.
Fuck no.
Like they're gonna ask him questions, etc.
He's gonna take his fifth amendment.
You know, defendants almost never go in a grand jury and present their side because there's no point.
To vitiate these allegations.
There's these allegations that he's done X, Y, and Z. If he says, hey, listen, I wasn't even in the state of the case at the time this girl said that I was here, or I wasn't in the state of New York at the time the girl said I was here.
No that gives them an opportunity to present that, and then the the government can take a look at it and see if they're gonna uh you know incorporate that into their grand jury testimony.
Very interesting you talk about that because now I'm wondering about timing, right?
It's no surprise we talked about it here on sidebar before that it wouldn't be a shocker if he's ultimately hit with charges.
Not a definite, we don't know for sure.
We clearly do not know what's happening behind the scenes, but we see all these lawsuits.
We know his houses were raided months ago.
We talked about the possibility of being reported to the grand jury has been impaneled.
Does this give you any insight into the potential timing of criminal charges in this case?
Yeah, I mean, listen, after a raid, generally I say there's like a 90-day period where they meet, they discuss the charges, they go in front of a grand jury, they discuss charges in front of a grand jury, present evidence, present witnesses, and usually there's this 90-day window.
And that's what they've been doing.
They've been bringing witnesses in and presenting the evidence, guys, and they've been doing this for at least a month.
I had information at least for a month that they've been uh convening the grand jury for this.
So maybe 120-day window, but it's usually within three, anywhere from three to five months that they put together an indictment, depending on how vast it is.
I mean, that's the picture I showed you guys.
That's the Miami case number.
I actually know this dude right here.
I know this guy personally.
This is the Miami office that did the raid, so I mean I've seen it closer to 60 days.
It just depends on what they're investigating.
Uh but I had a client whose house was rated about, you know, 45 days ago, and they're asking, hey, do you have any information that can assist us in what charges we think we may file, what charges we may not.
So my guess is uh if I was just putting money down, I would say towards the end of the summer, I think they're gonna have an indictment.
Uh I don't see how any evidence that he has is gonna sway them to the contrary, especially where they have this grand jury that has been meeting my guesstimate is for at least 45 days, and they've been providing evidence.
They usually don't uh Budley says, Marin, did you see foul play by the feds when you work for them?
It seems like they don't like you, they can get you.
Um, I never did, bro.
Um, you guys gotta remember at the federal level, man, corruption is a lot less um than at like the state and local level.
Of course, there's gonna still be corrupt pieces of shit, of course.
Um, but like planning evidence on people, doing dumb shit like that, you know, like being like a firman, not not that common, man.
Not that common.
Like the feds a lot of times that d cr arrested corrupt police officers.
Don't waste their time on a grand jury meeting and presenting evidence and then not file any charges whatsoever.
Now, I will say in his defense, right?
He is innocent until proven guilty, he hasn't been abused by anything.
But I will say we've covered a number of cases where his defense team has raised a number of really good legal defenses on the civil front.
You know, one of them was that the fact is he's being hit with certain uh causes of action claims that are invalid, he says, because the statute you're suing me under wasn't even in existence uh when these allegations happened.
So his legal team will, like you said, it kind of hit me if he's gonna say, I really I can prove to you I wasn't in this location uh when I'm accused of doing X, Y, and Z. Um by the way, before I get into the lawsuit, it reminds me, how much do they share with him or his attorneys of the potential charges of the case they have against him?
They share everything, or do they share just bits and pieces?
So, generally speaking, and I've dealt with the Southern District of New York quite a few times.
Um, usually they share bits and pieces, if they share anything at all.
Uh they'll say this is what we're looking at sometimes, X, Y, and Z. They might not give you details.
I mean, it's not hard to figure out these lawsuits that are coming out in Fast and Furious and the type of inch incidents that he's had in the past and the type of trouble that he's had in the past.
I think it's pretty easy to figure out where they're going with it.
And my guess is they're gonna put together some sort of um very long, encompassing indictment where it encompasses crimes that have taken place over a period of time.
Yep, and they're gonna be able to do that and shrink it together through the RICO Act.
In a sort of ongoing criminal uh conspiracy type situation.
Look, man, I see guys, uh bro.
I'd even yo, I told y'all, I haven't really watched this video like that before, but I'm telling you guys this how this is how they do it.
Especially when you got crimes like this that are beyond statute limitations.
