I I told them that it was your birthday the day before.
Oh they were trying to say they were trying to spam oh L Ack.
I was like, bro, it was this dude's birthday.
He had a live event with his people.
And then I had I was done.
And he was drinking the henny, so I already knew he was cooked.
I I called it too.
I I told your sister, I was like, he's cooked, bro.
I know he's not gonna be able to do this.
But uh but here we are.
No, I'm I'm glad we're here.
Listen, uh, this is a hybrid of th as you might see this is off the record.
I don't know why we didn't use it on other studios.
I think Wi Fi.
Yeah, it's Wi-Fi.
Um so we're using off the record studio.
Gotta use it for something.
Here's the thing.
First and foremost, um, I'm glad to be d doing this.
We find we we're combining streams.
If you guys haven't noticed, my stream just went up.
So we're all streaming from like this one thing.
Twenty locations.
Yo, this is kind of what the the the YNs do now.
Like they'll have like say Aiden.
Yeah.
Like he'll be at his boxing match and he gives everyone his code and they just plug his code in and they're all streaming Aiden's.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
It's it's the way to go.
Multi-streaming is where it's at, man.
Yeah.
Okay.
So first and foremost, uh, everybody probably knows why we're here.
Listen, probably the biggest trial.
I heard someone s say since the OJ trial.
I wouldn't compare it to the OJ trial.
Yeah, from a race uh perspective, no.
That shit was on TV.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
And I mean, granted, which was a different time.
I was in Jamaica and I remember that was on TV all day.
Yeah, bro.
Yeah.
And I was in Jamaica.
And and mind you, in the nineties, the last big case that was televised like that was Ted Bundy.
So and that was the first televised trial in American history.
And obviously, you know, his case was infamous because he was a serial killer.
He was chasing them, he was leading them across multiple states, killed 33 women.
You know, serial killing was still relatively new at the time, and he was a lawyer, well, educated as a lawyer.
He was a good looking guy.
He could, you know, finest finesse the women.
So the Ted Bunny thing was crazy.
Then you follow that up with OJ, and it's just like Yeah.
Yo, it's super interesting.
So, like, you know, I've I've covered um You guys ran good for a good one tonight, by the way.
I hope you guys are ready, because you guys ran for a really good one tonight.
Yeah, I I've covered a few of these.
Oh my god, that was my phone off though.
Um, I've covered a few of these.
Well, a few of these cases involving high profile rappers.
We did Tory lanes, we did YSL.
Um, I guess we do we did whoever the the the killer was of um uh Dolph.
But but this is super high.
Old block um Y and W Melly.
This is something else.
Yeah, I think this is the biggest hip hop case of all time.
Okay.
So let's try to bring people into the world that we're in and we're seeing.
Sure.
And I think this is the hardest part of me covering the case, right?
Me covering the case is trying to think about my regular audience audience member.
And I think I got a pretty smart audience.
I I think we usually no smart.
Oh, okay, okay, okay.
They're they're not like there's a couple like groups of people that fuck with other people.
I'm like these more dumb motherfuckers.
I can tell you dumb by basically who you're following, but yeah, facts.
I know they're pretty smart and shrewd and they're witty and they they also could think outside the box.
But it's really hard sometimes.
I know I put in a lot of prep work in trying to get documents, understand exactly what's going on, even learning things, and then now I'm like a translator and I gotta be entertaining with you.
Yes, yeah.
And that's the hardest part for me in covering these things because no one wants to feel like they're they're tuning into like C spam.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
And and I'll be honest, bro.
Um, you know, breaking down legal documents is very boring.
Yes.
You know, whether you're reading a criminal complaint or an indictment, I think criminal complaints are way better because at least you read it from the agents perspective, and it tends to be more detailed with the evidence and how they develop the probable cause versus indictments are you know written by the AUSA, far more mundane, not as interesting and more generic and uh less actual facts pertinent to the case of how they came up with a probable cause.
So because they're going to a grand jury at that point.
So it's a lot more formal.
But um, but yeah, man, I mean, this case is is it so different on so many different levels, unprecedented.
Obviously, the target with with Diddy being you know as successful as he is, um, it's it's absolutely nuts.
I think it's the biggest case probably in the past.
I think it's bigger than bigger than Epstein.
Um I think it's the big sec it's the second biggest case after Trump.
And honestly, at this point, it's bigger than Trump because they never actually took the Trump cases to anywhere.
I mean, you can make the argument, oh, he went to trial for the falsified business record case.
That was a BS case.
Now we're we're getting the details here.
Yeah, so again, let's kind of break it down for the audience.
I'm glad I'm here with you, right?
And we're not even we're not even there yet.
We do have all the information, but I want you to describe like what your day is, because I I'll tell you what my day is.
Like these days now, I'm doing 10 hour streams.
Yep.
I I'm like hyped up on coffee.
I didn't even know coffee to start giving you like like you I had bubblegs today.
I'm like, I drank two couple.
I'm like, but also it's kind of like really there's a little prep on my side, even to make sure.
Hey, these are documents I was submitted the night before.
It's in the docket.
You gotta be able to read it because you're gonna have to explain it in the morning.
Because sometimes the tweets could be cutting dry.
What's your day like?
Because that's way more hell.
You have to go there.
Explain the process of court.
Yeah, so so I'm waking up, right?
Roughly 6 a.m.
I'm walking into the courthouse, takes about 10-15 minutes.
I get there, and there's already a line, bro.
There's people forming a line at 5 p.m. the day before.
There's people forming lines.
There's people that that like stay in the line and get paid to do so.
And then the person that's paying them shows up at like, you know, seven o'clock and takes uh the position from them and they go home and sleep.
Wait, wait, wait.
So people show up the day before.
There's people there at 5 p.m. when I'm like leaving, like last week, for example, when Cassie was there, there were people lining up at 5 p.m. when I was walking out the courthouse.
How do you get in?
Because it kind of is well before you get there, it kind of feels like there's there's like these barricades.
I see people just out there.
I see some, I see you got heckled by some chick.
She she went viral again today.
She said she wanted to be in the free golf.
She's trying to get in it.
Of course.
So I'm watching that and I'm like, too bad for her, only men invited.
Oh, so we can get into that too.
So I'm looking at I'm like, is everyone there trying to get in?
Or are people there for the fanfare being outside?
It looks like a damn cookout.
Yeah, bro.
So I get there, shout out to one of my guys' name is Mel, uh, you know, watching the world, shout out to him.
He's the one that gets me in his YouTuber as well, up and coming.
Uh nice guy.
Uh, and you know, he's been hooking me up with getting in because at first I was getting into what's called the overflow room.
So the way it works is the first like they got like a press section.
Actually, if you want, I got a diagram of this of the of the courtroom.
Yeah, I can show you.
Now my is like detailed man, this motherfucker wrote.
Yeah, because I want to really describe it because this courtroom is actually very unorthodox compared to other courts.
How big is it?
Pause.
It's not big at all.
That's the problem.
It's very Diddy's in.
Yeah, it's not big.
How many people you think?
Uh people that are fit in the school.
Like a fit.
You got six rows.
They're letting seven people sit a piece.
Um, I mean, I guess you could say it like seats, it's this decent amount, but I've seen like bigger courtrooms, especially federal matters.
100, you think?
No, not a hundred.
Um, let me get this diagram.
It's like everybody's there.
Yeah, dude, it it feels that way, but like here's the thing.
His family takes up like two rows.
And then um, and then two rows are taken up by artists.
There's you know that like the people that like uh that draw the paint and stuff.
Yeah, yeah.
They take up the first two rows.
Nobody sits in the same rows as them.
Okay, here we go.
Here's the map.
Is there a way you want me to show it to your audience?
Yeah.
I mean, I think the what's the closest uh oh wow.
Nice.
That's a good ass camera, bro.
Okay, wow.
Okay.
So you want me to point at stuff while you hold it up?
Yeah.
Okay.
Um, so I'll point it as you hold it up.
So right here is the judge, obviously, right?
Um, the judge sits right here.
And then right in front of him, and then obviously the witness box is right next to him, right?
It's a little bit, you know, it's not it's a little bit f closer, but you guys get the idea.
Then the important thing that I noticed that was very weird, is that the first table is the row of AUSAs, okay?
And there's six AUSAs unprecedented.
That's another thing that's crazy about this.
Do they fit at the table or they're like kind of like No, they all fit.
Really?
It's a long ass table.
And then behind them is another like half table, and there's four defense attorneys there, right?
Wait, the defense attorneys are behind.
Behind, dude.
Isn't it usually when we see it on TV?
Side by side.
They're side by side.
Side by side in every courtroom.
So they're sitting behind.
That was the first thing that I was like, what the fuck?
And then the case agents.
Hold on.
Wait, hold on.
So the defense attorneys, just keep it keeping on the close, keep it on close.
Uh so the the the right where okay, right?
Right where the defense attorneys are.
Yep.
Diddy has nine, right?
He he has like seven or eight.
And they all fit as well.
There's a couple of assistants.
So I like and I can tell you who I think they're assisting.
Yeah, I think I I think I know who the paralegals are, and I could explain.
But yeah, I'm pretty certain four of them are attorneys that sit here, right?
Okay.
Then the case agent sits all the way at the corner next to the defense, which is weird as hell.
The case agent should be sitting next to the AUSAs.
So it's weird that he's not at the same table.
Yeah, it's weird, bro.
But the the table's kind of like divided.
He's sitting there with like one other person, maybe someone helping him.
Then behind them is uh his main attorney.
I forget his name.
Agnifilio.
Boom.
And then Diddy is right next to him, and then Brian Steele sits next to him, and then like three other attorneys.
Then the other interesting thing too, two marshals sit behind Diddy right here, and then another two sit to the left of them over here, and then one of the paralegal aides sits next to the marshals.
Have you so four marshals, one legal aide sitting on the side?
And then here's the gallery, they're gonna have um this divider right here is a divider to get to the audience.
Okay.
Interesting.
You're giving us like a like a realistic.
Yeah, I'm trying to put y'all there.
Cause when I tried to explain it to everybody, I was like, this is not gonna make sense to anyone.
I'm I'm glad let's keep this up for a second.
Yeah, sure.
Okay, so I heard from reporting from some people, they said at times, for example, when Cassie is testifying, Diddy's eyes consistently goes from the A USA, Cassie, but he also looks at the jury box.
He does.
Um what's his body language?
Have you, you know, uh cuffs before?
So um I can uh so here if you hold this up real quick, I'll show you real fast.
So he's he's here like right in the middle of the the third table.
Then the marshals right behind him.
Then here's a divider, you know, with the swinging gate when you go in any courtroom.
First set, this is where the artists sit.
They hog both of these front things cooked.
Like that there should be seating like 20 people.
It's like f 50.
In front of the mom and everybody.
There, bro, they're there first.
And there's two artists, one on the right, one on the left, and they're there, and they take up one.
One of them is New York Post.
Neuropost always got Neuropost got an alias drawings.
Okay, probably.
Yeah.
She's probably the chick on the right.
She'd be cooking.
She does like three art, three or three um three paintings in a day, bro.
I'm wondering how they get special privilege just to draw some shit.
It gets crazy.
And you can hear the noise too when they're fucking chalking it up and shit.
Really?
Yeah.
So second row, that's his family, right?
Right behind artists, row behind that, also family/slash friends, whatever, because nobody else sits here besides like maybe media.
Then these last three is um or the last, yeah, last three is pressed.
Credential press.
No, no, no, no, sorry, uh, public.
Public, okay.
So you're a YouTuber, but you're not press, you're there.
Now I sat second to last in the middle.
So I was direct uh directly behind Diddy, like five rows, pause.
Okay.
Wow.
So but so you gotta be in line for that, because they're picking the first.
If you're not like the in the first 20, you're cooked.
Really?
If you're not on the first on the public side.
Now on the press side, here's the press side, right?
So press has three rows.
Okay.
20, 21 for the for the press, right?
Um, and then behind the press, which I noticed this as well, especially when Cass was testifying, and noticed this, six HSI agents sit behind them over here.
Um, and they're in full chairs, they're not even on the bench.
Well, what about like, for example, say Cassie was in there, she uh wanted, and I think he was in there too, Douglas Wigdor, that's her personal attorney.
We see people where they're sitting there.
People coming with their friends or where there's witnesses.
So hold this real quick.
They sit, um, so artists right here on the right-hand side, the AUSA's assistants, they got a bunch of paralegals, they sit here.
Okay, and some of them are even AUSAs.
Then next is Cassie's people.
Her husband, her lawyer, her mom, family, etc., and her brother were all here, right?
And then there's also.
So she's like grilling, so he's in that third row grilling Diddy, like it's like Joe Button and 15.
Yeah, he has a clear shot.
He has a clear shot to Diddy, and they pretty much sit almost opposed to the Diddy family.
And then and then after cat the family, like the defendants, excuse me, the witnesses' family is there.
Because Dawn, when she came, she brought her people.
Every witness that comes in, anyone that comes with them sits there, and then three rows for press, and then the last row here, folding chairs is HS agents, and they walk every witness in.
Really?
Because it's their case, and the marshals are not gonna deal with that.
Interested.
Um, and then the jury box, of course, real quick.
Uh and then jury box over here, 18 jurors, six alternates, 12 main.
Has did he miss any day?
Nah, they're all there, bro.
Okay.
They're all there.
And it's very um even.
And then the witness box, which is also weird, witness box is right next to the jurors, bro.
They had to like move it there because the court is so narrow.
Um, because it's New York City, you know how it is.
Um, so they can't move from that area.
So if they want to walk around and talk, they can't do it, they gotta sit at that box.
Okay, could could you describe demographics-wise and age-wise and gender-wise when it comes to the jury, because this is a thing where uh uh early on in the case, there was an important argument race.
And the argument, I forgot what it's called, is uh it's it's an application.
It basically was saying that the prosecutors took all seven out of nine black people out of their preemptive strikes.
Oh, yeah, that was cap.
Well, well, they took they took seven people, black people out.
Yeah, but it was 100% warranted.
I could go through why they took them out.
Before they go through why what's the final makeup?
Uh okay, let me get it here.
I wrote it down.
Um I gotta go back to like day one almost.
Let me try to put this check.
I'm the librarian.
It's more of us.
Yeah, bro.
I was I was right in the city.
So you've been in the main court with Diddy so far.
Yeah, uh, for like three or four of the days.
Really?
Have have you been in so if you didn't get in the main court, you're in the overflow court.
What's that court?
Okay, so yeah, I I'll say that real quick while I so if you don't make it into the main court, which which I just showed you the courtroom, which you basically only got like 15 spots.
Yeah.
If you don't make it in there, then they put you in overflow, and there's like four or five different courtrooms on different floors.
Is the main courtroom is on the 26th floor, 24, 25, 23.
Those are used as overflow courtrooms.
So if you don't got enough room, then they put the other people in these other courtrooms and send them there.
And the Marshall in the overflow room?
They do, bro.
Really?
Yeah, now now in the main courtroom, you can't chew gum.
You can't, you could you can only drink water.
They're super strict in there.
Nobody could talk, nothing.
They kick you out if you talk.
The other ones, they're a bit more lax.
You can talk.
But you gotta be quiet.
Wow.
Um there's rooms, so there's probably about like a hundred, well, probably like two hundred to maybe three hundred people watching it.
Only about like seventy in in the main courtroom, but in the collective courtrooms.
If you want to count family and all that, yeah, yeah, yeah.
Um, yeah, but like, yeah, and the main uh, but yeah, there's there's hundreds of reporters there, bro.
There was there was a chick from Kazakhstan, Spain, Australia, Canada, um, England.
Every English speaking country sends somebody.
Jesus Christ.
And then even c even countries that oh, Spain.
Okay, so all right.
Um while you look for that about the jury, I want you to break down like a typical day, right?
Because what what we see is, you know, and shot to uh inner city press, we see, hey, listen, these guys walk in the room, right?
Or we walk Diddy in, and then the judge, they usually do some like pre- So Diddy is there like first.
Yes.
Like, like, and I think they do that on purpose.
He doesn't walk out in chains.
He's where every time he's wearing like uh either a beige or like a brown sweater with some slacks, white shirt underneath.
Never cuffed.
Demeanor?
I heard he threw up the the little love thingy.
He does that to his family.
He blows every single time.
He he does yeah, he blows kisses at his family.
Um he blew a kiss at a dude today.
I don't know who it is.
There's a guy that shows pause.
This dude that shows up every day.
Like a ball spot?
Don't fucking change.
Uh that has like a ball spot that's has a free puff, he wears a free puff shirt and a free puff hat.
I don't know his name.
He's an older black gentleman.
Um he blew a kiss at him today.
But you know, I guess he's fan.
He's probably family or some shit.
But yeah, he blows a kiss to his family, and he or he goes like this, um, or he gives them the heart, like you mentioned.
Okay.
So by the time you get in there, Diddy's already seated.
He's already seated.
Usually are the AUSAs and the prosecutors already into it with the judge, like, hey, listen, we're trying to figure out what we're doing.
They're already arguing.
Because they let the press up first, then they let the public up.
Okay.
So they give this the spots to the press, then uh the public goes up.
And then by the time I'm getting in there, they're already arguing about something.
Rule 413, like 408, like they're arguing already.
Okay.
At that point, our Which is a good sign because that means that both uh parties are extremely engaged and they care.
Bro, when I used to go to trial as an agent, and the reason why I'm able to compare and contrast this, when I was the agent, bro, defense attorney's like, nigga, we lost.
Like, yeah, we're not gonna wait.
Yeah, we're not gonna object, yeah, whatever.
So, like when I'm going in there and I'm watching defense attorneys actually get up and fight, and I'm seeing multiple defense attorneys take the stand to cross-examine people, I'm like, oh yeah, these dudes aren't here to play around.
Yeah, no, I can't wait to get into that breakdown because you I made like a whole uh like a whole notepad.
Uh I took my own notes on it.
Yo, it appears that Didi's using a full team.
Yes, dude.
Like, so what I had was uh Tenny did the uh Teddy Garigos, who's the daughter of Margaret, she did an opening.
Uh then for Flores, we get Brian Steele.
Then after who got young thug the 15-year probation, which in itself is a W. Then he go to he went to jail with them for a day.
Yeah, well, he was down to he didn't he didn't go to jail.
They he had to report on the weekend, and by the weekend, every lawyer in that works in that courtroom showed up, and then the the another lawyer, which actually his wife.
Because I know they held him in contempt.
Yeah, they actually took him in, though.
They booked him.
Yeah, they well, they brought him to the back and that booked him, but he had to report to jail.
They rolled his fingerprints.
Um they had to have rolled his fingerprints.
I have no idea.
But but he was supposed to report to jail on the weekend.
Okay.
So I guess they booked him however they did.
Yeah, yeah.
But then he had to go to the body.
It's abortion booking.
Roll the fingers, get out of here.
Yeah, yeah.
Generate FBI number.
And um, they did to Trump too.
Oh, okay, okay.
And then pretty much what happened was his wife is also an attorney.
His wife came with an appellate lawyer, and then they uh basically said that, hey, we're appealing this.
Could you at least stay?
Um, like he doesn't have to go to jail.
Then the appellate court basically um they didn't dismiss it, they delayed it, then dismissed it.
So he's good.
So but think about it.
So we got Teddy Garigos opening.
Mark um Brian Steele, which by the way, this is an interesting use of Brian Steele, too.
Yeah.
Brian Steele, if you want to.
Well, he cooked the first guy on, he cooked uh uh witness one, the the security guard.
Yeah.
Embarrassed and I can go through that if you want me to, exactly how he did it.
But but here's the thing though, right?
Brian Steele is a bulldog.
Yeah, you don't bring him in to like smooth it out.
You bring him in to chop heads off.
Now, this is a case about sex trafficking.
You've done sex trafficking case because you used to work, you know what I mean, uh at the border, the southern border.
It becomes a little bit different, especially when you're dealing with female um witness or victims.
You can't just be like, you bitch, you're lying.
You know what I mean?
Like, it's crazy.
So they they sent him at the security guard, then they put Xavier Donaldson.
Yo, I also noticed they matched race, they matched it race by race.
Okay.
Right?
Obviously, Brian Steele is not Hispanic, Flores is, but other than that, Donaldson's black, Xavier Donaldson.
Um, it's a tall black dude, right?
Bald?
Yes.
He went after he went after Phillips.
He's the weakest one.
Yeah, he's he was the weakest one.
So he went after the examination was clown.
Yeah, he went after Phillips, and then after Phillips gets off the stand, they bring up Cassie and they get um Anna Estevo to go at her.
Okay, right.
Then afterwards, they bring up the um uh the uh the special agent.
Yeah, it went it went Flores, security guard.
I for I might have ripped this that page out with the thing, but I do have the seven jurors that why they got kicked out if you want me to go over that.
But um, yeah, uh shit.
Yeah, okay.
First witness was Flores, Intercontinental.
Second witness was Phillips, the stripper slash escort, third witness was Cassie, fourth witness was a special agent Venda, fifth witness was uh Dawn.
Yeah, Dawn.
Yeah.
Six.
And by the way, they brought a black lawyer to just get Dawn.
Yeah.
West Millennium.
Which I'll talk about that.
That was they wore a black chick for the black chick.
They brought the black dude for the black dude.
They brought like a non-im uh ambiguous, like mixed women award or just non-being tactical with it.
They are being tactical.
Alexander Shapiro, one of the best um federal uh pellet lawyers.
You know, she's making sure every objection is like on the record that she's if this if they lose this, they're they're already sowing the C's that on appeal they could get something.
Yeah.
You get what I'm saying?
And then they brought Carrie, her best friend, and then uh now it's this uh this guy James, the personal assistant.
He's on the stand right now.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
So that those are the witnesses that they have.
Um, oh, I'll go real quick.
Okay, so they made this excuse, right?
They struck seven black jurors.
And this is when I knew, this is actually when I knew that the AUSA's office was very good.
So defense goes, hey, they struck seven black jurors, you know, we have jack blah blah blah.
A USA already anticipated.
Okay, well, I you know, the the lead ASA stands up, she goes through it.
She says the first person or juror 51, she knew 17 names on a witness list, all of them.
Um, and she knows all the kids of Diddy, uh, making a band.
Showed up loss.
Exactly.
It was bad.
He's too good.