That's my guess.
Again, you know, and like I always say, everybody's innocent until proven guilty, even if they indict him, he still has the right to a trial.
So long story short is that's usually where it goes.
That's kind of my feeling on this case is that they're gonna try and incorporate everything they can from his past.
I wouldn't be surprised if they go back to you know, prior shootings that he's been accused of, prior gun possessions that he's been accused of.
Uh, you know, there were some incidences of violence with other uh rappers that they may say he had something, some kind of hand in those other incidences.
So that's what I think they're gonna do is put together an encompassing indictment that throws everything at the wall.
So for them to tell him, hey, this is what we're gonna do, this is what we're looking at.
I don't think that's uh the case in in this matter.
Hey, everybody, I want to take a minute to thank Morgan and Morgan for sponsoring today's law on crime YouTube.
Morgan and Morgan, we don't know them, niggas.
So now I want to get your uh your thoughts and opinion on this major, major development, another development.
And that is that Combs was just hit with another lawsuit.
This is now, I think, the tenth lawsuit within the past Oh shit, tenth lawsuit.
So another one came in literally like within the last couple days, guys.
Tenth lawsuit, goddamn.
Yeah.
And this one is from former adult film star Adria English, and she filed a 100%.
Okay, uh porn star suit him, so not as credible, but okay.
114 page federal lawsuit in the Southern District of New York.
So again, the same district where we're seeing this federal Everything is filed in the Southern District of New York, guys.
So the AUSA's got a lot of evidence, and guess what?
They got a lot of witnesses too.
You best believe all ten of these lawsuit people are cooperating with HSI.
And she's filed this lawsuit against Sean Combs.
She's filed again against other defendants, and she's basically making claims of sex trafficking and sexual assault.
That she was, quote, used as a sexual pawn for the pleasure and financial benefit of others during Combs' infamous white parties, these parties that happened in the Hamptons and New Hamptons in New York and Miami, where everybody dressed up in white attire, and she claims that Combs forced her into prostitution for years.
She said that Combs forced her to take drugs before she was, quote, passed off to others.
And she claims that she was demanded to have sex, for instance, with celebrity jeweler Jacob the jeweler Arabo, who is listed as a defendant in this complaint.
And she claims that Wow.
Holy Combs threatened to blackmail her and her boyfriend from the entertainment industry if she didn't do what he wanted.
Combs attorney, by the way, Jonathan Davis released a statement saying, no matter how many lawsuits are filed, it won't change the fact that Mr. Combs has never sexually assaulted or sex trafficked anyone.
We live in a world where anyone can file a lawsuit for any reason without any proof.
Fortunately, a fair impartial judicial judicial process exists.
This is true.
This to find the truth.
And Mr. Combs is confident he will prevail against these and other baseless claims in court.
And keep in mind, guys, that um, you know, when one lawsuit comes, everyone kind of just comes because remember, guys, he settled with Cassie in one day.
People saw the blood in the water.
Let's just sue.
Let's get a quick buck off of this.
So obviously she's coming now too.
So am I saying that everyone's lawsuit is bullshit?
No.
But there are gonna be some bullshit lawsuits in that tent for sure.
You know, this is probably okay, but it does what you're I think there's one of them.
I mean, this girl's like a sex worker, man.
So, whatever.
But uh we'll see what happens.
Now she is suing under various causes of action, such as violation of the Federal Racket Hearing Statute, sexual assault, sexual harassment, violation of the New York City victims of gender motivated violence protection act.
Which they only had a certain amount of time to file those uh as well.
Violation of trafficking and victims protection act, aiding and abetting a sex trafficking enterprise, negligent and intentional infliction of emotional distress.
It's a massive, massive lawsuit, Radford.
Um, but again, very consistent with the other lawsuits that have been filed.
What are your thoughts?
Which obviously, right?
This is a perfect opportunity to sue.
So anyone who feels like they've been wrong by Diddy is gonna come now because he has bigger problems with this federal case, and obviously I would assume most of his money is going towards his legal defense for that versus dealing with these people, right?
And keep in mind, guys, that civil cases, though the threshold is way lower.
Preponderance of the evidence is only 51% versus 49% if we're gonna numerically display it.
You know, when I read some of these lawsuits, you know it's very hard to differentiate the lawsuits that have value to them and the lawsuits that are being just piggybacked onto everything.
Exactly.
Agreed.