Get her out of here, yeah.
And she was a fiance, her fiance was four years in prison.
Second person that got struck.
A little commissary bribe her ass right away.
A little commissary bribe her ass right away.
Get her eyes down out of here, man.
Uh he got arrested for harassing a cop and he lacked he lied about it.
He had lack of candor issues, didn't tell the truth.
And domestic violence problems.
Third juror.
Well, well, let's speak about that for a second.
Yeah.
So in the jury questionnaire normally, yeah, does it say tell any arrests you've had?
Because I I don't think it's the arrest, right?
It's it's probably him not being truthful about it, right?
Yeah.
So when they give you the questions on the voider, right, where they're asking these questions, whatever, um, then they followed up with questions.
If you don't, if you're not truthful on that, because you you have the ability to elaborate on things, right?
Because if it might say there, have you ever been convicted of uh felony crime or whatever?
But then they what what they might have asked them when they actually spoke to him has have you ever been arrested, and he didn't say that.
He didn't admit it.
And then they ran a criminal history and they saw that he got arrested in 2010 for harassing a cop and he had domestic violence issues.
Um the fourth the the the third person got uh ex-husband spent time in prison for murder, um, brother arrested for drug trafficking, too close to criminals.
Um really so so if if you married, you know, one of these Yns, they caught a body, caught three hats, they're like that pretty much gets you okay.
You're on jury duty.
Same thing.
I tell all my listeners, if you work in law enforcement, or you have anyone in your family that's law enforcement, or you're super pro law enforcement, you don't want to do jury duty, say that I'm super pro law enforcement, I believe the police.
I don't trust criminals, I believe the police.
They'll kick you off immediately.
The defense will immediately get rid of you.
Okay.
That's how you guys get out of jury, dude.
You're welcome.
Um if you don't got a criminal family.
If you got a criminal family, you can flex that.
Okay, now here's the thing too, and and I heard this, and what do you what do you think about this?
Uh understanding, because I get what you're saying.
For like a regular person on a regular jury that you're not interested in.
I don't you think it's a lucrative opportunity, and don't you think people are trying to get on this jury?
I'll tell you this right now.
So check this out.
So I'm gonna get to that here in a second.
So two brothers, uh so another uh juror got kicked out because two brothers for fouling convictions.
Um they watched the media coverage on a case.
He admitted he would lose 30% of his pay by doing this trial, but he still wanted to do it.
They got rid of him because they knew he would try to make money.
What you're saying.
Yo, it's gonna be a great book.
Yeah.
Yes, like this is a great book.
Like I'm gonna tell you, a publishing house right now.
You guys I'm racing to I would have started setting up the deals before the week before closing.
Bruh, that when they were what uh that that was a big thing for them was um anyone that had like media ties, anyone that was like maybe interested in like making money or some shit, they're like, nah, this dude they he said he was gonna lose.
Because I think one of the questions on there was how much money you're gonna lose from being here.
This dude said 30% of his income, but he said, nah, I still want to do it.
They're like, get the fuck out of here, nigga.
Um it felt like they were more down to say, like the people who are like, yeah, I don't know.
And they're like, no, no, you have to do it, right?
More than the people if you're too eager, like, yeah, I'm I'm losing out a lot, but I want to be here.
Yeah.
Okay, okay, okay.
That's that's good.
The next person, bad English, can't be fair, nephews in jail and for shooting a cop.
Like some ESL shit can't speak English.
Can't speak stupid.
Can barely speak.
Oh, like ESL shit.
Next person had uh sleep apnea.
Yep, they were black.
Hispanic.
Okay, okay, okay, okay, okay, okay.
Hispanic.
Um, next person, uh, sleep apnea, um, lied on the void here.
They said, nah.
Um, next person saw the CNN video, um, thinks the victim uh jumped on the bandwagon.
So he's he's uh he's he's a puff fan.
Okay.
So he saw a CNN video and he don't believe him.
So they they're they they got rid of him.
Okay, so how uh so here's the thing that CNN video is all over the place.
Yeah, I mean, everybody, I mean a dog might have seen the CNN video.
Yeah, bro, yeah.
How do they flush that video out?
Or I mean, shit, let's think critically here, like from both sides.
I don't think seeing the video in itself um uh disqualifies you.
I think him saying that because he said he thinks the victims all jumped on the bandwagon.
True.
Oh, okay.
So one of them was like because he's like, oh, the the Cassie followed a lawsuit, then this chick files a lawsuit, then there's a criminal case.
Like they were kind of like this bullshit.
So they're like, nah, get this nigga out here, too.
Oh, yeah, they have a bias right now.
So these seven black jurors that were kicked out, basically, or or he might have been they say black, but it could have been Hispanic, you know, Afro Latino.
Yeah.
Um yeah, basically, that's the reason they kicked him out.
All valid reasons.
And it's funny.
The AUSA knew they were gonna do that shit, bro.
So she stood up, she didn't even stutter.
But and she rattled it off like that, and I was like, Yeah, this this AUSA is on point.
Well, six of them.
I mean, like six of them, yeah.
But that was the lead at USA that did that.
It's like she anticipated it.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Well, we've only seen like she says in the first chair, and then the other guy, um There's someone in Slavic or something, or she's she's like thinking the second chair at USA, second or third chair.
Okay.
Um, all right.
Or the blonde actually, I think is second chair, now that I think about it.
I think the blonde is Emily, yes.
Yes, Emily's blonde.
What's her last name?
Johnson.
I think Johnson.
Yeah.
Okay.
She did the cross.
Uh cross.
She did the direct on Cassie.
Okay.
Um, yeah, it was interesting.
Who's their most important witness?
Yeah, Tenny did the um the direct.
Then she didn't do the cross.
No, no.
Sorry.
Tenny did the opening statement for Diddy.
Yep.
But was not involved in Cassie at all.
Yeah.
Who is Anna solely, which I think she did a good job.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
So by the way, we're gonna get involved.
She so I can already tell how they did this case.
They compartmentalized it.
So each AUSA is very obvious, had a certain role, and each lawyer on the defense team has a certain role.
You're taking this because remember, they get the witness list way before.
Yeah.
We're the witnesses, et cetera.
So they prep, this is my witness, I'm gonna cook him.
That's basically what it is.
I'm gonna, oh, this is because keep in mind, they got all the reports.
Yeah.
So they're reading the reports, they're reading the proffers, they're reading everything.
That's why, and I'll talk about that later when we talk about Dawn.
They were able to roast her.
She went through all eight of her interviews with a fine toothfucking comb.
Bitch, you said this.
No, that doesn't make sense.
You said this.
Then she read her complaint.
Uh and I'll talk about that later.
I don't want to jump the gun too much.
But that each, it's very obvious.
Each attorney, each defense attorney had a specific witness that they were targeting to cross-examine.
And then for the AUSAs, they each had a witness to bait to direct examine and also cover for.
Like, so when the defense was cooking them, objection, objection, which they did a really good job of doing this on um which witness was it?
Uh it was uh was it Cassie?
No.
Who was what was it?
Um the the government, I think it was for Cassie.
The government did a really good job.
Yes, it was Cassie.
The government on, I think the last day that Cassie testified, or one of the or the seconds of the last days, she was on the stand for damn near 24 hours, like three days pretty much.
Um the government had a bunch of exhibits ready to go, excuse me.
The defense had a bunch of exhibits ready to go from Cassie's phone.
And and there was a whole argument about that.
That was that's a pretty it's an interesting legal conundrum because again, everything was turned over.
These are either Celbrat extracted um um text messages or she handed over her phone um before.
So it was all celebrated because all the stuff was destroyed.
So so the the agents so because it's funny, the freak-off stuff all came from her devices.
None of it came from Diddy at all.
So all of it came from her.
So when it's yeah, that was actually shocking.
So all the freak off stuff you come up.
She said I was too scared to open the that computer, but I kept it there.
I want to bring it to the Apple store.
She claimed it was broken and she couldn't activate it, but then she gave it to the agents, they were able to celebrate it perfectly.
And for those that are wondering, guys, Cell Bright is uh a device made by the Israelis.
Yeah, no surprise.
Uh that basically extracts all the data from phones, tablets, etc.
And what it does is it pulls all that information out.
Um, it's called the phone dump, pulls all that information out, and then it puts in a nice report so you can analyze text messages, video, everything is there for you, and then you can compartmentalize whatever you need to for evidently purposes.
Really good for the A USA's office when they present in a criminal case or a trial.
So they take all the stuff from Cassie's stuff, right?
The H agents extract it.
The CFA probably, which you know what?
Uh, I guarantee you a certified forensic age will probably testify to in this that did the subright stuff, I'm assuming.
So anyway, um, and also probably every agent that sees the evidence from the different search warrant locations will also testify.
We got the New York chick.
She's a little bit of a rookie.
She testified first for the hotel room.
Someone's probably gonna testify from Miami and someone's gonna testify from LA from those search warrants, is what I presume.
Yeah.
Um, but going back to the um the cell phone stuff.
Wait, wait, before we get off that, I just wanted to get this because we didn't get to it.
Uh just approximate the jury makeup of the 18 people.
Oh shit.
Okay.
I will I'll give you the approximate.
Very mixed.
It's almost damn near 50-50 down the line.
Different age groups.
We got some young, I know there's like young white guys on there.
There's young black women on there.
There's middle, there's like an African-looking nigga on there.
There's a Hispanic older woman on there.
There's an older white guy on there, extremely diverse.
Really?
Extremely diverse, yeah.
Yeah, one of the big Almost 50-50 down the line and very diverse between white, black, Hispanic.
One of the big issues was could they get a fair jury?
And I'm gonna be honest with you, it did take a week, but they got there rather like sequentially, and I'm gonna be honest with you.
What do you think about the judge?
The judge seemed to be on business.
He was not gonna let it, and I think he was a little bit perturbed that it went into Monday morning, but even Monday morning, they chopped it down from 45 or 43 to 18 pretty quick.
Yeah.
He's on the shit, right?
What's your thoughts about him?
Uh, so the judge, and I want to make this very clear for our audience too.
So people need to understand this when it comes to criminal cases that go to trial.
The judge prioritizes the jury.
That's what he cares about.
He prioritizes the jury.
He's like, fuck the lawyers, fuck the people in the back.
I care about the jury.
Because he looks at it like the jury is why we're here, and these are civilians that are inconveniencing themselves for due process.
He does everything for them.
So if they delay anything and the jury's waiting, he gets starts to get angry.
And this with any judge.
Every single courtroom I've ever been in, when they go to trial, the judges always care about the jury juries over everybody.
They will rail out an AUSA or a defense attorney for the jury.
Now that we know that, everything he does is like, okay, we need to be expedient to the jury.
We got out at three o'clock today.
Why?
Because he wants the jury to not get burned out.
And he knows that this is gonna be a longer case, it's gonna take all the way into like damn near July.
So he's going from first it was like 9:30 to 5.
Now this week, he's going from nine, trying to start earlier to get them out at three.
And why is he doing that?
Because he wants the jury to not to be a refresher, not to be frustrated and get and get bogged down.
Because um, if you lose your alternates or whatever, it's it's matt you're cooked.
So he um that's what judges care about the most.
So yes, he's on point, um, but he's on point because judges are always cognizant of the jury.
That's the number one priority for them.
And by the way, I think your perspective might be a little bit um not a little bit.
I think it's definitely probably influenced by now your experience, but you you're a federal court guy, right?
Like you're you were a federal agent, you're a fellow court guy.
When I talked to like trial many times, right?
When I talk to attorneys, like for example, Bradford Cohen and even Drew Fillon, they're like, in state court, it's much more lackadaisical.
That's why cases drag on, like deadlines keep getting re-deadlining, like it's like, hey, all right, we'll do later.
Let's this another continuance.
This judge, remember, he turned down Diddy's request for extra two months.
No, let's get it going.
Why?
I didn't tell you that.
Okay.
So first you want a speedy trial.
They always request a speedy trial, I'll get bought.
Right?
Yeah, yeah, because once you can't get bottled, you want that speedy trial.
Yeah, okay.
Yeah.
So big you just big you just opted for that in his case.
He's the only one who opted for it.
Everybody else is like, yo, there's 20,000 wiretap calls.
Yeah, that's just oh, yeah, he's cooked.
Bro, you got a wiretaps on somebody, bro.
It's 20,000, bro.
But like, see, here's the thing with human trafficking, and I was talking about this.
I I was talking with Shade Room.
They they interviewed me about this, uh, but you get it first because they ain't posted.
This look, as someone that's investigated human trafficking cases, I've been telling people this for fucking years, and they don't believe me.
I tell them all the time, human trafficking cases are not as common as people think they are, okay, in America, in the United States of America.
And the reason why is because human smuggling is common, and that's what people conflate as human trafficking.
Two completely different crimes.
And the reason why human trafficking cases are not as prevalent is because it happens and trafficking are different.
We'll explain completely different.
Okay.
So human smuggling, yeah.
I hope you guys better fucking support academics, man.
It's gonna be a great show.
Um, so human smuggling is where people are trying to come to the United States illegally, and they're paying a human smuggling organization to come to the country, right?
So it's basically the illegal movement of uh migrants into the United States.
It's a for-profit business, right?
Um, and the aliens want to come here versus human trafficking that could occur with illegal aliens or with U.S. citizens, um, where you're basically, you know, forcing them to do work that they don't want to do, peenage, you know, sex trafficking, whatever it may be, right?
It could it's very broad uh with what you make them do or whatever.
So Coyote grabbing about like 35 Mexicans and just throwing them in the back of the shit, throwing 50 bananas on them and just saying we driving to motherfucking Laredo, Texas.
That is AUSC 1324, alien smuggling versus the human trafficking, it's a Title 18 code, completely different, not in the not in the INA.
So the thing with human trafficking, I'm not saying it doesn't occur, but it's not not as prevalent and not as common, and most importantly, not as commonly prosecuted.
And I know this any any H agent that's watching this or anyone that the FBI from human trafficking task force, they'll tell you, you get the witness.
Yeah, I want to try he's trafficking me.
My pimp is an asshole.
Two days later, nah, I don't want to, nah, like, you know, I was just mad.
I, you know, he's not really trafficking me.
I kind of want to do this on my own.
So the problem with human trafficking is extremely reliant on testimony.
And anytime a case is heavily reliant on testimony, you run into problems because the people that you're relying on for testimony tend to not be credible.
Prostitutes, people that are drug addicts, etc.
Now, in this case, Cassie's a drug, a drug, uh, a drug addict, a couple of people in here, did he, et cetera.
But they're rich in affluence, so it makes it a little bit different, more high profile.
But a lot of the times, you know, and she has a financial gain, she had a civil case, etc.
So she's gonna see it through.
Um, she has an axe to grind.
But a lot of the times, the the prostitutes or the people that are being trafficked, nah, I don't want to testify.
They don't want to testify, you don't got a case.
And since it's so reliant, it's not like drugs.
Catch you with the drugs, bro.
I don't want to cooperate.
I don't give a fuck if you don't want to cooperate.
I got you with 20 keys.
You're cooked.
You don't got to say a word.
We're either gonna do this controlled delivery or not.
Oh, Bobby, okay, maybe I'll do it.
All right.
You know what I'm saying?
I'm I'm glad you brought that up.
And um not trying to jump all around here, but we're trying to, you know, hit the city.
I got all night, bro.
We can give these guys all the value.
This will be the most comprehensive explanation on how federal cases work.
And with the state court thing, the other thing I will say, because you're saying Zlax today's well, 100%.
State court is a is a is a clown world because ADAs have way too many cases, judges have too many cases, they're too bogged down, they don't have the time and the ability to be more refined in their process in the federal court system, and then USA might have 10-15 cases on their plate total because A USAs get the privilege of picking the cases they want to take.
ADAs don't get that privilege.
They're taking everything from murder one, like Y and W Melly, all the way to disorderly conduct to DUIs, to they're taking everything, bro.
So um, like unless they're in a special unit, whatever, they're getting all the bullshit.
So a lot of the time they just don't have the resources and the ability, and they're underpaid.
And ADA might get barely 50, 60, 70k per year, right?
So that the the so a lot of times they they take it to get the litigation experience and then go private sector.
Or they um they try to take the feds.
But even the feds, a lot of the times, um, though they make six figures and they do pretty well.
Um, a lot of times they pick an A USA job up to move into the private sector as well.
Because if you're if you get AOSA, that's an extremely prestigious job, you'll get into any private law firm.
Because these law private private world, they don't litigate shit, bro.
You litigate in uh state court or federal court, you're above these, you know, loser-ass consumer lawyers or whatever the fuck.
They don't litigate shit.
So um, so it's a great way to get your feet wet.
So that's what they do a lot of times.
And then retention is tough.
ADAs don't stick around, they don't get paid enough, and it's very stressful.
So that's why the state courts tend to be um they have high uh low conviction rates, they lose trials all the time, cases get dismissed so much.
Local police tend to be a lot more sloppy because think about it.
Trooper stops you on the side of the road, you got to join in your car.
I'm arresting you.
Well, uh, you didn't get probable cause.
How'd you get the probable cause?
Uh I don't know.
And then, okay, well, this case sucks.
Because they're dealing with criminals like right then and there, and they're making probable cause arrests right there and then.
That's probably that's prone to a lot of mistakes versus the feds, they're watching you for four years.
Yeah, it goes into also what you said though.
And they're not, they can't make an arrest unless they get an A USA concurrence.
Feds, people don't know this.
Feds have no power without the U.S. attorney's office.
I remember when I was an agent, I had to call an AUSA, even though the motherfucker had 20 keys of coke in front of them, and we had them at the at the port of entry.
Like, I still had to call AUSA to get concurrence.
Feds can't do nothing without AUSA concurrence.
They they had to call um uh AUSA when Dirk was right there and they're like, he's getting on a private jet, then they can go to Switzerland and then again coming back.
Bruh, they probably had to fight to get that criminal complaint.
Yeah, they probably have to find the fight.
Well, the affian, if I'm not mistaken, was from LA.
So the affian was from LA.
So I already know she probably sent that shit like we need this guy now.
And they they drafted it like the same day.
Yeah.
So you know what they're probably doing?
They're probably getting ready to indict him, and then they found out who was leaving because we're really getting in the weeds now.
You could put an alert on somebody, right?
I won't say well, what database, but you can put an alert somebody uh with with HSI and customs.
We could put alerts on people when they want to leave and come out the country.
Because you know, you have that authority uh with immigration and with customs.
They probably had a record on him.
He booked flights.
Dumbass triggered the fucking thing.
He booked multiple fights thinking he'd be able to escape.
Well, he doesn't know is like there's ways to figure stuff out.
So they just, you know, pro, you know, deductive problem solving, and they figured out where he was at more than likely, probably had had his phone numbers, ping in, figure out where he was, bam, found him and got him.
Damn.
That's probably what created the urgency.
Because he booked the flights out probably the same day or whatever.
And they said we need to get the criminal complaint immediately.
He was the only one that was charged with criminal complaints.
They gotta indict within 14 days.
And by the way, that's what I think, even as well with the double the work.
That's the same thing I think with uh the big U case.
Big U was the the lead um in the Rico case and they couldn't find him.
I think that's why they hit a commit criminal complaint.
When they arrested everyone else, yeah, it took a day for him for for them to um find him.
And and I think didn't they put everybody on the criminal complaint though?
If I'm not mistaken, they did.
Yeah, they didn't they that I don't know why, you know, what because it was such a long criminal complaint.
I don't know why they went the criminal complaint route.
It looked like they're about to get an indictment, but you know what happened?
Man, Wack 100 was telling these niggas run for the hills, like yours.
Come in, go to Mexico.
Yeah, and anytime a complaint comes out, there's that that means there's a sense of urgency to do agree.
Because the problem is most AUSAs don't want to do criminal complaints because if you do a criminal complaint, yeah, that means you gotta indict in 14 days.
So you gotta do double the work.
So I gotta complain him.
It was that what happened if you don't indict?
Well, he's gonna get released.
Okay.
He's he is good, yeah.
You you you need you need to formally indict him within like it.
Most jurisdictions is like 14 days.
Or because the criminal complaint would get him locked up, but then Well, they'll do a detention hearing, and then a lot of times they'll challenge your probable cause.
Like you'll get uh, I used to get this all the time because I used to arrest most of my people on criminal complaints.
Bro, every single time, niggas hook me with a probable cause hearing.
Okay, cool.
I'd say I'm gonna show up, and then once they find out that they just like gonna show up or whatever, they just like, oh no, we'll we'll cancel.
They'll wave it.
Especially if like the if it's pretty solid.
I used to write my criminal complaints in a way where like I used to put extra detail in there.
Yeah, because you know they say burn them for public costs, fuck that.
I used to put so much where these niggas could never take me to a what's called a PC hearing.
But if you indict them, they don't get the PC hearing.
And then these things with Denzel Washington, man.
They build prison because of me, man.
Bro, hey, and then they also try to hit you with suppression hearings, too.
That's another bullshit tactic they do.
Yeah.
Where they the way they try to suppress the evidence that you have, and then if they know that you're gonna show up to that, then they'll cancel that too.
It's defense attorney tactics to delay.
But long story short, yeah.
If um, but your AUSAs are on point, bro.
They're not like, oh, I forgot, like 14 days they're doing it.
Okay.
So let's get into probably the biggest testimony since Y Sobody.
Okay.
Uh, Cassie, because Sandra Ventura.
Now, I don't know if you watched all three days of the time she was on the stand.
I saw of it.
Okay.
I'm glad you did.
From day one on the reason why I'm glad you did.
Having been someone who's an agent who works sex trafficking cases, and you just brought up a great point saying the reason why those cases are harder to prosecute is because you rely on witness testimony.
I want you to describe the range of emotions she really went through, but also where it went, because at the end of the testimony, and you tell me if I'm wrong, it felt like she was almost saying, Yeah, I don't really I don't really want him to go to jail.
She was like, she was like, I still have love for him.
She was like laughing at little things.
Like, she was kind of still almost showing signs, like, I love this guy.
Yeah.
Like, you know what I mean?
And she even said, I believe, and you probably have your notes, she said, I have love for what we had, or some uh um, and I know I was thinking about this.
Because she asked, Do you have love for Puff now now?
Or do you have love for him?
And she was like, No, I love for I have love for what we used to have.