Because they're all using the same types of uh facts.
When you read this lawsuit, it seems to me, when I look at the individual that's filing it, and me be it right or wrong, the industry that that individual is was involved in.
Uh, and then I look at He's being nice about it.
When I look at the individual's uh industry that she was involved in, yeah, she was a porn star, bro.
The allegations and whether or not those allegations would be able to be proven through other individuals.
This is one of those lawsuits I think is a piggyback onto everything else.
I think that, and his lawyer is right.
When you open up the floodgates, and I say this to my clients quite often, you know, a lot of my clients say, hey, I got hit, uh you know, this person's threatening me with a lawsuit.
If they file this lawsuit, it's total BS.
We should fight it, blah, blah, blah.
I said, listen, there's a couple different ways to go about this.
There's either one way to go about it, even on the BS lawsuits, is to settle it out for you know what you would be paying a lawyer, hundred grand, fifty grand, seventy-five grand, whatever you think that you would be paying a lawyer to answer that complaint.
But then you have to look at the things that aren't a cost.
When that lawsuit gets filed, are you gonna lose, you know, is everyone gonna ditch you?
Are you gonna lose, you know, your Adidas?
You're gonna lose your Nike sponsorship, all these different sponsors.
That's true.
That's true.
Them even filing the lawsuit sometimes creates problems, even if it's bullshit.
Sponsorship, so they're gonna just gonna walk away from you, not because the lawsuit is true, but because of the allegations in the lawsuit.
So those are things to consider.
Then, if a lawsuit actually gets filed, you have no choice but to go to war over the lawsuit.
Because if you settle that lawsuit and you settle it quickly, there is blood in the water, and all the sharks come to feed.
And that's what you saw with the Diddy lawsuit.
He's he said, no, I'm not gonna settle with her, I'm not gonna settle with her, which I believe that he should have, especially with Cassie.
You're talking about DeSandro.
He says he settled that lawsuit the day after it was filed back.
November of 2023.
Which was just idiotic at that point, because you don't settle it the day after it gets filed.
At that point, you're at war.
And and and really, if you if you settle something within a day of filing, it signals to all the wolves that I am weak and it's now the time to attack.
And that's what you saw.
You saw a lot of lawsuits being filed.
Some of them were just outrageously fantastical in terms of the the accusation.
Got a check here from Bowley.
He says, Marin, since the feds have a high rate of success, do you recommend coping a plea?
Uh yeah, bro.
You you're gonna lose most of the time if you if you try to fight the feds.
I ain't gonna lie, man.
Some of them could be true, some of them might not be true.
We just don't know, right?
Until you get into the heart of it.
But I think that opened the floodgates to allow everyone else to start suing him.
And I think, like I said, this is one of those lawsuits that I think he's gonna have another three or four before this is over.
Why this lawsuit do you think that?
Is it because and and I'll author, I was looking at the lawsuit, and there's a lawyer, I was looking at some ways that you might be able to uh uh uh attack this.
Obviously, these are very, very serious allegations, but uh there's a part of the lawsuit where it says defendant Combs frightened and placed plaintiff in apprehension of harm when he forced and coerced plaintiff to engage in sex work for him during his white parties from 2004 to 2009.
Um, do you think one thing could be is it realistic to believe that she was forced to do this for years?
Um, is that something that you say, you know, that might be hard to prove?
But then again, I mean, yeah, that's a long ass time.
How many cases, sexual assault cases have we covered where people are consistently abused for years and she's an adult.
And maybe it takes them time to realize that they're abused or they were in legitimate fear and felt they had no choice.
But you tell me, is that one of the areas that you're you're looking at?
I mean, why do you think that this is uh a case that maybe is uh piggybacking?
I I think that's one of the reasons.
You know, when I look at a Lawsuit and I see that it's over a term of years.
It doesn't mean that it's not true.
It raises my radar.
A lot of things raise my radar when I read uh you know different complaints and I say to myself, like I I've dealt with victims of sex abuse.
I've dealt with victims that have been trafficked.
I don't just represent defendants, I've represented civil uh claims where this same kind of thing might have occurred.
It it becomes more unusual as you pile on facts, such as that it's over a period of five years, and then nothing happens between 09 to 2024 until all these other lawsuits are filed, and then suddenly Yes, that looks very bad.
Like you didn't say shit until now.