And and that struck me as man, this chick just wanted a baby of 30 million dollars, man.
That's it.
She only won't show on Puff in jail, man.
Show Puff in jail.
What's important is you don't want Puff in jail?
The husband.
You can't sleep.
You can't sleep good now.
And has your girl bent up like a pretzel.
Yeah, having 30 niggas skeet on her.
Yeah, come on, man.
Yeah, um, so I think the important thing to note here is that um the the prosecution prepares the witnesses well in advance of the trial.
Because and the reason why they do that is because a lot of these people, they're regular people.
They don't understand public speaking, they don't understand uh credibility, they don't understand um, you know, being tacked and being able to speak in a way where people uh believe you.
So um, you know, trial preparation is that is very real, and AUSAs take it extremely seriously.
And actually, they they they this is where the defense got her was with the trial prep um with the with the whole rape situation.
Yeah, that's where they got her because um so just break it down from like you know, from your expertise, you're going into a case.
This is the lead witness.
Yep.
Now, to put in perspective for everybody who's watching, and and and I at first was a little bit confused by the time, and I'm like, why drop your big bomb show, your big witness now?
But apparently she is pregnant, she's about eight months pregnant.
That's what fucked Diddy up on the speedy trial.
I don't finish on that.
Sorry.
Oh, so there we go.
Yeah, so what fucked him up was he was he didn't get bonded, right?
So he's like, all right, speedy trial.
But then he didn't realize, oh, she's pregnant?
Oh, this is not good.
Because I'm sure his lawyers said, yo, you know what, Puff, we should wait until after she's pregnant.
She won't look as vulnerable.
This is bad for the for you know for the for the um defense, because you know, she's waddling in the court and shit like that, you know.
I mean, like she's baby kicking and screaming, you know.
She's very pregnant.
She's like taking breaks constantly when she needs to, right?
When she cries is gonna look extra vulnerable, like she's a family woman now.
So it's very difficult to look at her as like the former drug addict partying 304 she used to be.
Now that she's like a mom and her husband is there and her family's there, it's complete, it's it's she's she's a different person now, not to Puff's benefit.
Who's okay?
So they try to delay it and it didn't work.
Okay, so two things.
What do you think um you as an agent, but also from your knowledge of how AU A USAs work, yeah, what's that preparation process like for her?
And then describe the first day of court what usually happens, and um, then you can relate it to what you saw with Cassie.
Yeah, so so as the case agent, right?
Like you become what if a case is gonna go to trial, you become the AUSA's bitch.
So you put the whole case together, you gave them the stuff that they're saying just keeps working.
Oh, yeah.
Really?
You work even more now.
Because so most of the time you're hoping that the shit pleads out.
But if they actually decide to go to trial, oh now now the AUSA's feet are to the fire.
And guess what they're gonna do?
They're gonna say, I need this, I need that, I need this, I need that.
Right now, normally you give enough for your grand jury package to like, you know, kind of get the trial stuff going.
But if they actually decide, no, we're gonna fight it, and then we're gonna fight it, and we got a team like Diddy's team, yeah, you're gonna become the AUSA's bitch.
Not only are you gonna become the AUSA's bitch, you, your entire group, and your GS are gonna become the AUSA's bitch.
Uh the group supervisor.
Okay, okay.
So uh the GS14.
So every um the FBI, DEA, everybody, there's um groups.
And the way it works is each group investigates different crimes.
FBI calls the squads, HSI calls it groups, um, I think ATF calls the squads, uh, whatever.
Uh DEA calls an enforcement groups.
I'm getting in the weeds, but um the GS is the GS-14, he's a supervisor.
So all the reports that are written, the uh anything that needs to get approved or whatever is going through him, then it goes up to upper management.
The the supervisor is the conduit into upper management to get yourself approved.
The agents that underneath the supervisor, they carry the cases.
So you, as a case agent, when you have a case as big as this, everyone in your group is gonna be involved in supporting.
Like I told you before, six Asians are there just doing security for Cassie, right?
And there were even more in the back.
I saw six just in a thing.
There were another, there were like another four or five.
So you think this is like security?
Well, they had to because um they got to bring Cassie in and take her back home so that she doesn't get mobbed by the uh Pap Razi.
Wow.
Okay, so we we've heard this being mentioned a lot.
And again, we're we're still in the preparation stage of a main key witness of uh of a case that's this big.
Oh, yeah, so yeah, the case agent gets everything that they need.
You become the AUSA's bitch.
So I know that this case agent guy, he's working his ass off, getting everything that they need, and that's like leading up to the trial.
Then when the trial starts, as things go on, we're gonna need more shit.
So before the trial starts, and because we've heard this a lot, and Diddy's new Diddy's defense strategy right now, we saw it with Don Richard.
I hate calling it that.
It's Richard, but whatever.
She's trying to be all a little French irishard.
So Dawn Richard, apparently Diddy's defense team up on cross, they keep going over pre-trial interviews answers mixed with your your civil complaint um allegations, then what you said on direct or like they're trying to like hey.
They got Cassie like that too.
Yeah, you've said this three times, but you said it wrong.
How many interviews or like preparations that are then put into the record?
Because this had to go in the record in the city.
So uh let me hit Cavsi first.
So where Cassie.
So this is a perfect example of a civil case coming in and fucking up the criminal case.
Okay.
So let's start Cassie first.
She makes the allegation that Diddy raped her.
Yes.
Right?
And she makes the allegation.
She says that the allegation happened in her complaint, in her civil complaint.
And I think in interviews with agents in uh September.
So in her civil complaint, she says after Burning Man, that's when it happened.
Yeah.
Well before Burning Man.
One of the two.
Yeah, but it was a month, there's a month difference.
And get I I it seems that, and you know, I really want you to speak to the the idea of this, you know, the AUP flushing out the these points because it looks like for a crit for a civil complaint, you're dealing with a civil attorney.
Yes, Douglas Wigder is a pretty good civil attorney.
Got you the bread, shit, 20 million.
Who's gonna complain?
He was there too.
But here's the thing.
Uh I I feel, and you can tell me if I'm wrong.
AUSA is gonna be like, wait, hold on, the dates aren't matching up.
Even for this little small point, because she readjusts the date from her civil complaint that never went to court.
She got paid.
And when she I'll tell you why.
She read just it.
Okay.
During the prep.
Yes.
So her civil case comes through, right?
She says, I think she alleged September that she got raped, right?
Well, the problem is that the text messages don't line up with that.
So when the AUSAs are doing discovery and they're going through the text message with the fine-tooth coma over this rape allegation, they find out.
Bro, this happened in August because they got the Diddy text the day after.
That's how they knew.
Let me ask you a question.
So she got actually allegedly raped, August 20th.
So let me ask you a question.
2018.
Like today I'm watching Tony Busby.
He's on Piers Morgan.
He's talking about why he dropped a few cases, also talking about the Cassie testimony.
Yeah.
And he said they like hate.
He's the worst.
Yeah, they said, would you like to backpedal on some of the stuff you alleged against Jay-Z?
And it's like, no, the person who came to us for Jay-Z, one lawyer vetted them, then I then our team vetted them.
Compared to an AUSA vetting somebody's story, and then like, say a civil attorney.
Yeah.
What would you say the levels or differences?
Bro, it's night and day.
For a civil attorney, they just need preponderance of the evidence.
That's 51%.
For AUSA, you need beyond a reasonable doubt.
And then not only do you not need not only do you need beyond a reasonable doubt, you're your reputation's on the line.
You're a United States attorney.
You come from the Southern District of New York.
Like with these attorneys, they don't lose.
This is the same prosecution office that went over after Locosta Nosha.
This is the first prosecution office that, like, you know, Giuliani went after the mafia.
This is the same office that put Takashi in jail.
This is the same office that went off to Casanova.
Some of the biggest Rico cases, organized crime cases, um, were out of the Sun District of New York.
The only 9-11 prosecution's uh uh uh uh Zacharias.
I was gonna say R. Kelly, but that's Eastern District.
Yeah, I don't think he was out of Brooklyn.
But either way, like they that they're ops, they fight each other.
But but regardless, two very prestigious firms, uh the Southern um two prestigious AUSA's office.
So everybody's they're headed to a way higher standard.
Why when you hear S D N Y Oh, hey Cook, bro.
If the if they're on an indictment, it's over.
Yeah, I've never seen them lose.
Okay.
They have a reputation.
So and I can get into my predictions on what I think is gonna happen with this Diddy case.
Does the interview that Cassie did with them, does that go on because because Diddy's lawyer clearly knew she told investigators something different?
Yes, because that the um so they had the reports, they read the ROIs, so they read the HSI ROIs.
What's that?
Okay, sorry.
Um so every agency uh writes um reports of investigation.
For HSI it's called ROIs for the DEA, it's called the DEA six, for the FBI, it's called the 302.
So um these are reports of investigation where you know they document their stuff.
Now, when they went and they they debriefed Cassie, she sat down with prosecutors and she sat down with um with agents.
Now, the fact that she sat down and AUSAs were there leads me to believe that it was under a proffer, which means she basically is able to talk without being prosecuted because normally AUSAs don't want to be witnesses to interviews, but when an AUSA is there, that's like almost a telltale sign that it's under a 5K proffer, which would make sense because technically she committed crimes too by fucking getting an escort.
Okay, so now we're getting we're getting to somewhere good now.
I like this.
Yeah.
Okay.
Subscribe to your channel.
We'll give him some songs.
Well, here's the thing, I I think both of our audiences are like really good at getting shit.
Yeah.
Because what we're talking about right now is we're getting in the weeds.
Well, it's good.
It's really high-level shit.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
So, because you know, people hear these words being thrown out, right?
So it's it's different if you have either um maybe a local officer that's deputized to be federal, or you have an HSI agent, whatever, that's doing an interview.
But yeah, if now you have the US attorneys who are sitting there, it's most likely a proffer.
So if you and I'll tell you how like I remember vividly, I would tell AUSA, hey, we're gonna go interview this high-level target, you want to come?
They would always say no.
And I'm like, why not?
And they're like, I can't be a witness.
And I was like, all right.
They're like, but under a safety valve or a 5k proffer, I'll do it all day.
And I was like, okay, cool.
And the safety valve is basically the same thing as a proffer, but more for drug cases.
Okay, perfect.
So gives them immunity for the day.
But that makes sense because Cassie was recruiting the escorts.
Okay, so she had to get a proffer.
So what do you think that proffer looks like?
You being maybe maybe in similar situations.
Yeah.
Maybe not the same thing, but um, what do you think her proffer probably looks like?
So it's definitely a 5k one letter because she's not being charged.
Yeah.
So it's nothing that needs sentence reduction or whatever.
You can you can no, you can get a 5k without basically um you can get a 5k even if you're not gonna be charged.
Well, what would be like well, I would think it would be mostly immunity, though.
Right?
But because isn't isn't a 5k one letter is it's it's a reduction or that's waiving the mandatory um sentencing guy like this.
It could also be like used preemptively to like keep you from being charged too.
Oh protection as well.
But you know, that's not it's not used that often like that, though.
That's that's the because AUSAs don't like to do that because people feel like they're free, they don't got charges hanging over their head.
So, but do you think they're giving her like blanket immunity or something?
What I predict, again, we don't know, but what I think is like Well, we never know.
Yeah, we'll never well.
You know what?
They never didn't ask control.
What I predict is this is me just predicting here.
They gave her a 5k, they didn't indict her, they didn't charge her because she's a star witness, and then indicting her also would make them look bad because then they're gonna say, Well, you're only testifying to avoid charges.
Why do you think by the way?
I mean, you just brought up a regret point.
Why do you think Diddy's lawyer didn't bring up in front of the jury beyond the money aspect when they because they ask a lot of witnesses here, like, why are you here?
Why didn't they say, hey, based on what you've said, you've hired these people, you've done A B and C. Have you spoke with the government and gotten any deal that secures you from pro that that's what that's something we we see sometimes.
You want to know what?
Why do you think that it happened?
She got extra protection because she's a sex crime victim.
So you think that's probably something either off the record or not even I think that that is what it is.
Whenever they were grilling her, there were times where they had her on the ropes, government objected 4084.
And let me look it up, make sure I got it right.
Because I don't want your audience to be off.
Um I just want to make sure.
So they probably objected to this, or they worked it out like, yo, you're not gonna bring up Yeah, so federal rule of evidence 413, yeah.
Sometimes I get the numbers confused, but yeah, 413.
Basically, um similar crimes to sexual assault cases.
So they were using all types of objections, but one of the ones that she gets to enjoy is since she's a victim of sexual crime, she gets certain benefits that other people don't.
Why do you think they're able to cook Dawn to a significant degree that they weren't able to cook Cassie to?
They put her ass on a skillet, man.
Bro, they destroyed her, and I could go over the things that they did.
But okay, so with Cassie, let's go through this and then we'll go over the thing because we we're gonna talk about the discrepancies, right?
So with Cassie in her civil lawsuit, and when she talked to agents, she says she got raped in September.
Yeah, but then when they start doing trial prep, they find out because you really start to get in the weeds when you do trial prep.
Now you actually gotta look at the tax medicine.
Now you gotta really analyze, now you gotta really do the full cell brights and shit.
Oh, damn, this actually happened in August.
So when when she comes in to testify, she testifies saying, Oh, it happened in August.
But then the defense attorneys are like, Well, you said that it happened in September.
This is kind of off.
And then what the defense attorneys did, uh excuse me, the government did when they came back on redirect was they said, Did you read any of the documents prepared by the government before today?
No, I didn't.
Did you have the ability to correct agents or uh or uh prosecutors under documents uh before today?
No.
You are you aware of anything that they prepared?
No.
So that kind of saves her because she because she can say, look, it's a month discrepancy, it's not that big of a deal, uh, and you didn't even see the documents beforehand, right?
Because at the end of the day, like it's not like a crazy overt lie.
It's just a month of discrepancy, right?
Now, the defense went further with that though.
They they they they said, okay, you uh, you know, you you lied about this, and then they went into the, you know, because they just built on that, right?
They knew that the the one month discrepancy wasn't gonna be that big of a deal, but then they built on that.
Okay.
So why are you texting Diddy heart emojis?
Why are you guys communicating?
Why did you guys go meet at a party after?
Why do you guys continue to communicate after that?
Why did you guys why did you go to hang out with them on September 27th, right?
Uh 2025.
This is someone that allegedly raped you.
This is sorry, 2020, uh, 2018.
20 September 27, 2018.
I want a clarification on this.
I never got it during um for the tweets, nor anyone who spoke about it.
They're communicating for a month plus on text and seeing each other, and they're like, This is someone that raped you.
This doesn't make sense.
And then you had sex with Diddy.
Okay, so that's where they got her.
So so part of that clarification, even like right after supposedly this the sexual assault, she then goes to like she then starts dating Alex Fine, but still does free gloves with Diddy and fucks him.
Here, here's 2018, bro.
Okay.
So there was a part where they argued with the judge.
Um, this was Mark Agnifilia, and he said, yo, listen, we're gonna use possibly Alex Fine as an impeachment witness.
So we need him to be outside the courtroom when we start talking about certain things that overlap.
It was the race.
Did he step out?
Yeah, he wasn't in there.
Oh, okay.
When they talked about the rape, they got him out of there.
Yeah, because I was wondering because in the city.
And they argued about that for like a day, bro.
Yeah, in in that thing, she admits she cheated on her current husband.
Yes, bro.
With Diddy.
Yeah.
And I ain't gonna lie to you, I think that was effective for the for the defense.
I wish I wasn't in the main courtroom.
Bro, I wasn't in the main courtroom for that, but I'll tell you this.
When I was in the fucking overflow room, everyone was like, oh shit.
Even I said cooked when she said that.
Because the defense attorney was like bra like, is it not true that you um what did you when you met with Diddy?
Is it not true that you had sex with him on that day?
Yes, I did.
Okay, is it not true that your um boyfriend who is now your husband FaceTimed you?
Face timed you and you declined to call.
Yes, I did.
Ah, cooked, bro.
And that looks so bad because remember, they started with you said you got raped on this month, and but it was really this month.
Then it was, why are you communicating with and they showed the text messages?
She sent heart emojis and shit, and oh yeah, I miss you, and then they organize they set up to meet up in person, all this other shit.
They walk line by line from the rape all the way to the consensual sex, made her look terrible, bro.
What what was the demeanor of the uh uh defense attorney, Diddy's attorney, uh Estavio, um, when she says that, given first day, I thought she was on bullshit because she really, she really was like, she was like I hate to use this term, but she was giving Cassie the news to hang herself with.
First day, and I remember seeing that I said, This sounds goofy.
She says to Cassie, oh wow, you're pretty.
Like she gives her a compliment.
And I was just like, yo, yo, Diddy, you got another lesbian on team, you gotta get her the fuck out of here.
This is game time.
This bitch's over here trying to eat some pussy too.
What the hell?
But come to find out, she know how for real, because I'm like, yo, ain't no way because I wrote that shit.
You're talking about you look cute.
If I'm Diddy, I'll be like, yo, I freak off with Cassie, not you, bitch.
You're my lawyer.
But she used all of that, and now I get to realize she butted her up.
She got her comfortable, right?
Yeah.
So she was giving her compliments, like, damn, you're a pretty girl, blah, blah, blah, blah.
Which, again, this is exactly why I think they brought in a woman to do the cross instead of a dude.
If it's Donaldson, first of all, he fumbled on the sex worker, so whatever.
Yeah.
Um, if it's Brian Steele, Brian Steele's a bulldog.
You bring him in to go get the shit.
You gotta, you gotta, you got a snitch.
He's gonna turn that snitch into a into an idiot.
You know what I'm saying?
Yep.
So when that happened, and what how'd you how'd you judge her demeanor from day one to day three?
Where day three, she's basically just saying, Come on now, girl.
You know what happened.
You said you said he raped you, but you were freaking off with him still.
You were cheating on your husband with him.
Yeah.
You were texting ABSC.
How was her demeanor and how she like laid that out?
Because it looks slick, even through tweets.
Yeah, no, I mean, obviously, when you're cross-examining someone that long, it took them like a day and a half, they got like a full day and a half.
Um, you know, you gotta build a rapport.
Cause the thing is when Okay, so it's interesting, because even the way they were dressed revealed the antagonistic nature of what was about to happen.
So on day one, uh, or when Cassie Was doing the first uh when she was on direct, comes in, tight dress, super vulnerable, little jacket, whatever, you know, super pregnant.
When she comes in for the first day across, could you see it over the desk belly hanging over, or it's kind of like tucked in where like maybe the juror is.
When she was um when uh when she was on direct, you could see it clearly.
She came in like with the first day, bro.
She came in with a brown dress, super tight.
Look like she ready for another bro.
Yeah, come on.
And the stuff, but the sun was poking like this.
I was like, what the f I was shocked that she showed up like that.
I was like, why is she wearing?
But it was to show that she was clearly pregnant.
Okay, okay.
I thought she was dressing for like the last thing.
She was in there to show that she was pregnant.
Oh, lit.
Like, right to it.
That's what Diddy didn't want, bro.
So um, so she does that, right?
Um, she comes in.
Then when on the first day the defense is doing direct, yeah, she shows up, boots, black leather jacket or la black jacket, yeah, uh, big blouse, right?
So you can't see her bump, hair pulled back.
Oh, and that that quintessential, I'm a lady, I am not a ragdoll whore who's just like very fun.
Well, she also came with like leather boots and shit.
So she was like, I'm here to fight.
Okay, okay, like when I'm not very serial this year.
Yes, hair pulled back, wearing black, blue conservative blouse, right?
That's that's big, so you can't see her stomach, not vulnerable.
And uh, she sat down like what?
And then the the defense attorney also had her hill hair pulled back, so she was ready to go too.
It's very interesting how women fight in the cerebral, you know what I mean?
But both of them had their hair pulled back, which I thought was interesting.
It is a chess match, super chess match, you know, 100%.
How did how did both of their demeanors change?
Because also, I I read this, and you could tell me when it happened or what was her demeanor.
I heard she started crying um at several points, and she asked for a break once.
Yeah, she asked for a break like two, like two or three times.
Like, like how is this?
She like, well, like, no, no, hold on, please.
I need a break.
Or are they passed her tissues?
Like, what's going on in here?
Um, when she asked for a break, it was at a time when she wasn't getting hard questioning.
So it was like, I know they probably told that do not ask for a break when you're getting like cooked.
Uh she only asked for breaks when it was like I'll be honest with you, it was reasonable.
She would ask for a break like after an hour, hour and a half of questioning.
Um, and and like the judge would immediately be like, okay, um, and he would be like, you know, because she's pregnant.
Yeah, yeah.
So, but she did a good job of like asking for breaks at times where it wasn't bad.
Like that would make her look weak, like, oh no, I need to get a break here.
So she did good.
And then when she cried, I'll be honest with you, it wasn't that much, man.
She didn't, she cried maybe two or three times.
And it wasn't that like it wasn't like at the worst times.
Uh, you know, um, I know one time she cried was when she said that uh um like Diddy took her autonomy away with this with the like towards the end of her her testimony, and she would give the money back if she could get back her autonomy, which is like, come on, man, 20M, come on, bro.
Wait, so um there was a confusing part of the trial, and uh they said the prosecutors got the better of the exchange, and it was with Cassie on the stand.
They claimed that when um they had asked Cassie about a message, where basically I guess Diddy sends to her, yo, do you want to have like a last freak off?
And and and the the response is um I I don't want to have a last free cough, I want to have a first or something of the sort.
Yeah, I want to have a first freak off for the rest of our lives.
Yeah, and some people felt like yo, yo, she's still with it.
But the prosecutors came back around and said the full context of that was her actually saying she had a UTI, yeah, but but also kind of lamenting the idea of freak offs and and maybe almost kind of like rejecting it rather than her like saying, No, I want to keep doing this forever.
Because the the pro the defense was painting this picture saying, Yo, Diddy may have introduced her to the freak off, but she started suggesting the freak off.
She would text him, like, yo, yo, too bad, you know, too bad I gotta work, I want to do A, B, and C. Like she looked like she was trying to initiate, which I think later, the chess match that happens, the prosecutors tried to paint the picture that she only said that because it was the only way to access him.
So she would she would like say, Hey, listen, if this is the only thing you're willing to do to be around me.
And I'm wondering, what'd you get from the demeanor of their relationship?
I really think that Cassie was a side chick fighting to fighting to be a main chick.
Yes, and and and it was clear that if she was bad enough to be treated like a main chick.
Exactly.
Because she was hotter than let's be honest, she wasn't hot as she was hot on the rock.
Resident Peace of Kim, but like yeah, she was she was the hottest girl that he was dealing with.
But but but here's the thing it It feels like if it wasn't a freak off, he didn't spend that much time with her.
And she was suggested to get time.
That's exactly what it was.
He didn't spend time.
He barely spent time with her outside of the freak-offs.
And during the freak-offs, she would be doing weird shit like smearing semen on him.
Yo, you know what's also funny.
Bro, I was shocked when I heard that shit, bro.
Yo, there's a point where she says, Yo, I suggested, and you could tell.
Like, this there's a few things that you know, you run a male improvement podcast, a dating podcast.
Yeah.
Um when a woman says, if I don't do it, another bitch will.
You know that mentality.
Yep.
Hey, I'm competing to keep my spot.
Yo, I I looked up the math today.
So Dawn and especially Kerry.
Kerry brings it up very clearly.
When when she says, like almost this ad hominem attack at Gina Hill.
I don't know that's her last name.
Let's call her Hill.
She says, Oh Cassie hated her, bro.
Yeah, she says, Diddy was dating that little girl, and Mark says, why you call a little girl?
She was younger than us.
Here's the ironic part about it.
Yep.
At the time, that year when that happened, because Cassie was in um Cassie was in South Africa.
It's 2015.
Yes.
Cassie is 29 about turn 30.
Yep.
The girl at the time is 22.
Yep.
And I said this interestingly enough.
I said, women, he met Cassie at 21.
Yeah.
Cassie never thought, oh, that's a I'm a little girl.
Exactly.
No.
But now Cassie's about to hit that wall, dirty, and she's seeing him entertain that new chick.
He's like, yo, what's up with Diddy liking these little girls?
It's a story as old as time, and like it's it's so funny how you know when women lose their their luster, they immediately will shut out any woman that does that has that same luster that they used.
It's not like Diddy went to get a 16-year-old.
No.
Diddy met her at 21.
Yep.
Diddy went to the wheel.
Yeah, her even younger.
She could make the argument like, well, you were even dumber when you met him.
But Diddy started dating her at like 21.
Yeah.
When he started dating her at 21, he goes to get a 22-year-old after she's about to turn 30.
And now she's like, yo, what is this guy doing?
Um, what was your demeanor about even how she or anyone else, Carrie also, how they described um maybe this idea because idea of like Diddy's having a harem.
Because today, going into James's testimony, and even Dawn's, it made me think, and definitely Carrie's, it made me think, yo, this nigga Diddy, is he a freaky boy?
Yes.
Yeah.
I think Diddy's homosexual.
I personally think so.
Yeah, he's bisexual.
100% bisexual.
If you believe in Bah, you believe in Bah.
Yeah, I'm not.
I don't believe it.
Yeah, I don't believe.
That nigga gay.
But most guys that are bisexual simply just they simply just go to dudes, bro.
But since Diddy has the money, he can still pull the bitches.
Let's be honest.
A regular nigga can't be a bisexual.
Because what what once you're once a girl finds out you're bi, you're stat you're not that guy, she's she's good.
But if you're bi, but your status high enough, some girls will be, uh he was using her.
I think he was in love with the power and control he had over her.
But I think he was attracted sexually to the men.
And the reason why I say that is that I think he he had homoerotic desires, but too scared to operate on them.
For example, he would go in a separate room.
If you really like that and you're bi, have her rub the semen or have him nut on your chest.
Yeah.
If you that gangster and you trying to kill Shrug, have the nigga bring his dick over and nut on your chest, like a real nigga.
Actually, not a real nigga.
But no, that's what he was into.
Don't have her scoop it out of her box in the next room and lather it in there and you cuddle with her until it's like this dried up flaky shit, and then you like come out with your chest looking like like Ashy Larry.
Bruh, gotta be homoerotic desires.
Remember, he would never show it felt like everybody but Cassie knew about the the semen smearing.
Yep.
Then I remember about look, there's these stories about freak-offs that would happen with other celebrities.
Like, for example, one supposedly was Ja Rule.
I don't think Cassie was in that.
And I think, yeah, they used to have like these multiple sexuals type of shit.
And I think Diddy always used women to Give an excuse to other people who would be wondering, like, hey, why are you into group sex that much?
Why he would be in the rooms with other men nude.
Well, no, I agree with you.
And the other thing too that was very telling, and I don't know if they someone put this on the Twitter.
This is was this was how we did it.
Guy walks in, uh, and Cassie walks in.
They start off with like masturbation.
Okay.
And remember, he got mad at the prostitute for looking at him.
Homo erotics.
So you s you smearing the niggas man milk on your chest.
Yeah.
But when he's piping Cassie out and looking at you, trying to wink at you, now you mad?
Come on, bro.
Well, here, here it gets crazy.
This is where it gets crazy.
So, and I don't know if anyone reported this.
So, Cassie is, you know, fingering the nugget, whatever.
And then the other guy's whacking off.
And what Cassie had to do was stare at the guy, and he would look at Cassie, and Cassie would have to out loud describe the guy whacking it.
Wait, why?
Yeah.
Oh, we never heard it.
Wait, hold on.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
The only thing that struck me weird was like when Diddy was doing a nut check.
Like, he's like, Did you not, bro?
Bro, you show you nothing.
No, okay.
So this is okay.
I don't, yeah, I think some people miss this.
Yeah, dude.
To start it off, this was the scheme.
Guy walks in, they start with masturbation, right?
She's staring at him, he's staring at her.
She's fingering herself.
He's he's whacking it.
So there's no contact at first.
No.
Are they dousing themselves in baby?
I'll get to that.
So she's wagging off, he's whacking off.
Diddy's watching.
Just visually, just looking at each other.
Yes.
And he's sitting there watching, and Cassie is describing what she's seeing with the guy.
And she even said herself that Diddy likes black dudes of BDs.
Big deal.
Okay, baby.
I don't mean to, but but there's other details that.
So there's an old video of Diddy praising, and y'all gotta tell me what this is.
Maybe your audience knows because he probably got a little freaky niggas on there.
They'd be on the only fancy space.
Um Diddy did a whole thing before he was praising what's called tantric sex.
And the idea of tantric sex is not really sex, but it's I I don't know what the full definition is.
Like whacking off again to the edge.
And not and not doing it.
Not going all the way.
Okay, but I'm wondering if what you're saying in your how you're describing the freak-off, if maybe that was an alternate version of it that he because he would he's never said any of these things publicly.
Yeah.
But like I've been watching old videos.
I'm like, how did nobody fucking know?
Yeah.
Well, he did a good job of concealing things, dude.
I'll tell you that.
He did a fantastic job of concealing things.
He had a whole team to clean up shit.
But um, so yeah, literally.
So there's okay.
So they're staring at each other, whacking off.
Yes.
Then they start touching each other.
What happens?
That's when the baby oil comes.
Suppose the guy.
No, he can't.
Can't.
Suppose he can't get hard.
Because is Diddy in the room or he's not in the room?
Yeah, he's in the room.
But the dude can't look at him.
And he might be hiding.
I don't know if the dude can actually see Diddy or not.
Wait, so Diddy's in the room, Cassie's looking at the guy, she's fingering herself, he's whacking it, and she's verbally saying something.
She's describing what the dude is doing.
Verbally.
She's describing it to Diddy.
Yes.
Like right now, he's cupping his balls and he's stroking the shit.
Yeah.
What the fuck is Diddy doing?
He's stroking shit too?
I don't know if he was whacking off or not.
I can't confirm or confirm or deny about Diddy.
But the guy can't bust.
And matter of fact, he did he would not pay them if they busted when he they weren't supposed to.
He would not pay them.
So Diddy got these niggas edging.
Yes, dude.
Yes.
Damn.
Yes.
And if they busted when they weren't supposed to, they don't get paid and they get kicked out and another escort comes in.
Yo, niggas thought it was an easy job fucking Cassie.
Imagine you're just whacking off looking at her.
Well, one of the guys couldn't get hard.
The Phillips guy spoke about this in detail.
Once he saw Diddy beat her, he couldn't get hard anymore.
And Diddy stopped paying him.
There were times where he got sent home without getting paid.
The Phillips dude.
So anyway, so step one, whack off session, right?
Describe Diddy, Cassie talking dirty.
Then after that, they start the baby wall rubbing and touching each other.
Once that's done.
Is Diddy doing anything at this point?
Or he's just like He's whacking and watching and directing.
He's watching and directing and whacking.
But he's not touching.
Not until they start having sex.
So then they get into oral sex.
So masturbation, or baby oil, then that takes time, the four-plane shit.
Then the oral sex, then the actual sex.
Then if he wants to jump in, sometimes he jumps in.
Okay.
Alright.
Oral sex or oral copulation, whatever you want to call it.
Um whatever.
Um are we just talking about her giving him head?
Is he giving her head?
Like both.
Both.
Yeah, both.
He's just directing the type shit.
He's just directing.
He thinks it's the music video.
He's literally directing it, bro.
And and and the the the um the even the escorts like said that he had certain like things that he wanted.
Like, for example, he would stop them if there wasn't enough baby oil.
If they weren't glistening and lathered up a certain way, he would literally got on a shiny suit.
And he would make them rub each other more.
He was he was literally a director, and then he'd be in there.
It's crazy.
One escort, I think it was Phillips, described how it went from like camcorder to it to camera to cell phone.
Like the nigga saw the the the um he had three recording devices.
Yeah, yeah.
No, no, no.
Like he saw the expansion of technology being used.
Oh because he had like been dealing with them for a bit.
Oh wow.
So he like he kind of saw like the different ways that didn't.
Oh, now Diddy could just use his phone.
This freaky ass nigga like that.
Okay, damn.
And iPads and all this other shit.
So um, yeah, yeah.
So there was like a you know the trilogy of technology, I guess, of how it expanded.
But yeah, but yeah, dude, that that's that's something that he was doing as well.
But yeah, he was basically there directing, and as and he the guy was having sex, he'd be whacking off in the court.
Okay, I I I want to stay here.
Pause.
Yeah, but I do want to ask a question.
While I think about it.
Um we we're getting like some people who are assistants and so forth, and they could be seen if you want to have an understanding of this quote unquote criminal enterprise that the um AUSA is trying to paint out.
Okay, maybe these people are you know, the the quote conspirators, they're just not indicted, so maybe they had profits, whatever the case is.
One person who her name keeps getting brought up Christina Karam, KK.
Yes, she seems like very important, and number one she got brought up today too, multiple times.
Number one, I don't think she'll ever work with the government.
She looks like one of them go to jail for for Diddy.
Okay.
I don't I haven't heard anything about her.
Is there a possibility struck in a deal, man?
But but what deal could she have struck where she's not involved in the case and just absent.
She might be the last witness.
If she testified, I think Diddy goes to jail.
Probably she's probably because she's the Gillet Maxwell.
I think even when he did he because it should have been Cassie, but they can't do that, obviously.
Yeah.
So um, so I so I think she's probably gonna be the last witness.
So the way I'm thinking about this, and just as you mentioned, you saw the technology go from camcorder to this.
Because she would have got indicted, bro.
The reason why I'm saying that is because there's no fucking way.
I think she did not get in that she wouldn't cooperate and then not get indicted.
I believe that she was the one that probably was overseeing um these video tapes that Diddy had and making sure they didn't get out, potentially then destroying them.
Remember, Cassie also said at the end, she said she wrote a book, which her cap and asked told him out.
Why did you write a book?
I write a I wrote a book that he could finally understand me.
No, you didn't write a book for that.
You got author.
What the fuck?
Yeah, then she said, I send the book over, got no answer.
I sent it through my lawyers, got no answer.
Then I hit up KK.
I wanted him to read it.
Yeah, and KK said to me, KK said, um, yeah, this won't go anywhere.
And it was like she was speaking for Diddy, but but that didn't speak like it didn't sound like this is what Diddy said.
This sounded like a co-conspirator.
Oh, we knew you were running this play.
We bitch, you're not getting shit.
Yeah, right?
That sounds like a co-conspirator.
Yeah, like yeah, she's trying to conceal the uh the criminal activity.
I I'm wondering where she because again, we're seeing two personal assistants testify.
By the way, Fawnsworth, I don't know.
I don't know what to say.
Was that all just an act?
Maybe Front I don't know, bro.
He living the Oh, and then when Cassie said I can't do one last time, it needs to be the first time for the rest of our lives.
That's what it basically was was the statement that she gave when it kind of came to the freak-offs.
Because they said, Oh, we need to do one final freak-off.
And you said it's not gonna, she said basically I can't do one last time.
It needs to be the first time for the rest of our lives.
So, in other words, we will continue to do the freak-offs for the rest of our lives, it won't be the last time.
When did he said one more last freak off?
But is this that means?
And then the government tried to, like you said, say, Oh, well, let's show the rest of the text.
Um, uh, and that like you know, to say, like, hey, you you you know, because she claimed, oh, I got a UTI, I can't do it, blah, blah, blah.
Is is what they meant.
Like, no, I can't do it uh UTI.
But then the defense try to reframe it as you're no, no, no, you're saying no because you want to do it for the rest of your life, and that's how they closed.
Yeah, yeah, I remember that They got the last statement, and that's that's why, because I was just trying to go back to what you're saying.
Because you're saying that you think the defense got the best of them, that's where it comes from.
Because they got the last word, and then they were basically able to interpret that same last sentence a different way.
But this is the beauty between this is when you have good lawyers, right?
And I was talking about this in my thing.
They have the same set of evidence, they have the same text messages.
But one side is interpreting it from a victim perspective, the other side interpreting it from a woman that was willing and wanted to get involved in this and wanted to keep this guy.
And they're using the same discovery, but they're interpreting the text message differently.
And this is how you know that you got good lawyers.
And then when they're able to, which the government did this a bunch, they're able to object under 413 or other situations, all speculation, not relevant, blah, blah, blah.
And they were doing everything.
And the government actually did a fantastic job of this.
So one thing that the government did, but I was like incredible lawyering, was the defense actually named all the exhibits they wanted to use, right?
And it was from the same discovery from Cassie's phone.
Yeah.
And they named all the numbers, right?
Spent like I can I I should you not like 10 minutes naming all the different exhibits, like 20 exhibits, right?
Because you have to name them.
At first they said they had 400, they stayed up till 3 a.m.
Got 400.
The government said, hey, judge, I thought we we can do this.
Supposedly they say to the judge, well, we're going off after her direct, these became relevant.
We stayed up till three, we got them.
The judge says, narrow them down.
He says, Yeah, judge, we will.
They come with 20.
You're right.
Yes, yes.
So they come on like 20.
Then she names them.
And as she um starts trying to introduce each piece, they object.
They object to everyone.
And they object.
Bro, by the end of it, they were only able to get like maybe one or two images up.
But why is this important?
Some people might say, Myra, who gives a fuck?
They were able to get one image in or why does it matter?
Because that the the um the attorney had questions lined up per image.
So when you're questioning these people, you can't ask them questions that lead them to speculate.
You need to ask them questions where it like kind of leads to like a succinct and like almost absolute fact almost, right?
So when they have these these pieces of evidence, they're showing that what is this, right?
There, there's but if they don't have that piece of evidence, they can't show it.
They can't go into their questions.
So they're in her entire, and I can see her like panicking as they were doing this shit, objecting, objecting, and he's like, uh, you know, sustain, sustain, sustained.
I was like, uh, or no, uh, yeah, sustained.
So when they were doing this, this is fucking up the attorney because now she can't have her questions, so she had to adapt quickly, which I'll give her credit, she adapted quickly, and that's when she ended her with the whole, you know, rape situation and the you know, smash and the Diddy and all this other stuff.
But if she was able to get these 20 exhibits in, and the government's devious because they waited for her to go through all of them, and then as she started saying, okay, let's enter blah blah blind, objection, your honor, blah, blah, blah.
Objection, Your Honor, 408.
Objection, Your Honor, 413, 608, whatever the hell, 603.
And they just were able to get like, bro, like 80% of it not.
Okay.
And I hear good lawyering, bro.
I hate to be redundant and go back, but we gotta see the steps of the free cost.
So we get to the fucking mutual jerk off, the lathering and baby oil.
Yep.
Then after that, oh actually wrote it down some more.
We're talking about um fellatio or oral copulation, and then after that, it's time to fuck.
It's it's all right.
So, so is Diddy now saying, All right, let me now get up and you know I mean, just you know what I mean, haul him, shake over there and just slang something.
No, he's just whacking off the whole time they have sex, and then sometimes he would sometimes he would come in.
Like when they swack it up.
Yo, I'm gonna be honest with you.
Sometimes he would come in, yo.
But now let me say this.
Yeah, I know Diddy was on some serious drugs because this is TMI.
But if any nigga could whack off a good, they said that the fucking free costs would be four days long.
If you could beat Jack Sessions for four days long, nigga, that's assault and battery.
This is like attempted murder, nigga.
Like, God damn it.
Yo, if you could beat your dick for four days straight and not catch a heart attack, nigga, you great, nigga.
Nigga, try beat your dick for five minutes in the shower when it's all hot and you passing out.
If you could beat your dick for four days, this yo, this thing is better than Brian Popper.
He better than all them niggas, better than what's the nigga who fucked um Lena I forgot what his name is.
Jason Love.
Oh, yeah, yeah.
Yeah, then he's just whacking off for days.
Like you would do sessions, but yeah, I mean, it is like pretty bad.
That nigga had to shape the shit, man.
Like, yo, this is the no way.
Because like they would take just a few hours breaks and go right back to it.
Nah.
But that's the drugs, bro.
Like, that's just like the drugs.
But yeah, that was that was this that was the uh the order of things, man.
Absolutely wild.
No, this is crazy.
I was uh bro, I was shocked when when she said that shit.
And I was like surprised more people didn't report it.
Yo, did you see uh there was a part?
You tell me how this went.
Yeah, there's a part where Diddy had his skip bail is time.
Supposedly the the stripper was piping out Cassie, and he said it's my turn.
Like he was like, Yo, it's my turn.
Yes, yes, yes, yes.
And I'm like, Yeah, that's some skip bailish shit.
Yeah, yeah.
He did not have a pussy niggas my turn to get up in there.
Yeah, yeah, he did.
yeah.
Were both of them using condoms, or Diddy was just raw dogging right up in that job.
Uh I know the escorts were not using condoms.
Damn.
I know for a fact they weren't using.
He said, I asked her for an STI test.
I gave her mine and she didn't give me hers.
Phillips complained about this.
You know, the reason why is because he wanted he wanted him to jizz inside her.
That's why I realized the prostitutes didn't know too much, because they wanted to use protection, and Diddy's like, no, nigga, not only can you not use protection, you have to nut.
And here's the thing.
Either on her or in her.
Well, his thing was acceptable.
I think he probably liked preferably in her.
I'm gonna tell you why.
If anybody ever nut, listen, I learned this back in health class, man.
Nut dries up fast.
Okay.
So I don't I don't think Cassie's back flipping off her back.
Remember, she was just laying flat down.
They're peeing on her mouth, they're jizzing on her.
That that gist is gonna be dried up before you get to massage it into this nigga.
Like nipples.
So I gotta imagine Diddy wanted her to get nut inside of her, because at least, you know what I mean?
She could go in the next room, doodle squat, have it drip out in her hands, massage it into his nipples, and at least, you know what I mean?
It'll get flaky on his chest.
But if if you nut on a chick and it stays there for three minutes, that shit is that shit's done.
It's evaporating.
Oh, this is just me.
I'm sorry.
Everybody knows this.
Y'all watch poor.
So this is what I'm saying.
Diddy's a freaky boy, but he he knows the shit.
Yeah, I get no condoms.
Well, he knew when that dude didn't bust.
That's when that's when I was like, that's because when I first heard his testimony, why would I was like, why would Diddy care so much that he lied and said, oh, yeah, yeah.
Yeah, that that that's but then when Cassie gave her testimony, I was like, oh my God, now it makes sense why she was.
When it was harvesting body parts, yo, this motherfucker was harvesting semen.
Yeah, bro.
Nigga might be doing some stem cell research.
We never know.
Bro.
Yo, suppose Diddy was harvesting.
Because he came out, he was pissed.
The guy, like the escrow even said, like he was kind of concerned that Diddy came out and said, hey, did you not?
He was like, uh Yeah.
And he had to like keep the lie up.
And then, and then when Cassie gave her testimony about the nipples, I was like, oh my God.
Yo.
She just corroborated a very disgusting fact.
Yo, if Diddy.
And the witnesses don't talk to each other.
So you know it's legit.
If Diddy was harvesting semen for some type of stem cell research, Diddy might be a hero.
Bro.
Like, it's nasty, but he is a hero.
Diddy sacrificed himself and he used the freak-off to extract semen.
Yo, you ever see, no, this is real shit.
Like, you ever see, like, I watched this.
I listen, I'm a biomathematics major.
When they want to get the uh I've seen them for research purposes, extract semen from a frog.
And because frogs have these um the these involuntary muscles, they're really involuntary.
Like, you could actually even trigger one of the nerves, even after death, and it'll move just like they're alive.
Yeah.
They could eat the chicken head off and it keeps running.
So I'm like, maybe Diddy was harvesting the semen, and he could like solve some type of like, imagine he cures cancer because of the freak offs.
That's crazy.
I tell you this, if he did that, then he'd be a hero, bro.
Nigga get a little appeal to surprise, a little noble peace prize, all that shit.
Alright.
Okay, all right.
Um, did you hear the fact today of there was something called there's a drug dealer called one stop.
That's hilarious.
That's a crazy name.
The niggas sold weed, ecstasy, plan B's.
I was like, yeah.
Yeah, Doss had plan B's.
I was like, wait, what?
Nigga sells plan B. That wasn't.
That's a good drug dealer.
You gotta sell some plan B's.
Yeah, yeah.
Well, that's how you know Diddy was not in that bitches, too, I guess.
Well, we don't know.
Well, no, you know what?
She probably bought a plan B. Well, bro, she bought the plan B's.
I was gonna ask you this as well.