I'm gonna file a lawsuit too uh because I can, I'm gonna file a lawsuit two and jump on the case.
And I could get some money because we've seen them settle.
Uh jump on this kind of Diddy train and see if I can get my lawsuit settled.
Or it could be a situation where uh, you know, someone said, Hey, you should talk to uh I think Diddy gave the key back to the city.
This young lady, the Southern District of New York talks to her, and they're like, hey, I don't know if she is a sex worker or if she was abused and trafficked, and it could be on that wall, and to make sure that the Southern District understands I shouldn't be involved in this, I shouldn't be charged, I wasn't a sex worker, I was abused, she files this lawsuit to kind of put that over the top and say, like, look, you know, me a culpa.
Let's explore that a little bit.
So obviously, right, you make it a great point that there could be people who piggyback that come out after all these years.
Another way of looking out of its course is if somebody begins the lawsuits, if somebody comes out against a high-powered figure like uh Diddy or a Harvey Weinstein or uh uh R. Kelly, and obviously uh Sean Diddy Combs is not in the same Romanism, he hasn't been criminally charged, but it could give somebody the strength to come forward.
But putting that to aside, I was curious of the timing because do you think that she files this lawsuit because she is one of the witnesses who's gonna testify in this grand jury, or again, assuming there is a grand jury investigating Combs or he's the subject of the investigation.
Do you think she's testified?
Do you think she's spoken to them?
And that is why we're now seeing this lawsuit.
I think that's really interesting what we talked about.
I I I believe so.
I that's what I think that this is going.
I think that's 100%.
Individuals that are gonna be called on by the Southern District of New York to come in and testify in front of a grand jury.
I think as they are speaking to them, they say, Oh, wait a minute, yeah, I was trafficked, I was this, I was that, and then all of a sudden it kind of leads to another lawsuit.
That's why I think there's gonna be more lawsuits to follow.
So I don't know if that happened in this case, but you Absolutely everyone that's filing a lawsuit, you best believe the government is talking to them, and they're probably gonna be a witness in a criminal case.
It doesn't hurt them, it only benefits them.
And here's the other thing, too, just so you guys know.
If Diddy's found guilty of these crimes from a criminal case, pretty much everyone that claims that they were sex trafficked by Diddy is gonna uh win their case.
Because keep in mind, beyond a reasonable doubt is all the way up here.
Preponderance of the evidence is all the way down here.
So if he's found guilty, right, beyond a reasonable doubt for sex trafficking, all these people that are filing these civil lawsuits against them, even how no matter how frivolous they are, they only need to prove 51% versus 49%.
How strong is it gonna look if they got them on beyond unreasonable doubt?
You see that happening in many cases where they're called in as a witness, they start going now that I say that.
That actually I just had a Eureka moment.
I think that's another reason why he's fighting so hard to stay out of jail, right?
Because I think his strategy is I'm gonna stay out of jail, fight my Fed case for as long as I can, and I'm gonna fight these civil cases, either settle out as many of them as I can, or fight them, then do my criminal case last, because the worst thing that can happen, guys, is the criminal case goes, right?
And he gets found guilty.
Now, all these people that came forward with a with a civil case of sexual assault or sexual human traffic uh sex trafficking or whatever, they all are instantly more valid because he's already found been found guilty beyond a reasonable doubt in a federal case for sex trafficking.
So um, and obviously he's gonna go do jail time, but then he's gonna be financially liable for these people.
So I think his legal team is looking at it like, all right, we're gonna extend the federal case as long as we can.
We're gonna ask for discovery extensions, all that crap.
Obviously, it's gonna be a big case.
So he'll be able to fight it while he's free, not ask for a speedy trial, extend the process, right?
Extend discovery, all that crap, all these hearings, right?
Delay, delay, delay, fight these civil cases, either settle them out or fight them, right?
He'll probably end up settling them out, pay them all out, leave me the fuck alone, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, right?
And then get on with the criminal case and fight that one and put all his eggs in that basket.
Because if he loses the criminal case, not only does he lose his freedom, He's gonna lose all the civil cases by default.
Through all the things, and the and the uh, you know, the US government they start saying, hey, you know, it sounds to me like you were you know you were trafficked.
This doesn't sound like you were sex worker.
This doesn't sound like you were just getting paid to have sex or whatever.
This sounds like he was he was doing this to you or this to you or this to you.