So very interesting to note.
Yeah, and I wonder you mentioned this earlier, and I think we're about to get to the same thing, or you're gonna use the same excuse to not excuse, but like the same reason.
Yeah.
When remember we we talked about, we didn't hear her say she met with the government and probably got a proffer.
And that might be carved out because she's a victim of sexual violence.
Yeah, cool.
This is uh, and that's not sure.
I'm just speculating.
Because like she was involved in a crime too, so I could see why.
And I think that's a reasonable speculation.
So we're hearing about all this freak off shit.
We're hearing about semen on nipples, we're hearing about everything.
Well, she got some kind of immunity deal.
Okay, we're hearing it.
She was ordering escorts and organizing all their trips.
Facts.
And their defense has nothing to do with, hey, she was the main one.
They don't even try that.
Yeah, they don't even try it.
So the question I have for you is a person who gets brought up very often in this.
And we get to realize he might have been one of the culprits of leaking the videos.
Or some of the videos that later was threatening Cassie through this guy named Sajit, which is like a really shady story.
I'll let you elaborate in a second, but let me finish asking a question.
Jonathan Odie, the guy who shot up Trump Durell in Miami, who later did uh in his interview, he said, hey, I was a sex slave for for for Cassie and Diddy.
So he said this back in like, was it 2018 or whatever the cases?
And turns out, shit, he was spitting.
Pause.
Facts, right?
Now, here's the interesting part about it, and I wonder why this hasn't came up, and you tell me.
Um, I don't know if you know the answer, or we'll probably assume.
The dude said he got a $5 million settlement from Diddy.
Okay.
He had a $5 million settlement for a few reasons.
He signed an NDA.
OD, right?
Yes.
Okay.
He got a f uh for he signed an NDA.
He had videos that Diddy wanted back desperately, that he gave, which by the way, he gave to uh two attorneys, Mark Eargos and Ben Misselis.
And as well, he said that through the freak-offs, he caught the herpes virus and he blamed them.
So it was almost like this one payment.
We're gonna talk about lumps on her tongue and shit.
But but that's what I was I was gonna get into.
I'm like, there's so much freak-off shit going on.
Yeah, there's she's admitted hundreds of prostitutes, no one's using protection, and we hear nothing about SDDs.
Yeah, we're gonna be able to do that if we're gonna talk about at least and in the trial, at least 20 names.
Okay, but but but think about this from an A USA perspective.
If I really want those jurors over there in that jury box to really feel like this guy's a monster, I want to show how reckless he was.
He was infecting people or uh facilitating the the situation that was getting people infected consistently, yeah.
And we heard no testimony about abortions.
Yep.
By the way, there's another woman, she's not in trial here, Gina Hugh.
She said that she had two abortions.
We hear nothing about maybe Cassie having abortions.
Cassie was mad about the abortions.
Gina, that pissed her off when she was in.
It was the video and then abortions.
Okay, but we hear nothing.
Yes, you're right.
But we hear nothing about maybe her personal issues beyond the the UTIs and sores on the tongue.
Yep.
You're telling me that we're hearing about all these other diseases and even abortions, but they didn't even pry.
They didn't even say, hey, did Diddy ever get you pregnant?
Um, were you on birth control?
We don't even hear those questions.
Yeah, we didn't even hear that.
Why do you think not take the angle?
Because the best way to paint Diddy as a monster was to it was to paint him as a reckless asshole that forced everybody, right, to not wear protection.
He was nutting in people, he was having sex workers nutting people, reckless, she was getting UTIs, clearly she was saying her health was being affected.
Yeah, why not just go all the way to be like, look at the full side effects?
Well, no, I I think they did.
You know, she talked a good amount about you know the pain she was experiencing, how she couldn't, you know, she'd be in pain for days, she needed to recover for days.
She couldn't get her music done because the the freak-offs would take so much from her between organizing it, getting pretty for it, then doing it, and then recovering from all the drugs and everything.
She had no time.
Those are her full-time job, according to her.
So this OD guy, yes.
I was expecting to hear somebody at least a little bit of chlamydia.
Ain't no way I know someone's fucking in a chlamydic hopping the game.
Ain't no way.
But with the OD guy, okay, so I'll do Sujit first.
So Sujit basically was like a friend of hers, some dude that like was associated with Woo Kid.
She went out to New, she went to um Atlantic City and she went to New York City.
She had like two events that she had, and this guy was there with her.
Um, so he tells her, hey, I heard that you're in a porn video.
And she's like, what?
And she freaks out.
She calls Diddy or contacts Diddy and says, Yo, this guy's saying that there's a sex video out on me.
Now, Diddy obviously freaks out too because he has a vested interest in not getting discovered either.
So he tells her, yo, figure out uh get to the bottom of it and don't let him out of your sight.
Diddy's in LA when this is all going down, right?
So he's not there.
So she so Diddy tells her, don't let this motherfucker.
Don't let him out of your sight and get some.
We might have to Tupac his ass type shit type shit.
Potentially.
Well, he didn't say, I don't know, she didn't say that.
Love pop.
But yeah, but what she did say though, she actually recorded herself.
And it's funny, the government didn't play this, but the defense did.
Did She record herself or he recorded her.
No, she recorded herself.
It could have been him recording her.
Or maybe she recorded the conversation with her and him for Diddy, but now that conversation is weaponized.
That's what I think.
She's shouting at him like, motherfucker, I'll get you killed.
Yeah.
Like, I ain't killed nobody yet, but you'll be the first one that that's the call.
I think she recorded it for Diddy, more than likely.
Because to me, it looks like it was recorded from her angle.
So I think they asked her even on uh on Cross, uh, did you record this?
She made three to five different threats against him.
Um that she would bury him.
And the crazy thing was she said, it's not gonna be me that does it.
I'm not gonna get blood on my hands.
And then she really made it, and the other reasons too that was uh that was interesting.
She kept saying, like, I'm not gonna get my career fucked up.
Like, this is you got me fucked up.
And she was like swearing at him and nigga this and nigga that so it was actually uh very shocking to see her um speak to him like that.
It was very shocking.
Because at this point, remember, bro, everyone's looking at her like, oh, she's pregnant, she's innocent, blah, blah, blah.
But when dudes saw that, they're like, oh, what the hell?
Uh okay, I could read for you right here.
I got it.
Um, ask him on recording, was I touching myself or someone faking fucking me?
So that's important.
I was touching myself.
That comes back to what I told you.
They start with whacking it, right?
Ooh, that's why she was asking that.
Yep.
So she asked that specifically.
Was I touching myself or was someone fucking me?
So she says he has a video.
Then she says, Wait, you see it?
You have it?
Let me see it.
Uh, K says she needs to see it now.
She threats to kill him and bury him if he doesn't show it.
And then she tells everybody there, get the fuck out of here, and tells him to leave.
And you could kind of hear like people dispersing.
And she says, if you don't show me this thing, uh, I'm gonna kill you and Barry, and um, you know, and I'm not gonna be able to do it.
There's not gonna be blazing my hands.
And she threatened him like three to five times in this recording.
Wow.
But that's a good detail.
She says, and I wrote this down and I put a star.
Was I rec um was I touching myself or was someone fucking me?
So that tells you right there, it starts with the whacking off.
And and I'm pretty sure I don't know if you were so done with that trainer's daughter keeping going, but I wanted to ask you about just generally what I did take away from the entire thing.
I said, you know what?
With all things means and the OD thing, last thing I'll say.
Uh because he was the other person that was threatening to the video, because the defense brought this up.
Hey, if um Diddy was because remember, Cassie's argument is he has these videos on me, he's gonna blackmail me and ruin my career.
Defense comes back.
Bitch, did you and him not conspire to shut this suja nigga up?
That's why they played the video, that's why they played the recording.
So Diddy had a vested interest in making sure the videos didn't get out either.
Then they brought up the OD guy and said, OD had a video and Cassie knew about it, and then they asked, Do you know how the video got deleted?
And she said she had no idea.
And then that's when the defense was like, Okay, are you aware of the fact that Diddy spent months and a significant amount of money to get rid of that problem?
She was like, No, I wasn't.
Um, but I didn't know it was 5M, but that makes sense.
Yeah, that's what the guy said in the interview.
He said five million dollars and NDA.
So that made that makes sense.
But but they did say that he spent a lot of money and it took months to let him for him to negotiate that.
And the nigga's clearly off his rocker, so that makes sense.
Yeah, and I don't think that guy's gonna be involved in the trial because his testimony or his conversation, whether it was so high or whatever when he was.
Oh, he's not credible, bro.
He's not credible.
They would never bring him.
He got involved in that shooting, he gave a ridiculous interview.
Though some of the facts line up, he's probably meant to unstable.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
Yeah, you know, that's a nightmare witness, bro.
The worst witnesses are the ones that like have uh nuggets of truth, but a lot of bullshit.
Because then it's like, oh my god, bro.
Yeah, they they say something that works, and you're like, good, and then they say some bullshit, like, oh yeah.
Yeah, that's AUSA.
And it validates everything else.
Yeah, and then and then the defense the defense is gonna have a field day with that.
Okay.
Cassie's demeanor.
Um I guess I'm asking your overall opinion.
Did you feel like she came off credible?
One thing I I believed she came off overall was that I looked at her and I said, I do think she was loving some of them freak-off um, you know, activities.
But one thing I do believe she was protecting Diddy a lot.
You think so?
Okay.
Let me try to make the point and then you respond.
Freak off going on at Intercontinental.
Diddy feels he's about to get arrested.
They escort her downstairs.
Diddy's shouting at her, Cassie, call my phone.
They about to lock me up.
She goes outstairs, she's trying to ignore him.
He's texting her, she's calling my phone.
Yep.
Yo, um, he beats her ass.
She goes back to the joint where Carrie Um The hotel, uh, her home.
Yeah, it wasn't him.
Carrie uh what?
Carrie Morgan or something.
Yeah, Carrie Morgan.
Yeah.
She goes with a hoodie.
So you can see that her face is fucked up a little bit.
Diddy's storming in, like, yo, where's she at?
Hitting the door, supposedly with a hammer.
Yep.
They don't answer the door.
They call the cops.
The cops come to the city.
They didn't impress her at all.
But by the way, chat, they didn't impress uh Carrie Morgan that much at all.
So, like they she basically gave more context of like why they're not friends and shit like that and what they did.
And but yeah, because it's sorry.
Yeah, yeah, his defense didn't do much with that.
Um, and then what happens is the police come.
We did find out she got a nice 30k though for getting hit with a clothes hanger.
Not bad.
Oh, okay.
We didn't know the amount.
Okay, we're gonna go.
Oh, yeah, yeah.
Okay, okay.
So the celebrate was 30k.
Okay, so this is why they're not friends no more.
Diddy does that shit, right?
Uh shows up, grabs her by the neck, kind of like drags her, and then hits her with a clothes hanger.
Okay.
She says she got a concussion and she went to the doctor and shit.
She retains legal, and I think they correspond with Diddy's people.
Cassie meets with her at a pizza shop one-on-one.
Says, hey, you overreacted to this shit.
It's not that serious.
Blah, blah, blah.
Carrie gets pissed.
Bitch, I like what do you mean?
He fucking, your boyfriend hit me, and while you were in the bathroom, just chilling.
Hey, I describe this if you want to think about just how relationships are between men and women.
Every girlfriend of your girl hears about how you ain't shit.
Yeah, she's a person that your girl vents to.
So Cassie would, I guarantee, would probably be like, Yeah, Sean did this, blah, blah.
Oh.
It's a new girl.
So she was she was there soaking everything in and defending her.
You gotta stick up for yourself.
And the moment it's the other way around, Sean is in in her presence, and she gets hit.
She looks at Cassie, and Cassie's like.
Yeah.
Let me give you not going against my mind.
Let me give you a quick quick summary, bro.
This is like easy mode, right?
Basically, these chicks are in the meet at a modeling gig, right?
In New York City.
Uh, they end up becoming friends.
Uh, it's interesting.
They met because they had to wait in line for a Polaroid.
Isn't that crazy?
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
20 years ago, you had to wait for a polar ride.
That shit would never happen now.
They had to wait for the polarite to be developed or something.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
This is like, bro, she's like 39.
Bitch is like 40.
Anyway, so they're there, they become friends.
They end up getting an apartment together, live together like in 2004.
Cassie meets Diddy, blah, blah, blah, 2007.
They're going on trips, they're hanging out, blah, blah.
So she witnesses Cassie get her assholed by Diddy on two different occasions.
Once in Jamaica and once in LA.
In LA, he basically shoved her.
Uh, she didn't really know what the context was.
She just knows that he pushed her.
She saw that, but she didn't see anything else or why it happened.
Then in Jamaica, she sees him like drag her uh because she took too long in the bathroom, and then he sees her push her and she falls and hits her head.
I think that's bullshit.
That's what she claimed.
I'm just telling you, it's precisely what her story is.
So she and then she says she lied there for like 20, 30 seconds.
Carrie comes out yelling at Diddy, like, what the fuck?
What the fuck?
Cassie gets up, runs into the woods.
They both say, and get in fucking golf carts and go after her.
Cassie, if Carrie finds her, they hide in a fucking thing for like um hours and then they go back to the house.
Whatever.
Oh, and then in LA, they also ran and hid for a bit uh for 30 minutes or whatever, and then she left.
But and then, you know, they go on trips, hang out, they go to Burning Man like three times, they have fun here, have fun there.
She says that, you know, Diddy uh, you know, shits on her and yells at her, whatever.
It puts her down.
And then the other thing too is that she told Cassie on multiple occasions, yo, you need to leave.
And she was like, no, he pays all my bills, he gives me uh an allowance, he takes care of me, blah, blah, all this other shit.
So um, you know, I can't, I can't leave.
I don't know if it was Dawn that said that.
But either way, the point is both of them understood, both Cassie said the same thing.
He supports me, it controls my career.
I'm not gonna leave.
Whatever, which I think to the defense is actually a good thing.
Um, and then the the things comes to a head where he shows up at the house in 2018 looking for Cassie.
Uh I forget what for, and he had a key.
So he walks in while she's there, right?
Yeah, he's paying that spot.
Yeah, he's paying, yeah, he paid for all her shit.
Cassie didn't pay for nothing.
Well, but wasn't she living with Carrie at the time or no?
No, she was not Carrie was there visiting.
This is LA.
Carrie was uh Carrie's back in New York at this point.
So uh, but now Carrie lives in in LA and she's a personal assistant at 39 years old.
So ain't do shit with her life.
But anyway, girls live life on easy mode, bro.
So, bro, I'm telling you, these bitches are live life on easy mode, right?
She might as well get in that free girl.
Bro, yo, yo.
In the beginning of it, in the beginning of it, they the Diddy's defense team brought up to Cassie.
Were you jealous of Carrie?
Because there's a there's a message that says, yo, she's suggesting.
I know you like Carrie Moore.
I know you like Carrie Moore, which is this is why two bad bitches can't be friends.
Yeah.
A girl like to be with an ugly friend that knows he clearly fucking with me, bitch.
You ugly as sin.
Well, now she is.
She was better before.
Oh, she looks ugly in court.
I got an old picture of her.
She kind of looked a little bad.
Little blonde girl who five around.
Yeah, now she's a little bit more cooked.
Bro, blonde women age bad, bro.
You know how it goes.
No, it's not blind woman that's broke, woman.
That's what happened.
Like, you know, I mean, yeah, she probably broke.
She likes 40 and shit.
You know what I mean?
You can see, like, because they partying and shit in their 20s and living life and shit, so whatever.
Um the drugs are just coming to her portion of the screen.
Exactly.
Damn.
So uh anyway, and I don't think she's married.
What was that?
Looking like moldy porridge in this.
Bro, I'm telling you, the bumps in the face, whatever.
Cooked, right?
I could dye my hair and become uh go back 20 years, baby.
Like this girl's fried.
But anyway, uh so so I can say you ain't.
Hey, I can tie my shit back.
I could be I could be Diddy, I could dye my shit black.
Not that way.
Um it'd be fine.
But anyway, um, so yo, you gotta sneak some some some just for men rogan into him.
Like, I hear Diddy's looking crazy gray.
Yeah, he is very gray.
He needs that just for men.
He does, but they won't let him do it.
His he got a patty and everything.
Damn.
Yeah, he got a patty and everything.
He's not as dapper.
But uh, I'll finish the story.
So um, so she's at the crib with Cassie, listening to her music.
There was no drugs there.
She denies that there was drugs there, contrary to what you know, they claim that he hit her because she was putting Cassie on drugs and he wanted her to get off.
So Diddy walks in, has a key.
She's shocked.
What the fuck?
He's looking for Cassie, losing his shit or whatever, and he grabs her by the neck and um uh drags her or whatever, and then he throws a he throws a hanger at her.
She said boomerang tosses the hanger or hits her, basically hit her in the head area.
She gets a concussion.
Do we know what time this is?
Because it feels like he was crashing out when Kid Cuddy was punching dick in the stomach.
This is like 28.
I'd be mad fucked up if a nigga wearing a crop top was fucking my bitch.
Yeah.
This is when Crop Top?
This is way past.
Okay, okay, okay.
This is way past.
2018.
Who's fucking her then?
But he did, but he but he sparring kicked her in 2011 because of Kid Cuddy.
Oh.
That's when she got the bruise on her back.
Nigga spark kicked her.
He gave her 300 combination with that.
And then she went home and then she showed the bruises to her mom and her mom.
That's what that's how she showed the bruises to her mom.
Like the p the government showed the exhibits of her with like lumps on her back and bruises.
Oh, yeah, it was.
Because that was when he fucked her up in 2011 for being with Kit Cuddy, nigga sparring kicked her in front of everybody.
Uh, and then she fell.
But going back to the Carrie situation, so he shows up to the house unannounced with a key.
Carrie's like, what the fuck?
Cassie knows that he's there, locks herself in the bathroom.
So he fucks up Carrie, whatever, hits her in the head with a thing.
Carrie's mad as fuck.
So um, like a month later, whatever, or a couple days later, I forget exactly what it was.
I think it was a month later that I met at this pizza shop to discuss the situation.
Cassie basically tells her, yo, um, here's an NDA.
You overacting, 30,000.
And Carrie just took it.
And and then they haven't spoken since because Carrie was furious that she didn't take her side in the situation.
And they didn't talk since.
And then the lawyer kept bringing it up.
I don't know why this nigga trying to be like uh fucking mediator.
Like, well, you ruined a 17-year-old defense attorney.
You ruined a 70-year relationship because of this.
Like, you know, you got the money, blah, blah.
Why don't you whatever?
And then she said, Oh, well, she hasn't contacted me either.
So, bro, it's ego.
Like, like they can easily rekindle it.
You could tell that she would want to talk to Cassie again.
But it's because they don't want to talk to, like, they don't want to, she don't want to admit.
No, no.
They would never be friends again.
No.
When two women see their lives and go, yo, this chick is a personal assistant, like fucking broke as hell.
You know what she'll probably think I'm better than Cassie.
I deserve Diddy.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Diddy chose up.
She probably wasn't down for the freaking.
And it brings back bad memories.
And then on top of that, like Cassie, they were probably being hoes together.
So, like, Cassie don't want to open up that shit, and she probably don't want to open up that shit.
Yeah, you can't let your girl get back with her whole friend.
That's crazy.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Hey, um, really.
You're being hoes at New York City, bro.
Really important question.
Um, so in the case.
We covered the Dawn stuff last, if you want.
Yeah.
So in case that shows crazy.
Improving the Rico, um, and I explained today to my audience like there's two different parts of like what's usually alleged, right?
So uh there's a few things that need to be understood, right?
There has to be some type of agreement.
People have to understand that they're they have knowledge of this.
But there's something called predicate offenses and also what's called um overt offenses.
And in a Rico, you need to prove two predicate offenses.
Overt offenses aren't necessarily crimes.
It's like, yo, you going to get rope, but the rope is used for the kidnapping.
That's for the conspiracy.
Yeah, that's what the conspiracy is.
So the predicate offenses are gonna matter.
For example, sex trafficking is part of one of the uh the predicate offenses.
There's actually about like six or seven of them that they hit.
There's a bunch, bro.
Yeah.
Bribery, all that.
They also include arson.
Yes.
Do we expect that?
That's why they brought the kid the cut the kid cutty shit in.
Okay.
But but do we expect for that to be flushed out a little bit more?
I don't think Kid Cuddy's touching that stage.
But do we expect maybe like some type of forensic report on the car or you know what I think is they're they're looking at it like we need to put as many predicate offenses here as we can, and um if we lose all of them and keep two, we win.
Okay.
That's I think they're throwing everything at six.
And actually her uh Diddy's defense when he brought this up and saying like this is fucking wildly ridiculous because you can argue that like almost any of these things, because he's saying, like, yo, these assaults, like, this is assault.
How the hell?
Like, this is a simple assault.
How the hell is this being a predicate offense?
But then they're saying, well, it goes to means and uh methodologies, means and methods for for the for the organization to institute that fear, whatever.
So this is why Rico's so powerful, because bro, you could damn near like because there's two things, okay.
There's two main reasons that the audience needs to know why the A USA's office went with Rico.
Two main reasons.
Number one, they were able to bring in all the crimes from the early 2000s, and and that they weren't able to bring in before.
2010s, because this would have probably been a statute of limitations problem, right?
So that's number one.
They were to bring in all these fucking crimes.
And then number two, it allows you an incredible amount of uh variance and latitude to like make crimes that normally wouldn't like be federal offenses.
Now they're federal offenses.
I'll give you a perfect example.
Let's say me and you got a gang.
Um, you know, the the um let's see here.
The hard on thoughts.
Yeah, me and you and Lee.
That's what I'm talking about.
That's the game.
Heart hard on thoughts, right?
We decide, all right, we need money to fund this organization, all right?
And me and you decide to rob a bank, right?
And uh during the course of the robbery, uh, you shoot, right?
At shoot up in the air and you accidentally kill somebody, right?
Yeah.
Now that would normally be like a murder charge, right?
Which the state would take, because the feds never take murder.
But since we're we got a gang and we committed like a federal offense, right?
Or it could be even offense that's not federal.
Like we could just be like, you know, just plan a murder, not even robbing a bank.
We just plan a murder because um, you know, some only fans they just talk a shit about our gang.
So we go and we murk him, right?
We just shoot his ass, bum, done.
Yeah.
Don't talk about the fucking, you know, hard on thoughts gang, you fucking loser.
Yeah.
I almost use the wrong word.
And we murder his ass, right?
Pause.
So we all murder him.
Now, when they charge us with Rico, they can hit us with murder.
Feds normally never investigate murder.
Murder is a state charge every single time.
Yeah.
But since we are a gang, murder is a racketeering activity.
So now they can lump us and hit us with murder.
So that is why Rico's so powerful, because you're able to take crimes that normally wouldn't be federal, carjacking, arson, shit that the state would normally take.
Yeah, there's federal statutes for it, but they they never uh take it because it doesn't hit interstate nexus.
But when you use a Rico, now you can bring all that shit in.
Hey, the the the perfect way to even also describe this, uh and also it's gonna show the difference between districts, but also the reason why Rico's is so effective.
R. Kelly's a perfect situation.
So R. Kelly was charged.
They did that to bring in all those crimes in the 90s.
Yes, so R. Kelly was charged in two different districts.
He was charged in um Illinois, where Chicago is, and then he was charged in Eastern District of New York.
Eastern district of the city.
Eastern District of New York used the Rico uh c uh charge on him and the man act.
In Chicago, he got acquitted on four of seven charges.
He was only found guilty of three.
Eastern District, nine or nine guilty.
Yeah.
That just goes through the difference.
When they're coming in with that Rico, they're coming in for some years.
And by the way, you know, you know, we're and the other thing also with the Rico, uh, with with the with the um with the R. Kelly stuff, like for that, they had to do that because they're bringing in stuff from like the 90s.
And all they need to establish to bring it in, are you still continuing the criminal activity?
Yep.
If you're still continuing it, and it's in the statute.
Yeah, and it's in the statutes.
Now they got you for whenever you were doing.
That's how they got the mafia, bro.
They're getting these niggas for crimes they did in the 60s.
Well, you're still doing it, so now we can go after you for the this stuff.
And we're not trying to jump ahead here, but we're trying to play Oracle.
Let's try to play Oracle.
We got time, right?
Can I get another um Red Bull?
Red Bull, please.
Um We're cooking tonight.
Pause.
Playing the Oracle.
I started thinking about a potential plea deal that because we've heard he turned down a plea.
I I'm going to give you some scenarios and turn down a plea, right?
Yeah.
Yeah.
So this is how it goes.
There's seven predicate offenses under Rico.
At m at minimum, if he pleases please guilty, and I don't think they would ever give him a plea for just bribery and instruction of justice under Rico.
No, they're they want sex trafficking.
As soon as he gets that, that's minimum 20 years, right?
Yeah.
Um you take a plea, you can't even depart from that.
So you're not gonna give him a plea for 20.
So the Rico, mandatory 20.
Now here's the thing.
The two individual charges, which are the um sex trafficking, yeah.
Um no, no, the the sex trafficking.
There's two and four, it's count two and four.
Yeah.
So count one Rico, count two and four is sex trafficking um by force fraud or coercion.
Two is on Castie, four is on Jane Doe.
We haven't heard Jane Doe yet.
Yeah, we don't know who she is.
Either of those brings at least 15.
Okay.
Okay.
Um brings at least 15.
And and I mean I'm asking you from a AUSA government perspective, would the government be okay with this, right?
So the way I was trying to do the math on how they could have given him a plea that maybe he could really consider.
The only thing that brings him 10, right?
Is going to be count three and five, which is the interstate prostitution shit.
Which I think that's actually at this point right now, I think that's the strongest charge.
Really?
Right, right now.
Just but there's more witnesses.
There's more witnesses.
But do you think there would be a win for the government?
It looks like they want blood.
Do you think there'll be a win for the government?
They're like, hey, let's give this motherfucker like, you know, I mean, like, yeah, yeah, they want a conviction, obviously.
The more time, the more months they get, the the more the the bigger the charge, the better.
Uh, but they're they're gonna be.
You think they'll be good with 10?
Well, the the more the better.
But but like what I'm saying is like any conviction is a W. So let's say, let's say they only get him on the the lowest one, it's still a W because they won.
As long as they don't lose the trial.
Not conviction, but we're talking about a plea.
Because that was a plea's still a W. Okay.
So you think they would have probably offered, like, we'll drop the sex trafficking shit.
Plea to the prostitution will give you that.
That's interesting.
I don't know what they offered him.
But they probably they had to have offered him something.
Because going to try to do that.
Yeah, they yeah, but like this is too trumped up in the media.
If you guys came with a racketeering stat uh uh charge, okay, I can see that being dismissed, but the Cassie count to the sex trafficking, I could see them doing that and him getting the lowest lowest version of that.
He has no criminal history.
Um, but buddy, you're getting 15 or close to 20, bro.
Like, yeah, yeah, I you know it it's tough, man, because he has the means to actually fight it.
So, like from the AUSA's perspective, it's kind of like weighing like, okay, this dude can actually hire a legal team.
He's not like a typical stupid ass rapper.
Agents have any input on it.
No, no, agents have zero input on that.
For us, we don't know.
So once you give this stuff up, even if you're like, fuck this guy, I hope he doesn't get a plea.
The the AUSA isn't like, yo, bro, like, how was when it depends on how cool you are with your A was A USA.
Um, but most agents, uh keeper roll with you, we don't really care how much time they get.
Oh, as long as this is a dub.
Like, like, as long as you get a guilty conviction, I don't care.
Like, yeah, I mean, unless it's like a really bad dude, like he killed people and shit like that, then that's a little bit different.
But, you know, most agents would be like, yo, as long as they get the W, I get the guilty W. You just don't want to lose in trial.
Because the bit the worst thing is you don't want to go to trial and lose, bro.
You really don't want to go to trial and lose.
That that's like some shit that's like, I don't want to say career ending, it's not career ending, but it's extremely embarrassing for you, and it's really bad for their USA.
Like really bad.
Six of them are like the lead.
All six of them.
Really?
Yeah, it's gonna be embarrassing for all six of them.
And keep in mind, this is a career maker for them too.
So they want to probably get them on like the biggest charge.
But any guilty could uh any guilty on any of this stuff is gonna matter is gonna be a W regardless.
But what I think is um at this point, you know, I think the interstate they got him.
That's right, because the escorts are there, they paid them.
You got the witnesses, it is what it is.
Hey, that's the simplest one.
What do you think about um so the lead isn't Emily Johnson, it's Maureen Comey, which is the daughter of uh former FBI director, James Comey.
Yeah, uh she is the lead because she's sitting on the first chair.
This is gonna be this is a career defining.
Yes, like uh um approach for her.
Do you think we're seeing a lot of nepotism, like even in court?
Like, I mean, Teddy Garigos, Mark Garrett Garagos's, by the way, Mark Garigos represented Diddy Back when Odie sued.
Oh shit, I didn't know that.
Okay.
So, and by the way, he's doing PR for them now.
Wow.
I know this is a fact because his PR people hit me up.
They're like, hey, we're in court.
I got their cell phone numbers and everything.
They're like, hey, just let us know if you need any info.
We'll send it to you.
Obviously, they're trying to get some good press.
And I like, I'm like, all right, cool.
I look at the bottom.
Contracted out to Garigos and Garagos.
So makes sense.
Diddy's paying, you know.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
He has PR people in there.
He's got people, PR people.
I mean, this is what happens when you have the money in the I mean, they're paying people to wear Diddy shirts and shit.
So You think he's paying people that directly?
It's his team.
Probably okay.
100% his team.
So you know, and no, and notice how like they're they're starting this thing now as like the defend the the um the witnesses are starting to get a little bit weaker, and they're like finding like, you know, chinks in the armor a bit.
Then like, all right, let's roll out the t-shirts.
Niggas wear teach t-shirts in front of the courtroom.
I ain't see them, but the narrative is kind of starting to change a bit.
A little bit.
I mean, even for me, bro, I'm telling you, like, you know, um the witnesses, like they have like Cassie, they they beat her up a good amount and on the stand.
Her promiscuity, drug use, um, the fact that she didn't want to leave, the fact that she was living a certain lifestyle, she got all these benefits.
They sit there and say she he didn't progress her her career, but then again, he put her on with Kid Cuddy.
She got songs with some of the top artists.
She did put out a mixtape.
You know, you can make the argument.
Um, well, maybe she was lazy.
Was it really Diddy that was holding her back when you put her in touch with all these artists?
And she said at a point, and and I don't know if she they she expounded on this.
She said her job was to train for freak offs.
How do you train for a freak-off?
I like I've been trying to figure this shit out.
Well, this is what exactly what she said.
She said basically her day was quick.
She would, she would she would get told to get do a freak-off.
She started hitting up the escorts, she started booking a hotels, she started doing her nails, uh, picking up lingerie, uh, because she had a couple of sex shops she would go to to get the the outfits.
Um, she would, you know, show the outfits to Diddy, make sure he liked them or he didn't like them.
Um, and she would get and she would just do all the coordination, and then she would uh, and then she'd do the freak-off that would last who knows how long.
And then she would say, she would she was doing a freak-off like every week, and it would last somewhere between one day to four days.
So like half the week, and then she's recovering the rest of the time.
So she said she had a very tough time uh making music and being productive.
But she was living a certain lifestyle, so like, you know, she she was getting everything paid for, whatever.
So you can make the argument, like, bro, she could have been left.
So my thing is, and then and then the defense really did attack like the intercontinental that she got 10M from them.
That nobody knew that.
That was like uh a break, a breakthrough.
That's why I said to my audience, I said, hey, if you think Diddy only is hiring these lawyers, that's investigator work.
Investigators found that out.
That's not in discovery.
Oh, yeah, yeah.
Cassie's not saying that somebody that knows somebody that knows somebody.
And you can tell that they just got that info.
And I could tell that because it was like before she was a little bit rattled rattled, and and she knew she couldn't lie, and she had to admit to it.
And I'm actually surprised that you know, I mean, I'm I'm pretty sure she was a little bit more.
They're did you file a lawsuit?
She said no.
They're like, oh, okay.
Did you file a demand?
Oh, yeah, that was good.
Yeah, so she she covered a suit.
Did you follow us?
Nope.
She said I haven't filed.
I'm not involved in any more litigation.
I've not filed any more lawsuits.
Yeah, I don't plan to.
Yeah.
Okay.
Um that's how they locked her.
That was good.
Yeah.
That was shrewd.
Yeah.
Wow.
Okay.
Let's do some scoring a bit of defense versus.
By the way, too, when they said she got 10M.
I was like, oh, fuck.
Yo, she's a bad chaser.
And also, not only that, the the um the jury wasn't happy with the rape situation either.
Let me ask you a question.
And I know that this is.
They were like, what the fuck, man?
Like, even the dudes are like, bro.
This is gonna be redundant.
Now that me too shit again out of control.
Well, we could talk about that too, but this is gonna be a redundant question.
Yeah.
If they settle with Cassie for 10Ms, granted, Diddy seems like Intercontinental or Internet.
Intercontinental.
Oh, yeah, yeah.
They settled with Cassia, I mean for 10.
That nigga fucked up, right?
Flores fucked that one up.
But here's the thing.
If granted, Diddy is the aggressor in these videos.
But Diddy's life has changed from this.
If he beats his case, I need 10Ms too.
Come on.
If I beat this case, that video heavily prejudice an entire nation against me.
The whole jury pool.
That is literally, I was a paying guest.
I was the one who booked the hotel.
That video has severely changed my life.
I need my 10Ms too.
Bro, I'll tell you this.
If Diddy beats this, there's gonna be hell to pay, bro.
Nigga, he's suing everybody.
We might even get cooked.
No, no, his team weren't hit me.
They're cool with me.
I talked to Diddy in jail.
I'm like, all right, Playboy.
He said, but he said, Playboy.
You know, I got no problem with you.
I was like, You spoke to him?
Yeah.
Why he was in jail?
I ain't tell you this.
No.
What?
No.
You want me to tell you the story?
Yeah, go ahead.
Okay.
No, I know.
Yo, they listed all his jail calls.
I think they brought it up low-key, but but.
Besides the privilege conversation.
They're not listening to lawyers shit, but they're listening to you, bro.
No, no, he was calling a lot of people.
So I I know he wasn't me.
But because they brought they did bring it up in court when he tried to get bail.
Well, they brought you up?
No, no, not me.
But the way out of conversation happened, I'll tell you.
Okay.
So I was here.
Who did we just interview?
Because YK was here with me.
I can't remember who.
I can't remember who.
But we're chilling.
We're chilling in there.
Takashi 6ix9ine, locked up.
Oh, he was locked up with him, wasn't he?
6ix9ine.
Probably.
6ix9ine calls me.
Bro, what's wrong?
I got a lot of stuff.
No, so 6ix9ine's brother calls me.
Okay.
I got a question on 6ix9ine after this.
Okay.
I don't want to go.
6-9 brother calls me.
I get on the phone and say, yo, Danny wants to talk to you.
I said, Oh, put him on.
He said, Alright, hold on.
I put him on the phone.
He put him on the phone.
He's like, yo, Ack, what's up, man?
How you doing, bro?
Is that everything good?
And I'm I'm gonna be honest with you.
Me and 6ix9ine, we have like an interesting relationship because, like, that's my guy, but also at times I give him like that big brother love.
Cause bro, I I really want to see my boy win, bro.
Like, I my career was helpful.
You stuck by him at the end of the day.
Well, I still stand by him, but you stuck by him at his worst times.
But I really still stand by him, but I also bro, you gotta stop doing some shit.
Like, and I'm kind of reaming him out a little bit on the phone, but not really, because I understand he he's locked up.
And he's like, he's like, yeah, I know, bro.
Like, I'm doing A B C and D that I'm about to do blah, blah, blah.
Cool.
And then he's like, yo, bro, but yeah, no, no, yo, act.
I did call you because like, yo, I wanted you to, you know, I wanted you to talk to somebody, and like, yo, he's like, you know, Diddy, like, yo, you you know, he locked up with me.
And and I'm and I'm just thinking, generally, in in this GPU.
And he's like, yo, he's like, yo, he's like, yo, yo, how is it with you and him?
I'm like, man, I it ain't really shit.
Like, I've been locked up.
I mean, at one point, I think he was like hitting me up about like, yo, Miami, but it ain't really nothing.
He's like, yo, he's like, yo, act.
He's like, I'll fuck with you and my friend.
He's like, I met Diddy in here.
He thinks you don't fuck with him.
And he told me real quick, he said, when I came in here, Diddy was depressed and was sleeping all day.
Yeah.
And I was like, I was like, wait, you could you see Diddy's like, no, we're in like this private thing.
It says it's me, Diddy, SBF, and he was just like, it's all these high profile people.
Sam Bankman freed, yeah.
And by the way, Anna Esteville, I believe.
She comes, she comes from, she's she's SBS lawyer.
And she did Cassie Cross.
Go look it up.
He hired when he got out.
Oh, well, he well, he didn't get out nor SBF.
But he hired SBF's lawyer in the last month and a half.
I think it's I think it's Estevio.
But he picked up, um, he picked up steel like in the last month or two.
And for what people told me, Diddy in jail around these high profile inmates, Sam Bam McFriends a billionaire.
He tells, like, yo, she's good.
You gotta get her.
He adds her to the team.
But anyway, 66 is like, yo, whatever, whatever.
He's like, yo, I've been telling him, yo, dog, you can't just be here just like depressed all day, just sleeping all day.
You got to fight this.
And he said, Diddy asked him, what does that mean?
Because he's thinking, well, I have the lawyers, they're fighting it.
He said, yo, you're getting killed, because like every day in the media.
6ix9ine's the media guy.
He's like, I've always said, 6ix9ine, he's a cool rapper.
I'll do like songs from him because maybe I'm biased.
He's my friend and also he makes hot songs when he used to back in there.
But I think 6ix9ine's the best marker in the game.
He understands media like no one else.
So he tells Diddy, he's like, yo.
Uh you know what?
I'll say this too, because I've said this, I've been saying this for years.
I think um him, his uh return from jail.
Yeah.
The Gooba uh marketing push was One of the greatest marketing pushes I've ever seen in my life.
He was able to take the rat thing and make it a joke and laugh at everybody.
And he did the rat emoji and the music video.
To this day, one of the biggest trolls I've ever seen in my life.
It was all him.
Had all the street niggas angry, losing their minds.
Yo, the the first before he got locked up, his label spent zero marketing dollars.
He would just cook up thing after thing every day.
They didn't spend no money.
Anyway, so that was just all him, no money.
Guaranteed.
Nobody put money into it.
That his label, yo, to the point, his label would send private jets for his bitches.
Because they had so much money, this marketing dollars don't spend.
They don't spend his market.
They're not paying me.
Six nine is my guy.
It's almost like quit pro crow.
Like he's supporting me, I'm supporting him.
Yeah.
He's cooking up viral shit every day.
They're not spending marketing dollars.
He was doing it by himself.
Yes.
That's millions of dollars that you don't have to spend because you're cooking it up yourself.
He would just tell him, yo, fly these two bitches here, give them this.
And his label would just start book it be his personal booker for bitches.
Guaranteed.
Because he has so much money in marketing.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
And they gotta spend it too.
They gotta spend it.
They gotta spend it by four then.
So it's like he would just say ridiculous things.
That's why later on, he's like, all right, get it.
You know, it's actually incredible that he was able to do this just off of uh off of Instagram.
I remember does he still have the highest IG life?
Um break that break that record in hip hop, but like some Hispanic person or something.
Some overcome personal.
Half the world speaks Spanish, man.
Okay, so anyway, so I'm talking to Six, and he says, um, he says, Yo, I want to put you on the phone with Diddy, like, yo, I just want him to talk to you because I've been telling him he gotta tap in with the media because he gotta change the narrative.
Because right now, everybody don't even know him or know the truth.
They think he's guilty.
And you know what I will say now that you mention this, it's a good point.
Because Diddy, after 2015, you ain't hearing from him, bro.
And other than he fell all the way back.
Yeah, he he he he was never a social media guy.
And this is a dude that dominated in the early uh ca I I try to tell these these Gen Zero's like when I'm on stream, yo, you couldn't turn on the TV without seeing this guy in the 90s and the early 2000s.
You couldn't.
He was because here's other things too.
I talked about he blended races.
He was hanging out with Ashton Kutcher, he was hanging out with um Russell Brand, he was hanging out with rappers, people he was hanging out, but like this dude blended things, he was hanging out with rock star niggas, right?
So, like the thing with Diddy, I'll never forget, uh, we ain't going nowhere.
Bad boys for life, right?
The music video, he has rappers there, he has rock stars there in the early 2000s when it was like not cool to hang out with white niggas, right?
Or not cool to hang out with rocker people.
He was doing that.
He was doing it before Jay-Z did the crash crash course with Lincoln Park.
He was doing all that stuff, and on top of that, he dominated television too.
You making a band, MTV, MTV2.
He was on BET, he was everywhere.
So like he dominated like media in the early 2000s, and I and I feel as though, like looking back now, 2020 highsight, he never switched over to the Instagram, Facebooks, and the and the YouTube of the world to a degree.
Like up until like 2008, you gotta remember he was really instrumental in you know, voter die and getting Barack.
He was huge at getting oh Barack Obama elected, actually.
Huge.
Um, but what I'm saying is that um uh 2030, um, I'm talking 2013 plus.
I'm talking Instagram era, YouTube.
Yeah, yeah.
After that, Facebook, yes.
I think he let narrow.
Facebook MySpace, yes.
So anyway, I'm thinking that's the point though that Takashi caught on to like, bro, you're not, you're not.
You know what I'm saying?
So, so 6ix9ine says, Yo, he's dead.
I want to get y'all on the phone.
So I'm thinking it's like, all right, yo, I'm gonna call you back at this time.
And I am gonna lie to you, it's the same thing that happened with like uh um, I think with with that with uh loose cannon and Dirk.
6ix9ine literally said, Hey, yo, Diddy, come here.
And I'm thinking, all right, he's just saying some shit.
Within two and a half seconds, I hear.
Yo no, Playboy.
Oh shit.
It's Diddy on the phone.
Wow.
And I knew he was aware of shit, because he's like, yo, he's like, bro, listen, man.
So is that how's everything doing out there?
And I'm like, yo, everything's good.
And he's like, yo, I just want to let you know, I never had a problem with you.
And that was very, it was a he was aware of whatever, because I was out here publicly saying, Yo, I think Diddy tried to invite me somewhere in London to line me because I was calling his side chick, um, uh young Miami, a prostitute and whatever.
And he had hit me one time.
I was kind of like, bro, you're fucking up my pimp again.
So I'm like, maybe he was trying to, you know what I mean?
Like, give me a lesson type shit.
Okay.
And he quickly addressed, like, I got no problem with you.
And he was just like, listen, man, you know, uh, you know, I just want to tap in with you, and you know, we gotta put we gotta put some good energy in the world.
Like he was speaking ambiguous because he knows it was being recorded, of course.
Um, because I was on the jail calls a six nine zero call.
And um, he then says, So I want you to get in touch with my son.
And he was just like, last thing he said, he said, Christian.
No, not Christian, Justin.
Then the last thing he said was that they came, they didn't, they weren't there today.
Which is which is interesting.
Yeah, they weren't there today.
The last thing he said to me was Um, what do you say?
He said, Y'all must see when I get out.
And I ain't gonna lie, that creeped me out.
I was like, whoa, okay.
It's like, like, it's the first time I heard confidence in the voice of what he was saying.
Okay.
But was six nine was tell me that he was like, he was like, yo, he's moping around.
He's he did not sound like that on the phone.
He sounded pretty like, yo, he's like, yo, I'm gonna see when I get out.
Well, bro, I'll tell you this, man.
The reason why he was moping around, and it's making because it's interesting how you're giving me information, and then it's connecting things on my side.
Bro, this guy had assistance, do everything for him, bro.
MDC, bro.
Bro, and and MDC is one of the worst prisons.
Bro, you know how many people used to complain to BOP about MDC?
Like, it was it's the one of the worst prisons in America when in the federal system in Brooklyn.
But um, but with Diddy, the reason why I was moping around so much is like as I listened to the testimony, bro.
He didn't lift a finger.
Bro, the the his assistants were at his house 30 minutes before he woke up, or an hour before.