Bells and whistles go off in those individuals' heads, and then they hire a a civil attorney to file a civil lawsuit.
That happens quite often as well.
So you just don't know, but they like I said, it just it raises your radar when you read these lawsuits, and you start kind of questioning why it took over a period of time, why it took so long to come forward.
And you're right, there's always arguments on the other side.
Oh, this person was very powerful.
But it wasn't like she was she wasn't a rapper, she wasn't a singer, she wasn't in that realm of okay, I'm at this level of fame, and if I don't do this, he's gonna blackball me.
It's a very strange dynamic in that lawsuit that she's discussing, especially like that she that he forced her to have sex with Jacob the jeweler.
Like these individuals that they're bringing in is very unusual.
The counterargument to that would be if you're somebody who's not very prominent and doesn't have the power, it's easier to blackball you and make sure you don't get the career, or your boyfriend doesn't get the career that they were looking for.
I do want your opinion about this, though, because there are a lot of people who are named in this uh lawsuit.
A lot of uh companies there are people, Jacob the Jewel.
Um, but she's also suing uh I give everybody an idea.
To Miko Thomas, and I want everybody to listen to this.
Some of you guys that are wondering like who this dude is, right?
This dude used to be fucking huge back in like uh in the early 2000s.
Used to be famous for these watches.
Right, here he is.
Right.
We're rappers and shit like that.
He used to be real big in the in the um Jacob Rabbo uh American jewelry and watch designer who founded Jacob and Company in 1986 and grew it to become an international luxury blend.
He began strictly as jewelry with bowl designs that appealed to celebrities who became regular customers.
And then back in the early 2000s, like 2004 and shit like that, when she was hooking up with him allegedly, right?
I remember these used to be these watches used to be huge back in the day.
These were like the cool things to have, these watches from the different time zones, right?
Which I don't know what the hell this eBay shit is.
It's probably fake.
But you guys get the idea.
These used to be huge.
I think people still wear Jacobs, but yeah.
But in early 2000s, this was in all the music videos, bro.
All of them.
Damn, I'm showing my age right now.
Defendant Thomas was to defend Combs as Gallane Maxwell was to Jeffrey Epstein.
Without defending Thomas, a woman using her inherent goodwill as a woman to gain the trust of a so you got convicted of tax evasion?
Nah, really?
Look this up.
Oh, wow.
Okay, falsification of records and making false statements to a federal agent connection with federal money laundering investigation in Detroit that involved a drug ring.
What?
Hey, yo!
Yo!
Is that going to be the next episode of Fed Reacts?
Okay.
Oh shit.
This back in 2007.
Here's a press release and everything.
So DEA got him, because obviously DEA went ahead and presented it.
IRS.
Oh, with black mafia.
Oh.
He got a dial with the black mafia guys.
What the hell?
And if you guys guys, I covered the black mafia case.
More than a million dollars in cash was seized by law enforcement officers.
Okay, so I guess they okay, using the legal proceeds of their narcotic sales purchase and lease numerous luxury vehicles included, acquired, is sold real property and purchase jewelry while concealing the true source and nature of the funds involved in the transaction.
Okay.
Okay, okay.
Yeah, I covered this um this case, guys.
But I didn't know that this guy was involved in it.
Jacob the jeweler.
And it's on my Fed Reacts, by the way, guys, if you guys are wondering.
Um right here.
Actually, it was a pretty good one, man.
I went ahead and used the documentary to react to it.
Uh let me see here.
Where is it?
Oh, right here.
Yeah.
Multi million.
Guys, go check this out, man.
Uh, the BMF is what is what they're talking about.
I I definitely covered this one.
So that was a good case.
Definitely good.
This was a cool, this is a really cool case.
But I mean, who cares about Jacob the Jeweler, man?
Like the way that these guys were smuggling the drugs is way more interesting and important.
So, yeah.
Um another woman coordinating and acting as an avatar for defending Combs, defending Combs would be unable to execute his corrupt sex trafficking organization.
So when you hear something like that, right, is that give you again an allegation?
But there seems to be, if we're talking about what kind of case the feds might be building here, there this is not the first time that someone has made a comparison to Jeffrey Epstein, right?
I mean, that's a big allegation to make.
Correct.
And and the thing is like I said, the other thing about this lawsuit is I always look at who the lawyer is on the lawsuit as well.
Sure.
And the lawyer on this lawsuit is it's not some fly-by-night lawyer lawyer, he's a real guy.
And there's, you know, some of these lawsuits are filed by lawyers that might be newer lawyers that might be fresh out of law school that might be under, you know, a certain amount of years in practice.
And I look at those lawsuits differently, be it right or wrong, when uh when a high-powered attorney or someone that you have a lot of respect for takes one of these cases, you'd hope, and you usually find that they do their research before filing a federal lawsuit like this.
So of course.
But that's the thing that weighs against everything that I'm saying is that you know, there's a high-powered attorney and a respected attorney that took this case on, and you would imagine that he did some investigation prior to filing a lawsuit.
So as I mentioned, there's other people that she's suing.
She's doing Vive magazine and its parent company Pennski, because she claims that they helped him, helped Combs throw these parties where she was allegedly abused and trafficked, and that they allegedly exploited her in the sex trafficking conspiracy by using her likeness without her consent in a 2006 magazine issue about these parties.
Um Bradford, I want to get into some more developments, but if you had a quick thought about that one suing those companies as well.
I I think that they kind of threw everything at the wall.
I think a lot of these things um will be very difficult to prove, especially like when there's sponsorship for these parties.
So a lot of times you find that uh individual liquor companies or magazines, Maxim, any of these magazines that throw kind of like their support behind a uh behind a party or support the party in a different way monetarily or just by covering it.
Often you find that plaintiffs will sue those individuals, saying that they have some sort of liability for it.
Very difficult case to prove against those corporations and those individuals that work for those corporations, because you have to establish some sort of duty to protect and some sort of duty that they breached, especially like when they're saying, Oh, she uh, you know, she was used by them uh to promote these parties and things of that nature.
Generally they get releases signed, and I would imagine that if they did some sort of story on her personally, that she probably would have partook in that story uh willingly, and it wasn't something that she did uh or they did behind their back.
And again, you're gonna run into statute of limitations issues, you're gonna run into some problems here, uh, even though she may Someone said the real question is Did you check Jacob uh Arabov's early life?
They have claims on some things.
You're gonna run into some issues, especially with some of the claims against the corporations.
Okay, so we'll see which way that lawsuit works out.
But I did want to get your perspective on two other developments happening in the middle of all this.
And one, to be frank with everybody, uh, we were planning on talking to Bradford about this initially, and then the lawsuit happened, and then the subject of the investigation happened.
But the first thing that we wanted to talk about was that uh it's being reported that Diddy is trying to sell his estimated multi-million dollar Yeah, every single time, Doge poster.
I checked it.
Every time Los Angeles mansion, the property that was raided by the feds.
It's in the homely hills area of Los Angeles.
TMZ reported that sources say Diddy paid forty million dollars for this back in 2014.
He's trying to sell it for 70 million dollars for it, um, uh trying to sell it off markets, reportedly 17,000 square feet, eight bedrooms, eleven bathrooms, thirty-five seat theater, swimming pool, swimming tunnel, basketball court.
Um, why try to do this now, Bradford?
Could it be he spends most of his time in Miami?
Could it be he needs the money right now?
Could it be it's bad memories from the raids?
I mean, he he's selling or allegedly selling this property right now in the middle of all this.
Do you find it interesting?
Yeah, I mean, it could be a combination of all three.
Liquid.
Right.
It could be that he spends more time in Miami than LA.
That one you think it would be at the bottom of the list.
I think more likely than not, the lawyers have told him, hey, listen, you have these 10 lawsuits, uh, ten lawsuits with lawyers billing on ten lawsuits, not to mention whatever the criminal case is, you're billing out at two thousand bucks an hour.
It's very easily you're you're reaching a million or a million five a month in just lawsuit costs.
Right.
So that's crazy.
If he can trim the fat, I think he's looking to trim the fat if he can make a little money on a house that he doesn't use that often.
I think that's why he's selling that would be my guess.
I think liquidating assets when you are facing what he's looking at right now is probably a pretty good idea, no matter how it looks to the public.
You have to do what's right for you at the time.
And I think I think what's right for him is like I said, to trim the fat, get rid of things that he doesn't necessarily need to have and need the expense of, so he can concentrate all his effort on the um on the resolution of these cases.
From an outward point of view, I mean you couldn't tell that he's troubled, that he's been out and about.
I they just TMZ reported that he was just in Wyoming.
Uh there's pictures of him uh water rafting or river rafting with his uh family.