And they were getting shit ready.
They were telling the cook, had the food ready, they were getting papers ready.
Like his life was literally handled from to every degree.
He didn't have to worry about nothing, bro.
He just like existed and showed up to wherever he needed to go.
Bro, one of the duties is like, you need to have a boat for me ready when I go to Central Pay.
Oh, no, no.
Hey, hey, listen.
Listen, no, wait, wait, no, no, nigga, I call no.
I only called you because I'm watching the I'm watching the trial today, or I'm like, watch uh and David James said this.
And David James said this to me.
Or not to me, but but he said this, but it resonated.
Yo, David James, the personal sister to Diddy said he was working 20 fucking hours a day.
Yes, you gotta listen to this shit.
Because now I'm like, yo, I might be overpaid.
Did he say he was working 20 hours a day for 70,000?
Yeah, yeah.
I'm like, what?
Diddy, what?
Yo, yeah, yo, Diddy was using all the money for baby all, bro.
20 hours a day, every day.
Yeah, you gotta wake up 20 minutes before Diddy.
Bro, and then to stay till 3 a.m.
You gotta be in a script.
I was like, yo, Diddy had a real sweatshop.
You want me to tell you what the schedule was?
Yeah, yeah, okay.
All right, I'll find it.
Keep going, keep going.
I'll find it.
That's the only thing that really struck because you know I'm a pocket watching to the max.
Cause I'm usually thinking, I'm like, yo, for Diddy to get people to conceal crimes for him, he must have been paying the bag.
When I heard this thing was paying $70,000 and they were working 20 hours a day.
Hell nah.
The free club just ended last year.
This this is 2007.
All right, so that's like maybe a hundred, that's like a hundred today.
It's like a hundred today.
Still.
Yeah.
If you're not a free cost, yeah, yeah.
And you gotta clean the baby all.
Yep.
You gotta do this, you gotta do that.
Yep.
Imagine you walking into a room and it's caked up semen on the sheets.
So this is what it was.
He was he said, Dia was his boss, she was a chief of staff.
He was with Diddy every day, uh, before he's up every day, have a file of all his business ready, business docs ready.
News mentioned of him for the past 24 hours, schedule all the business meetings that were ready.
Uh he would call security, let them know Diddy's leaving to arrange the vehicles, uh, work from 6 p.m.
Uh from that they would work from 5 to 6 p.m.
He'd do his meetings, then he'd go to dinner, then to go to the studio, work until about 3 a.m.
Then they would either take him home or anywhere else he wanted to go, aka partying.
And then uh 30 to 60 minutes before wake up, and he would work just like you said, uh 20 hours typically.
Um made 70k per year with some overtime, work six to seven days a week.
Sometimes he worked three weeks in a row, no break.
Um he had a writer list of items, he prepared all the rooms, hotels, concerts, etc.
The way that he wanted, and he had a particular list for hotels versus or particular list for other places.
Um he coordinated the the security D Rock Malik Bonds, Uncle Paulie, security bit with Big Tim.
He didn't see any illegal weapons by security.
Uh Bonds Paul and Tim in the beginning told him to stay in his lane because we getting too ambitious.
Uh he ran, he also managed the household.
Uh Amanda was had he had a house in fucking Alpine, New Jersey that he helped manage with a woman named Amanda in Miami.
Uh Amanda managed a place in Miami, but he also helped with the place in New Jersey.
Um what else here?
Uh Diddy had multiple girlfriends that he knew about.
Kim Porter, Sarah, Tara, Yana, Cassie.
Nigga had bitches with rhyme and names.
This nigga was a player.
Uh Metcass at uh, and then it goes into how his um interactions with Cassie, but those were some of his duties.
One thing I will say about Diddy, and I think he did one of the smart, dumb criminals.
Yeah.
I think if you do crime, you're dumb.
Yeah.
I think he always 20, 30 years.
Yeah, I think he was smart in a way of compartmentalizing.
So like think about this.
If you're doing all this with covering up shit, and your assistants never see it.
All the security guards claim they never seen a lot of that stuff either.
Everybody had certain little things that they saw.
By the way, there's two people who I'm expecting to be on the witness list.
You can tell me how many witnesses are left.
D-Rock or Roger Bonds.
They've been mentioned by important key witnesses.
Uh Leaf also will probably come.
The Fahim guy.
Okay.
Because that's the one actually that like people name.
I think he was real big mention in um Lil Rod's thing.
Oh, another butt bombshell for you.
Little Rod was the main person that provided all the probable cause for the search warrants.
Fucking found that bombshell out.
Wow, wait, hold on.
Bro.
Yo, they better like the goddamn video.
I'm looking at your shit.
Bro, bro, you only got 1.3.
Yo, they didn't even like your shit on King Act Dance.
I know a lot of you.
I didn't like my shit on Myron Gaines X. Bro, what the fuck?
We're giving yo.
This is by far one of the best talks on this case I've seen.
Nobody gets his in the weeds.
Nobody's educated on this shit.
Guys, like the fucking video, subscribe to Kingdom.
You see, you be stopping the show.
You'll be like, listen, I'm gonna stop this story.
Like the goddamn video.
Yo, yo, that's so crazy.
So, and I got it from a very good, I'll tell you off stream.
Okay, but who told me?
But okay, but now let's get into some legal east, like uh um sure exp uh explanations or um discussions about that.
Sure.
If your main source of probable cause evidence came from Lil Rod, how is Lil Rod not a witness or a victim in the case?
That seems that uh uh I would have gone to a probable cause here and then.
Well, remember, the the they indicted him, he doesn't get a problem call here.
Okay.
If you're indicted, you don't qualify for a problem, right?
Only a complaint.
Um, so okay.
And again, I'll tell you off air, then you'll know.
But but but but they did the search warrant before the indictment.
Yes, and they also did it before Rod filed his shit.
If I'm not mistaken, I think they did it before Rod filed his um his um Yeah, his uh so the government talked to him before.
Yeah.
Yeah.
He was a predominant source of the um, he showed up to the house.
He did, bro.
He was there for like the first couple days.
He was there for the per first couple of days.
Um, but uh, but yeah, I saw him there, he was there with his lawyer.
Um, but yeah, bro, the the probable cause that they used, because here's the thing.
Why not use Cassie?
Or is it so far removed?
I got you.
So they did use Cassie.
Cassie did provide a significant amount of information on the multiple homes.
It was stale though.
Because with the feds, and I'll explain this.
When it comes to search warrants, they need like a two-week gap of what they call the information to be fresh, can't be stale.
The thing with Lil Rod, since he was there making music all the time, he knew the house intimately, he knew where the stuff was, he knew all the safes were, he knew the layout.
Dude was drawing floor plans for the feds.
So he was able to provide real-time information because he had been at the all the houses, fresh to the feds, real time, and they were able to execute the search warrants because with the feds, you need that two-week thing.
I'll give you an example, just so your audience really understands because this is super important.
Because this is where what led to them like doing a lot really was kicked off the case.
Let's say uh me and your agents, right?
We buy drugs from Leif's house.
We know Leif is a drug dealer, right?
And we buy cocaine, huh?
How'd you know?
I just knew.
Okay.
He doesn't, he doesn't look trustworthy.
Uh so um, so we buy an ounce of uh of cocaine, right?
So we go to the prosecutor.
Hey, we want a search warrant for this house.
Okay, when'd you but do the drug buy?
Uh we did it yesterday.
Okay, cool.
Drafted the warrant, cool.
But if we went to the A USA and uh we said uh like a week later, two weeks later, like you gotta do another buy.
Sorry, this is not.
By the time we get this thing signed, it's gonna be like 10 days, 14 days, not good.
We need more fresh PC.
So in other words, the feds are very particular about giving search warrants for houses because the house is considered the top echelon of the Fourth Amendment.
Like the house, it goes your phone, then the house.
That's why title threes are such a big deal to get, right?
And I could talk about T3s too, why big you is cooked.
Yo, let me tell you this.
If they ever get T3s on you, you're fried.
You're air fried, you're done.
You're done.
Because they need more probable cause to get a T3 than to arrest your dumbass.
I'm gonna say that again.
They need more probable cause to listen to your phone than they need to arrest your dumbass.
The only reason they're going up on your phone is because one of two things.
Either you're the top nigga and they're trying to really get you cooked, or B, they're trying to climb up and what's called spin up another wire.
Because they they want to identify a co-conspirators.
So either way, if they get you on a wiretap, you're air fried based on like what it takes to get a wiretap.
Yo, once I seen 20,000 over there, I'm like, yo, bruh, you know how much chatting you gotta be doing to be on 20,000 calls, bro?
That's a lot of chat.
Here's the thing.
I still talk to you.
That's a lot of chat.
Here's the other thing too.
I still talk to you know, agents.
Nigga, nobody does wiretoux like that no more.
Everything's encrypted.
So, like, the fact that they got this dumbass nigga on a wiretap.
You gotta realize big U is one of them old ass things that FaceTime.
You know what I mean?
Like, with him, he's he's still like rotary phone dial.
Wait, but we'll go back to the search.
Yeah, let's go back to that.
So Rod gets in the search, and I know that it's good PC and it's super fresh because you need two weeks.
Break it down though.
So you think, and by the way, I'm I'm I need people to fact check this with me.
I'm gonna do this on stream tomorrow because we're gonna go through a civil complaint now.
So Rod goes in, yeah, or they find him somehow, or they get a heads up that he's probably gonna file criminal uh uh civil complaint.
And when he goes in, they have him signed to a sworn affidavit of what they could they what he claimed.
Not Rod.
So on no for the search warrant, no?
No, because search warrants, you can use hearsay all day.
It's just probable cause.
You could say an informant told me this information.
Like it could come from so with a search in So in the search warrant that gets signed off on, they don't have to say this information was produced by Rodney Jones.
Hell no.
Let's just say a confidential source.
I want to read that search warrant affidavit, bad.
Did you think it would be available?
I uh uh uh I think if we find a case number, we could probably do it.
Because it's gotta be unsealed by now.
It's gotta be unsealed.
You just need the case number.
It's gonna be an MJ case number because the search warrant.
Because the magistrate judge signed it.
Yeah, I did find it.
Yeah.
Chat, remind me tomorrow.
We're gonna look for that.
We're gonna look for it on stream.
The problem is that it might not be under that same case file.
It might not be under the bro.
I hate the fucking federal court system.
Their shit is all fucked up.
CR indictment, but search warrants go filed under other shifts.
You gotta like know the case number almost.
And when I was when I was in the courtroom, they showed it was crazy.
Um they had to show the evidence log of what they took from the house or what like um because they did like a drug test of the case.
Or in the indictment or complaint in in an attached um, they're not putting a case number in an attention.
A lot of the detentionary, they're not putting that shit.
Well, remember, remember they had to show that, hey, we found a gun.
Yes.
Right?
Yeah.
You found a gun at whatever.
Yeah.
You don't think they cross-referenced like the search warrant um like maybe it was sealed at the time.
Maybe now we can find it.
Well, yeah, they talked about it.
They get they they gave the press release, but they're not gonna put the case number on there.
They they gave the they gave the indictment case number.
I or did they even give a case number?
I don't even think the case was the case wasn't indicted at that point, I think.
When they found the serial numbers and they did press release, or sorry, the gun without the serial numbers, I don't I don't know if they were indicted yet.
I think it's still in the indicted one too, though.
Um there's gotta be a way.
I'm gonna try to find it.
That would be really important.
Because here's the thing.
You're gonna have to look for an MJ case number.
So when they're indicted, it goes CR.
Are it's gonna say how they got the probable cause in in that um, yes, yeah.
That's why I want to read it.
Because because the thing is with a search warrant for a house, it's extremely it has to be extremely detailed.
So there's probably gonna because here's the thing.
They're gonna go attachment A, which is gonna be what's to be searched.
This is gonna be attachment B, what they expect to find in the house when they search, then attachment C, which is gonna be the affidavit which outlines all the probable cause.
And with with that, with the search warrants, um, you don't have to list who it is that gave you the stuff.
Hearsay is completely acceptable, informants are acceptable, other agents or other people giving you information is completely acceptable.
Like, if you look at the search, uh, the the Trump search warrant is a perfect one that I like to refer people to because it's public.
If you read that, we'll have it as redacted.
But if you if you read through that, it says, like, you know, you could tell us inform information.
Anytime you get a warrant for someone's house, bro, inform it.
Or undercover.
But that's way harder to get undercover.
It's an informant.
Or maybe a victim that was.
Which is basically an informant.
Okay.
Because they're telling it.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Damn, Lou.
Little Rod is the one that provided that shit.
That's a bombshell.
But he's not.
I don't think he's gonna be in this.
I'm wondering if Diddy could use that to be like, yo, this guy that gave you the information.
I mean, he's not charged with guns.
Uh did he?
Yeah.
They could.
They found an error with the serial number obliterated.
Is that worth prosecuting a man with like all the people?
With all these charges, no, but I'm surprised they didn't do it because I've been trying to throw the book at him.
Um I think it's 18 USC 922 K. Someone Google that.
If I'm right, bro, I need some ones in the chat if I'm riding.
I think it's 18 USC 922K.
Firearms used to be on my ship, bro.
I used to work with the ATF like this.
Because when I was in Laredo, bro, niggas were taking guns and buying them in Texas and trying to smuggle them down south all the time, bro.
So like I seized hundreds of guns, man.
That maybe even hundreds, literally hundreds of job, bro.
Maybe thousand.
What does it say that little rod is not in the case if he's if he ends up not being?
You know, they can always bring him in to testify as a witness.
There's probably issues with him that they don't want to use.
When I seen them, I'm like, I'm gonna use this because me and me can't get along, but I know this on both.
But it's all good.
Like, how the prosecutors are a good story right here.
Yeah, like the prosecutors don't give a fuck about a story.
They're like, yo, how credible is this nigga?
You know what I mean?
Like, cause because see, you gotta draw the line where it's like, okay, I want to bring witnesses in that got dirt, but at the same time, I can't bring in a witness that has an axe to grind too much.
Because then it's gonna be like too obvious, like, why are you here?
Oh, I hate this nigga.
Okay, bro, okay.
You know?
So, um, and they already got Cassie and Dawn, right?
And and and the fact that they that that they put Dawn on instead of him, yeah, bruh.
We you want to go over the Dawn shit?
Oh, yeah, yeah, yeah.
Please, please, please, please.
Yeah, let's go over the Dawn shit.
I'll go, I'll go uh throw it with your audience and shit like that.
Um, let me see here what what's the engagement like?
Yeah, we got what?
We got uh four and a half on my shit.
We got uh 11 on yours.
Yo, y'all niggas need to like the shit, man.
We're uh I'll take Yeah, I ain't gonna lie.
They do be going crazy when it comes to watching, but yeah, should they be in the chat?
Guys, engage with the shit, man.
Okay, here we go.
I'll tell you how much they said 1,000 or boots.
Thank you guys.
You guys like my cowboy boots?
Awesome.
Niggas hating on the Chelsea's.
I know you gotta.
We got 5,000 on the Academy channel.
We got 1200.
Wait, how many do we got watching total?
All right, so we had 17,000 just on my two YouTube channels.
Okay.
Then we have 600 on kick.
By the way, you guys go to kick if you guys don't want like ads, like you know what I mean?
It's an ad for experience over there.
And then Rumble, I can't see from this multi-streaming thing.
So I probably got like 2K on Rumble.
So that would be like 17K.
No, no.
So no, just with you.
That's like 1920.
Yeah, that's like 1920 just with me.
Okay.
And then whatever you got going on.
Yeah, so and I'm streaming on Twitter and shit.
So we yeah, we got we got over 20, bro.
We got like 25,000.
Yeah, we were probably closer to 30.
Yeah, we got like 25,000 right now.
So 20 to 25,000.
Hey, hey, for everybody who's watching, you gotta understand this.
This was what you call a we're not working like David James, but like this is pretty much like a 15-hour work day.
Right.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Like, you've been up since what time?
I woke up yesterday, 8 p.m.
No, no, this morning.
No, I didn't sleep.
I woke up at 8 p.m.
So you've been up since 8 p.m. yesterday.
Yeah.
Bro, what the fuck is in them Celsius like?
I don't know, bro.
I I just I woke up and I streamed and then I just didn't go back to sleep.
And I did the the court thing earlier, and then just hear that.
You didn't sleep at all.
Nah.
When are you gonna sleep?
After I'm done with this.
But you gotta get to court anymore.
Uh I'll live.
One of the hardest things.
Hey, one thing he says much is they they dislike you.
Or not everybody, but some people they act like you're the worst.
Yeah, niggas hate me.
You outwork all of them.
And that's one of the reasons you're always gonna be here.
I'll tell you this.
The reason why I know so much about like being an agent, I can give you like these intimate details is because I did it.
Like, like all the stuff I tell you about when it comes to search warrants, writing wiretaps, pen registers, bro.
I can go in the weeds like about how investigations run or whatever, and like I can see the mistakes.
As I'm watching the agents testify, I'm like, you fucked up here.
And I told you this example before.
So I'll give y'all a quick example of what I mean by this.
One of the agents, uh, or the agents, when they searched his his um his hotel, right?
They seized a bunch of baby oil, good.
They seize catamine, good.
It corroborates what the witnesses told you.
Fantastic.
You find it there.
Awesome.
They find $9,000 cash, right?
And in a in a little satchel, Louis Vuitton satchel.
What do they do?
They seize it.
Stupid.
Why?
Can they say that's the money he's using to pay for drugs or pay for prostitutes?
Okay.
And here's the thing.
That's a good angle.
Now the agent, when she's on the stand, they say, well, why'd you take the 9,000?
Because the defense is like, why'd you take the 9,000?
Uh why'd you seize it?
They didn't take it.
They seized it.
Cause because when they went into the courtroom, she actually pulled the satchel out from the from the thing and cut the bag open, pulled the satchel out, pulled the money out of it, and then fan in front of the audience on some poosh icy shit to the jury.
Wait, they cut the bag open?
Yeah, because it's evidence bag.
Oh, okay.
Yeah, I thought it was like they cut the Louis V bag.
Yo, yeah.
So, so they they they they they they seized the bag as it was with the money in it, and then they they counted it, zipped it back up, put in there, and then put it in the evidence bag, sealed that shit up.
And it's been in the evidence vault since September.
Then she brought it out just for the trial, and then she took it, took it out, cut it open, pulled the satchel out, pulled the money out, and fanned it out on some poosh icy shit.
I was just waiting for her to do this.
I was like, what the fuck?
Now, when she did this, I cringed because then I because I knew I knew as soon as she did that, she was like, the defense is gonna come at you.
Here, here we go.
So they say, Why'd you seize the money?
Oh, um, we believe that it could have been potentially been involved in the criminal activity or a criminal proceeds, blah, blah, blah.
She's like, okay, for what?
Oh, bull cash smuggling.
I'm like, you fucking dumbass.
Now, this a this agent has been on the job for like five years, really four, right?
Because she was spent like a year getting ready for the academy of shit.
Probably three to four years of actual real investigative experience.
And she went to her first duty station in New York.
Bro, they're not they're they're not.
But when they put like a lead person on the stand because they got a lot of new agents, bro.
So and new agents often go to places like New York, Los Angeles, Miami, uh, and the border.
Hard to fill offices that no one wants to go to.
Is that not the person who's the lead agent that cooked up this entire thing?
No, but the lead agent is five is five years in too.
You guys shouldn't have seized it in the first place.
Because, like, under what statute are you gonna are you gonna seize it under?
Um, because nine out of ten times he's gonna be able to prove that that money is legitimate.
So, what she should have done, what I would have done, and I talked about this on my show.
Whenever you're dealing with someone like this where they're clearly committing crimes that it's not for profit, and he's rich and he's wealthy, and more than likely that money is being involved, uh it was made legitimately, you're creating headaches for yourself by seizing it, right?
It's easy to seize money from a drug dealer.
It's easy to sell the money from a scammer or someone that's doing some other illicit crime for profit.
That makes sense that because you can say this money's being seized until you can prove that it's legit, and they never can.
But with someone like him, bro, billionaire, $9,000 cash, that's play money.
That's his real money.
You know what I mean?
So with that, I would have seized the money under a six, and they went over the evidence forms.
It's called a 6051.
All right, is the is a form that the DHS uses, all of it.
6051S.
I would have seized it just to secure it, put it in a bag.
Then, once I got him to the marshals, hey bro, we found this.
I'm gonna give you a 6051R return.
Have him sign it, count it in front of him.
Here you go.
This is gonna go with you to Marshall's.
I'm not taking that fucking money.
I don't because seizing money, so there's three high-risk items.
I'm really giving you guys some in-depth shit that will get you in fucking trouble in law enforcement.
Money, drugs, weapons.
In every agency, whether local, federal, state, municipal, whatever, these tend to be high-risk items.
Typically, they need to be disposed of or dealt with within 24 hours because they're high risk.
And I always look at it like if you can get rid of that liability, do it.
For example, I had a friend that worked at the ATF and I had a friend that worked at the DEA, and I would often work what's called OCDF cases.
And I can go into that detail if you want later.
But the reason why I did this was I knew for me to seize drugs, it was a pain in the ass because I had to bring it to a C BP Lab and all this other bullshit.
And then I also knew that dealing with guns was a pain in the ass because we had to lock it up in a certain storage room.
So guess what?
ATF.
That's they're the gun agency.
DEA is a drug agency.
I had friends over there.
Unlike other agents, I always work with other agencies.
And I had guys on speed dial.
So I called my buddy.
Hey man, I got a gun here.
You want it?
It's a part of a case.
You can stat it.
Yeah, I'll come take it.
Comes takes it.
He could come take it by himself, write serial number, done.
Right?
Versus with me, HSI, they got like a two-agent policy.
He can come with his task force officer take it, no problem.
They deal with guns all day.
DEA, hey, got this dope here.
It's not that much or whatever.
You want it?
You can stat it.
Yeah, I'll come take it.
All right, boom.
Give him the drugs.
He deals with it.
I don't gotta worry about it.
I don't got to worry about putting in my vault.
And then with money, if it's not illicitly tied to a crime, I'm getting rid of it.
And the other thing, another thing, I'm really getting in weeds here, but there's a lot of states have something called um fuck, what is it called?
T off.