I I am curious.
Um now that we know that, or at least it's been reported that he's the subject of the investigation, and all this is happening.
You know a question I keep getting asked all the time, Bradford, why doesn't he just run?
Why does he just pick up and go to a country with the Um the good question?
Someone's asking, do I think that he was being investigated before the Cassie scandal?
Um There's a chance, there's a chance, but I'll tell you this the Cassie scandal, and then this do a little rod, absolutely put some so put some wings in the sale.
Put some wind in the sails, excuse me.
Where there's no extradition.
People say, why didn't Harvey Weinstein do that?
Why didn't somebody what would your answer be to that?
It's a it's a multitude, it's very funny because it's not one answer, is the right answer for that.
Sometimes it's ego, sometimes it's uh it's you know, I'm not guilty, so I'm sticking where I'm sticking.
A lot of times it's the government's gonna find out that he's making a run for it because a guy like that's very difficult to get out of the country without everyone and anyone finding out.
It's not like he's you know Bob Smith and he can just put a mustache on and some glasses and go hit, you know, a cruise ship and take off.
So it's very difficult.
Is it impossible?
No.
But if he gets caught doing it, I think the government is prepared to just file a complaint and arrest him on the spot, as uh and no one likes that.
That is not a good look.
Uh so I think that it's a it's probably multifaceted, but I think the biggest part of that is that I don't think they'll do the complaint route, they're file an information and uh just bring him in and uh cooperate.
The government probably already let his uh attorneys know if he tries to make a run for it, we're prepared to just file a complaint, arrest him under a complaint, and then just hold him no bond, as opposed to if they actually file it.
Yeah, which they're the which diddy's not gonna do that.
That would be bad.
No bond.
File the charges towards the end of the summer, he might be eligible for a bond because he knew that these charges were coming and he never made a run for it.
Speaking bond, I have one final.
Which I think this is why his team, which I've been told, told this inside of information, his team has been telling the the feds where he's been traveling everywhere he goes.
Question for you.
And I know I've hit you with a lot of different things that are happening uh in the Digazaga, but clearly a lot is happening.
So Roger Bonds, this is Combs' uh former bodyguard, appeared on this program called Vlad TV and said, quote, if I get subpoenaed, I'm not gonna jail, I'm not going to jail for nobody.
And then he doubled down on that, that he would testify, even if he were promised he wouldn't get in trouble.
I can't say that I'm gonna be an advocate for one thing and then not stand up for another thing.
So if I say that he's evil and I say all these things about him, if I was just one of those people that went back in my corner and sat down, then I'm continuing for this to keep going on and on.
I'm showing this person that they're just as powerful as they think they was.
Anything I can do to help these women, I would do.
That's quite a statement.
What do you make of it?
I think that, you know, it again, we're gonna ask probably when you look at ex-employees, and I'm looking at this from the defense perspective.
When you look at ex-employees, a lot of times they have a bone to pick with an individual.
They weren't paid enough, they weren't paid the right thing.
Who knows?
But that being said, I think it's very dangerous when if there's someone who is your right-hand man bodyguard, and if they've witnessed things and they've seen things and now they're willing to come in and testify, especially when you speak, if you're speaking freely in a car and you have your your bodyguard there and he's overhearing things, that's always dangerous because he could testify to a lot of different things, and it's hard to say that didn't happen.
It's hard to say, hey, listen, even though he was in the car, that wasn't said.
What is the flip side to that is that you know, these bodyguards that see things or witness things and they don't come forward at the time, but now they want to come forward.
Now they want to protect women, now they want to do that.
And that's when the defense that's what the defense is gonna attack.
They're gonna attack his credibility immediately.
That's what the defense is gonna say.
But you again, you could say he was so powerful, he wouldn't this guy would have never worked in the business again.
You know, there's defenses to everything, but it's not good.
It's not good when a bodyguard wants to come forward.
And assuming the allegations against Diddy, all the allegations are true, and if he was a part of this, if he was a participant, then I would imagine he'd have to work out some sort of deal, an immunity deal.
Correct.
Absolutely.
Right, and I think that's why he's saying I'm not gonna go to jail for anybody.
Right, right.
Because I think that m most of the people that are involved, and most of the people that were around him at the time, I think are all very nervous that somehow, some way the Southern District of New York would put them involved in everything else.
And I think that's why they're gonna be able to do that.
And that's why so many of them are gonna come forward and talk.
Sent him a subject letter, not a target letter.
Right.
Because it could be that there's multiple subjects.
That's I think that's a very fair assessment.
Again, he's innocent until proven guilty.
These are allegations.
He hasn't been arrested, hasn't been criminally charged, hasn't been found liable in a court of law.
Yeah, it's because there's a lot of targets.
That that's why, guys, they're doing a RICO indictment.
I uh I'm putting my money.
I think this is gonna be a RICO indictment.
We're gonna have at least three to ten defendants.
Um, and the uh it's gonna be the RICO charge, and the prerequisite charges of that are gonna be um solicitation of minors, sex trafficking, interstate transportation, all that bullshit.
Fascinating updates nonetheless.
And how great is Bradford Cohen.
Breaking down everything about what's going on here.
I threw so much at him.
Uh Bradford, thank you so much for your expertise, your insight, and your time.
Really appreciate it.
Thank you so much.
Thanks for having me.
All right, everybody, that's all we have to do.
Definitely gave some great insight there.
Shout out to that guy.
He's an entertainment lawyer, but he definitely knows his shit.
Uh so uh so yeah.
Guys, that is pretty much it.
Give me ones in the chat if you guys learned something today.
We went over so much.
We went over RICO, went over the crimes that are established in Rico.
We went over what a search warrant entails.
What's in a search warrant, attachment A, B, C, things to be searched, place to be searched, affidavits, what it takes to get a search warrant.
We went over what HSI is.
We went over what charges more than likely is going to be hit with.
So yeah, we went over a lot, man.
But yeah.
Love y'all, ninjas, man.
Guys, Castle Club.tv, guys.
You guys can see right there on the bottom corner, right here.
Yeah.
CastleClub.tv, guys.
Go ahead and get in there, man.
Uh, we're almost at 7,000 strong.
I want to get to 10,000 because at that point, that is how we stay independent.
That's how we're able to tell all these haters, F you.
That's how we're able to continue to make the content.
That's how we're able to continue to make progress and uh, you know, keep things going, man, and continue to innovate.
You guys see that we're doing the IRL streams.
Uh, I predict pretty soon people are gonna try to copy that.
It is what it is.
But you know, we're the innovators, man.
We're the originators, the innovators, and uh at the end of the day, you know, people are gonna always follow our lead, man.
So um, so for us to be able to continue to innovate, we need people to uh to support on cast club because like I said before, guys, I'm doing the stream right now.
You know, besides some of the donations that come in, etc.
That's cool.
But um, this is pretty much free, man, because we're 100% demonetized, which sucks.
And you know, we reapplied for monetization, we'll see what happens.
I'm not holding my breath, man.
Like they've denied us plenty of times for a bunch of nebulous reasons.
So, yeah.
If Rico leads to the clans, expect a bunch of suicides in the future, okay.
Uh, yeah.
Guys, thank you so much.
Okay, you guys are saying play Overwatch.
We'll see.
We'll see.
No, well, here's the thing, guys.
The I the thing with Crowder is I have the idea, the change in my mind.
I got the idea, but I live stream it.
And it's on intersexual dynamics, so it is completely, it is very different.
You know, the whole change of my mind thing is still street debates live.
So I don't think many people do that.
I mean, I could just get rid of the change of my mind and then boom, it's it's totally mine.
So you guys could call it copying if you guys want, but I don't really think so, because it's completely different.
Um just the phrase change my mind.
Uh let's see here.
Yeah, yo, free Lucas Cage.
Yes, I saw what the hell happened with him on uh on Twitter, man.
Fucking bullshit, man.
Guys, uh tomorrow, money Monday, we're gonna have uh DL Saint on.
We're gonna uh one of our generals um out of Tampa.
We're gonna talk about how to become an air traffic controller, make a hundred K per year doing that.
Great career field.
I don't think you need a college degree for it either.
And then we're also gonna do the political talk show, FNF News tomorrow.
And uh it's gonna be a good time, guys.
It's gonna be a good time.
Then you guys are gonna get some after hours on Wednesday, and uh and yeah, man.
Yeah.
So uh cool, cool, cool.
All right, ninjas.
Love you guys.
I'll catch you guys tomorrow at 7 p.m. for fresh and fit and money Monday, and then we're gonna have um Fresh Fit News, the debut of Fresh and Fit News.