There's a program where you can, if you seize money and you're working with the same locals, you can actually give them the money, and they're able to get take about 80% of it, right?
And it works for their department.
And it's like a very good way to like build connections with local law enforcement agencies that don't get the same level of funding or whatever.
If obviously you're able to articulate that it comes from proceeds, uh drug proceeds or scammers, it was very obvious.
So I would give it to the state and locals and let them deal with it.
And then the agency gets 20%, and then the local agency that I work with, they get 80.
And then I don't have to deal with the money.
Let them deal with it.
That's how I dealt with high-risk evidence my entire career, never got in trouble for that shit.
Never had to deal with problems because this is what you open yourself up to.
And anyone that works in law enforcement, guys, whether you work for FBI, DEA, any of these agencies, like I implore you.
Whenever you seize evidence, if you don't need to take it, don't fucking take it.
Right?
Especially with the high risk stuff.
So okay.
Let me ask you about just even what they found in that hotel room.
What type of and her testimony was going smooth until that money shit came up.
And they're probably gonna have to give the money back at the end of the day.
What I think predict.
I think Diddy They're not wrong for doing it, but they didn't have to do it.
And she just opened herself up for no reason.
They had everything else so smooth.
Yeah.
But they're new, so it is what it is.
I think Diddy opened like it.
What planet could Diddy be on if they raided two of your houses looking for things involved in sex trafficking?
You go to New York with planning to turn yourself in at some point because you heard the grand jury indictment was near.
Yeah.
And in your hotel room, you still got Astroglide, baby oil.
He had a lot too, bro.
They showed pictures.
Yeah, like why we can have a kind of it was it was like 10 plus bottles, bro.
This is where I'm like easy.
I think I see why his defense try to argue this angle to say he was incapacitated, or they're they're almost kind of saying like he has a problem.
Yeah, this sounds like a motherfucker that got a problem.
He does like, bro, they're if they're looking to arrest you for sex crimes, and you're going to a closer place to make them feel okay that you're not gonna evade arrest.
Why would you have the evidence?
Well evidence that you might be doing more of it.
Yeah, no, I mean, he has a problem.
I mean that's stupid.
The fact that because he went to New York knowing he was gonna get arrested.
Like maybe he thought they want to get a search warrant for his hotel, or he thought like he's too smart, but that was retarded.
What?
That's crazy.
Yeah, I don't that's what I was like, yo.
I think Diddy has a real fucking problem.
This might be from some childhood shit.
I kid you not.
Yeah, yo, it the the way how Cassie described how frequent he started requesting the freak-offs.
Yeah.
Once a week, dude.
She was saying multiple times in terms of like it was once a week, but it would last days.
This is sick, man.
I can get into Dawn shit.
Um, my bad.
Uh, but yeah, no, that was uh just uh a thing on evidence, rules of evidence.
Someone's probably watching the show right now, like, oh shit, I gotta all right.
So um, okay, so let's go to Dawn.
Uh sorry, man.
I took like pages of the point.
You're writing fucking Yeah, I was writing novels, bro.
Um, but it's okay.
I wrote in a way where it's gonna be able to make a lot of sense.
Is your audience familiar with the first story she gave?
Skillet and all that?
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
The first story that Cassie not making the eggs right, diddy came down and slapped the shit out of her with a skillet.
Yeah, or attempted to slap her with the skid skillet, yeah, as we're gonna see here in a second.
All right, so basically, so it starts right with the and by the way, niggas spent like 30 minutes talking about the skillet thing.
Yeah, uh, the defense and the prosecutor, by the way, uh, before Dawn came in.
So, anyway, uh, so it begins with the X Gill story and Diddy threatening uh statements.
Uh the incident was passion, but and if people talk, they could go missing, right?
Another important thing when he brought them in.
Your story, your audience knows the story, right?
Yeah, so and I think Dawn was kind of grilled on that because she never had this whole thing about oh, Diddy said people could go die, or people.
You know what?
Let me say it again for them because this is actually this is very important, because this is I'm gonna be coming back to the story.
So let me tell them because a lot of new people here.
All right, guys, it's very simple.
2009, she's at the house in LA hanging out with Diddy and Cassie.
Um, it's nighttime.
Cassie is like uh cooling eggs uh in the kitchen.
She hears Diddy come down belligerent loud, saying, Hey, where the fuck are my eggs?
Cassie doesn't have them ready.
He grabs a skillet and he attempts to smack her in the head with the skillet, misses, and she goes down in the fetal position.
As she's down in the fetal position, he's punching her, he's kicking her, he's talking shit to her, whatever.
Then he grabs her by the hair, drags her upstairs, and they watch in horror as they hear sounds of glass breaking and yelling and shouting.
That is a story.
Um, then following day, Diddy tells them to come in.
Her and who's Harper?
Uh Harvey RV Pierre.
Okay, the other girl that's a part of their Diddy 301.
Kalina.
Kalin.
My bad, my man.
This is 2009.
So Danny Kane is gone.
So she tells them to come in.
They recorded the studio, locks the door when they come in.
Hey, just so you know what you guys saw was a crime of passion.
We love each other, so I love.
I'm gonna take y'all to the top.
We need to keep this behind closed scenes, and you know, people that talk about stuff like this go missing, right?
Very important that he said that.
Then he gave them flowers.
This is according to her testimony.
According to her testimony, and then he gave her flow gave them flowers.
Which is crazy.
Like, yeah, don't worry that I what my chicks has by here's some roses, bitch.
Anyway, so anyway, allegedly, this is what Dawn said.
Okay, so now that y'all know the the story.
So it started with this skillet thing in the going missing, okay.
Um, she felt shocked and scared when she saw it.
It was early uh in the recording for uh Diddy Dirty Money.
This is in the early stages.
Uh she still saw Cassie, but saw her at the studio, hotel, house, etc.
Saw her often, saw her other acts of violence frequently, saw Diddy Punch her, choke her, pull her hair, slap her, face, um, punch her in the stomach.
The reason um she didn't say anything is uh or the reason why he hit her is because Cassie would talk back, having an opinion and uh wanting to perform.
Talking back is that bad?
No, I'm just kidding.
Uh so then they went ahead, uh, and then his security guys were Harv, uh, me or people that work for him, Harv, Mia, D-Rock, Capricorn, they're all witnesses, um, and they're staffing security to some of these incidents.
So the first incident was 2009.
Security like D-Rock um showed images uh of D-Rock in Bonds.
Uh they were security and worked for Diddy from 2009 to 2011 when she was at Bad Boy.
So those were other witnesses there, I think, at the first event.
Uh, she saw saw evidence of violence, face oh, the evidence of violence against Cassie.
So she saw injuries in her hands, face, knees, arms.
She covered up with makeup, clothing, and sunglasses, which does corroborate other things.
Um, her and uh Kalena getting makeup.
Okay, so this is the other story, I guess.
So her and the other girl were getting makeup.
Um they heard arguing between Cassie and Diddy.
Diddy punches her in the face, okay.
Um, and then Cassie came to the bathroom crying.
Her eye was swollen, uh, but but she put makeup on and sunglasses to cover it.
She stayed with Cassie after she was punched.
Um, and this was like right before Central Park like performance for appearance.
And then they showed a photo, uh, exhibit uh if your audience wants to know, 9p 102.
Uh it showed a pick of Cassie and her and Harper on that day.
All three of them are wearing sunglasses.
That the the prosecutor asked her, this is on direct, by the way.
Uh why do you guys all wear sunglasses?
And she said they wore in solidarity to support Cassie.
Um Diddy punched Cassie in the stomach at a restaurant.
This is another incident of violence in Hollywood.
Uh, she left the room after.
Uh Harv Pierre, Capricorn, Mia, Pawn, Harper were there.
Keep in mind who I just mentioned, guys, because it's gonna change in a second.
Um, and then they showed a message of Pierre.
She had positively identified him.
As they're mentioning people throughout the story, they're showing images of them and you know the witnesses confirming that's XYZ.
Um Pierre was president of Bad Boy Records at the time.
They went back to LA uh house in a sprinter after this Hollywood punching situation.
D-Rock drove.
Cass and Puff were arguing.
Cass said that she was embarrassed and she didn't that like that.
Why'd he have to do this in person?
Uh Diddy didn't wasn't taking none of that shit.
Huh?
In public.
In public, yeah.
Cass.
So she was they were arguing.
She was embarrassed, and she said, Why'd you have to do this in public?
Diddy smack the shit out of her in the mouth and told her to shut the fuck up?
And everyone on the rest of the ride was quiet.
She just stared out the window the rest of the time.
Cass wanted to do more modeling and more for her career.
This is something that she convided in Dawn in.
She heard Cass and Diddy discuss her career.
Cass said it would happen on his time.
And he and uh he told her to wait.
Um, and then she overheard a conversation, I think, uh, where um he told her he owned her and would slap her.
She overheard a conversation, I think she said.
Damn.
Did he did he didn't like Cass talking to Dawn, told her to stay out of his relationship.
You bitches are here to work.
You don't know work.
He told them the world pay, the the world, uh he they would pay for it if they didn't mind their business.
Yeah, yeah, that's what he said.
He said, like, yo, say how my business, you bitches are here to work and you bitches don't know work, is what he told them.
Uh and then he said they would pay if if they didn't mind their business.
Um, and then since he beat Cassie, his lover, because they asked her, yo, why didn't you do nothing?
And she said she said she was scared for her life.
Important, note that too, guys, that she was scared for her life because they had this was the rolling theme why she didn't do nothing.
She was scared for her life because she saw how he was beating the shit out of Cassie, and he was like, yo, if he's treating her lover like this, like I'm cooked.
I can't say nothing.
Um so she stopped interfering in Diddy's relationship.
Um, she saw Diddy do uh weed Molly E. Ketamine uh at the studio, never saw him take opiates though.
Uh then she mentioned this guy one stop who was the drug dealer.
He brought the drugs.
He brought um he was a black dude, he showed the picture of him, and she identified him.
He brought cocaine plan B, weed, e Molly, etc.
Um, diddy stored the drugs in his Louis Vuitton pouch.
Uh her her, he or his assistants would carry it.
Diddy offer drugs to her uh to them.
Um said she only smoked weed, she didn't use any other drugs.
Uh she said D did use drugs while working, but you know, he was a productive uh drunkie or drugie.
Uh she observed Diddy with a gun on his possession.
Uh, saw this from 2009, 2010.
She saw D carry the gun in his lower back, his security also did the same.
She left Bad Boy in 2009.
Um she kept in contact with Dawn.
Uh or no.
Oh fuck.
Uh oh.
Diddy kept in contact with Don.
Diddy would contact her anytime she got some motion.
If she didn't answer his cast or his management would contact her.
Uh she was always pleasant when talking to him because she knew how he was.
Uh, she did not disclose what she saw because she was told not to by Diddy Harvin Pierre.
Uh she and Cassie filed a civil lawsuit around the same time.
Her lawsuit is still pending.
And then the defense cross-examined her.
So I gotta take a drink before this one because this is gonna be one of the greatest asshole pains.
And I have a witness in a courtroom.
Who did this cross?
This was uh the black chick, the short black chick, the one you mentioned.
Oh, yeah, this was West Merlin, Nicole Westman.
Yeah, she was a feisty short black chick that sounded white.
But that's how you know you're cooked.
The black she sounded white, bro.
They get air fried.
Like I was she spoke proper English.
Sound like Condolee Sorizes in the show, man.
Dawn, I ain't gonna lie to you, bro.
Dawn is stupid.
Because she would be like, Yeah, so you hired your lawyers to litigate on your behalf, and are you aware that they did this?
She's like, uh, what?
What was that?
It's like you hired her lawyers to do a certain she didn't know basically she ain't she know what the word litigate meant, and a couple other terms.
There was like four different I know leaves and back, like what the fuck's going on?
I know, bro, straight nickotry.
But um, there was multiple times where um Dawn didn't know what she was saying, and she would have to like make it like baby steps, it was painful.
So Dawn's not smart.
Did you see her getting bullied when she was walking out the courtroom?
There's a video of it.
Uh when she walked out the courtroom, yeah.
I know as she walked, she walked out.
No, no, no, not the courtroom out the courthouse.
In or out the courthouse.
Uh looked like he was out.
Out.
Okay, well, I'll tell you when she left the courtroom, she got the fuck up out of there quick.
She and and like she walked by, she didn't even wait for the people that were with her.
Like the people that were with her just like filed right behind her.
Really?
Yeah.
By the way, uh pain zombie ghost and thing for the uh 20 Canadian, bro.
Appreciate you.
Shout out to you, bro.
Okay.
All right, okay.
You want me to do her cross now?
Okay, so here's a cross-examine.
So she confirms that the lawsuit is pending.
Um, And guys, I'm summarizing for you what they said, so you can infer what questions were asked, but I'm summarizing for you like what was said based on the questions.
So she confirms the lawsuit was pending with a motion to dismiss.
Her attorney sent a demand letter prior, filed a suit in September of 2024, roughly.
She sat down with federal prosecutors eight times, asked her for allegations are consistent.
She said yes.
Asked Dan, uh, asked Dawn about Cassie uh Skillis situation, claim she uh dropped down in the fetal position.
So she repeated kind of the same story.
And then this is where the defense attorney started to start cooker.
She goes, Are you aware that the egg incident was in your letter in her demand letter to Diddy's people?
And she says, no.
The demand letter says she heard the pan hit, but didn't see it.
She heard it hit the wall.
So she didn't see it in the demand letter.
Then she goes on and says, On October 31st, 2024, you met with the government and told the government Diddy did hit Cassie with the frying pan versus saying Diddy tried to hit Cassie.
So we already got three stories already in 10 minutes, not even five, like this like the first five minutes or 10 minutes of her talking to her.
So first she testifies, um, did he try to hit her with the with the pan?
That's what she testified to.
Then her demand letter says she didn't see him hit, she didn't see him hit her with the pan.
Rather, he uh she heard the pan like hit the wall, right?
Then uh she told the government on October 31st, which was lying on Halloween, uh, Diddy did hit Cassie with a frying pan versus Diddy tried to hit her on the frying pan.
So now we got three stories, right?
In 2025, Don told the government Diddy threw eggs at Cassie.
So she changed it again that he threw eggs at Cassie and set the pan down, right?
So now we got multiple stories.
We got one story where it's throw eggs in a pan down, another one hitting with the pan, another one attempting to hit with the pan, and then another one pan hit the wall, and she only heard it.
So we got multiple stories.
So she calls her out on this, like, which one is it?
This is a big difference, right?
Then she says, um, did he call her to the studio the next day?
Now they get into the whole um um danger thing, right?
Um I felt uh um you gonna go missing.
Diddy call into the studio the next day, love and passion, don't say anything with her and Harper, etc.
People go missing.
October 31st, first interview with the government, same one.
Um government did not she did not say to the government that people go missing today, USA's.
Okay, maybe you should have forgot it.
March 18, 2025, second interview.
She did not say anything about the people go missing comment.
April 17, 2025, third interview.
She did not say it's all the ASAs or the government about the people going missing in this interview either.
So she met with them three different times, didn't say shit about this people go missing, which you would think that's a pertinent fact, right?
Because she mentioned that shit day one when she stepped on the stand, by the way.
And she only had 30 minutes to testify.
That's another important thing.
So when she came in and testified, it was right after I think Agent Benda, it was like 4:30.
Yeah.
Friday, 4 30.
So she comes in within that 20 minutes of testimony or so.
She's able to rattle off immediately.
Yeah, she hit him with the pan, and we were scared because he said that people go missing and gave us flowers.
Pretty like, and she said it pretty smooth.
I believed it.
I was like, damn, she this story is pretty solid.
But now this defense attorney's coming in saying, like, you met with the government three times.
You didn't say shit about this.
She also met, and then she mentioned the other dates that she met with the government.
April 8th, April 9th, May 10th, May 10th, uh 2025.
So the first time that she mentioned people go missing was May 10th, 2025, right before the trial.
Really?
That's like really right before.
Yeah.
Another thing that she brings up, the restaurant assault.
She said, Who else was there at the restaurant with you?
Uh Neo, Usher, Jimmy Iveen.
She didn't bring that up when she met with the agents.
And she didn't bring that up when she met with the government either.
Um, she mentioned those people being there.
Next one.
Uh, video on the event from the Central Park uh punch.
She said that there was video on it.
Didn't go too much further than that.
They didn't show the video in the in this in the trial.
Government asked about the allegation, the civil complaint.
Um, in a civil complaint, she made a she she said that uh she made an allegation that Diddy grabbed Cassie and dragged her on the grass.
And then she and then and then she said, Did that actually happen?
And she goes, No, that was a misquote from my lawyers.
So then she asked Diddy about the guns.
She says she saw Diddy with the guns three times in New York City.
Never saw him do anything with the guns besides have it.
Never saw him pull it out, reload, any of that stuff.
She just saw him with it.
She saw Diddy do drugs.
Weed only.
No, actually, yeah, she only did weed.
She pretended to use other drugs.
Diddy did cocaine.
Told the government she never saw Diddy do a cocaine.
Okay, so in her testimony, she says she saw Diddy do cake cocaine in the trial.
But when she met with the government, she told the government she never saw Diddy do cocaine.
When was this?
October 31st, 2024.
The first interview.
So now this is her testimony is pretty unreliable.
Like it's all over the place.
So as time progressed, so so the attorney, this is where the attorney like kind of got her with the fucking fatality.
She goes.
So as time progresses, your story changes.
She said yes.
And then she uh Did she say something like yo, I'm remembering more with time?
She that's how the government redirected to try to save it.
Oh.
So she never saw she and she never saw Diddy pay one stop.
She uh, and then her um, and then they asked her, so now your story changed.
And she said, Yeah, but it's uh but different.
So ask so she asked her about the okay, now she asked her about the fear with Diddy, right?
Because she the whole theory was I'm scared of Diddy, etc.
So um, because of the so they said, okay, if you were so scared of Diddy, why did you contact them on multiple uh situations?
You asked them to come back as a solo artist.
Um then they also said you initiated contact with Diddy on multiple occasions and you want to work with him again.
And then she also said, uh, so he threatened you, scared you, but then you asked to go back and work with him, right?
And then she also said uh the defense attorney asked her, Danny Kane and Diddy Mur uh Diddy Dirty Money went double went platinum, both of them did.
Danny came from 2004 to 2009, then did he dirty Diddy Dirty Money from 2009 to 2011?
And she says, since she left them, she hasn't released the same level, reached the same level of success.
And she asked Diddy uh to sign her as a solo artist in 2011 after leaving, uh, asked her to work with Diddy as recently, and then they got her with this one.
Asked to work with Diddy as recently as 2020.
And then uh felt Diddy had no reason to dismantle, and she was mad.
They said her were you mad about Diddy dismantling Danny Kane and Diddy Dirty Money?
Because she felt like there was no reason for him to dismantle it.
And she said that she was saddened by it.
Uh, and then said he said Diddy ruined her career twice with dismantling both those um organisms.
And that's kind of a reason why she would.
She would be making up all the shit.
And then the defense attorney says, uh, you saw Cassie file the suit and you read her complaint, and then you filed soon after.
Um she disliked, uh, and then she said you did it for the money.
And she said, No, I didn't do it for the money.
And she said, okay, what'd you do it for?
She said I did it for compensation.
I mean, they said, so money.
And she was like, Yeah.
So she air fried her, bro.
And then basically the government redirected, they tried to say, okay, well, you wanted to meet with the real reason you called Diddy was because you wanted to meet with Lorianne to be a judge on making a band.
Um, she asked her about the get different government interviews.
Same thing with Cassie.
Did you see the inner the reports that were prepared by agents and government government officials prior to what the defense attorney showed you?
She said no.
Um, let's see here.
Um she said uh let's see here.
In every meeting with uh the government, she said that Diddy hit Cassie.
Um then this is what you said before.
As she she said she tried to the reason why she's remembering things because she tries to push it back in her memory, and then as she met with people and she was talking about it again and again, she started to remember facts.
Wow.
Absolutely.
Uh I think that was a nightmare.
Um then she tried to play off the Diddy thing, like when Usher and all them were there.
She said, Well, the government, didn't we ask you which employees were there?
Cool, because she omitted Usher and everybody else from being there.
Yeah.
And then the grass incident when she said that uh what you know, what was the issue with the complaint saying that Diddy got dragged on the grass When it didn't happen, she said her lawyers misquoted her.
And then they also said, Did you see the demand letter that your civil lawyer sent?
Remember the civil lawyer said the bullshit about the um it said the stuff about the grass and a skillet difference.
Uh and she said no, she didn't see her lawyer's demand letter.
But that's kind of crazy because like, bro, most lawyers, they're not sending a demand without you looking at it, bro.
Come on, man.
Yeah, of course.
They gotta go off your statements and then you want to put it in a way that they feel like they're not giving up too much, but they could elicit the money.
Yeah.
Or settlement.
And and they said that, like, yo, these people working on your behalf, and they send this letter on your behalf, litigating on your behalf.
And and like she couldn't even understand when they were trying to say that.
So yeah, I mean, bro, I I'll be honest with you, I've never seen a cross-examination go that bad ever.
Wow.
Okay.
Um let's try to give like scores for overall and also the first week.
We're we're only the first day into the second week.
Yeah.
I wanted to score this like boxing.
I said that I think Diddy had a 10-9 week last week.
I think the government should have been 10-8.
That should have been a knockdown.
So in boxing, you get knocked down, you lose an extra point.
Usually, if you just lose the round, it's 9-10.
I think the government should have knocked down Diddy with Cassie.
Instead, I feel like somehow he edged out the round with all the people from I think I'm going tied with the opening.
I think that the um who was the first witness.
The first witness was um my blanket here.
First one of course.
I think I think they got the best of Flores.
Defense?
Uh, yes.
Okay.
I think um Yeah, Brian's still embarrassed him.
I think he wrote that report.
That that report, oh man, they they cooked him with that report.
Granted, to his defense, he's a regular security guard.
He doesn't know that it's just gonna be using a trial of the century against him later on.
Well, well, he's a cop now.
Yeah, he's a cop now.
Yeah, yeah.
But when he wrote it, he wasn't a cop.
You're right.
So I'm I'm giving that to a lot of.
How long did he be on been on the force?
I didn't get that part.
I think it was about three or four or four years.
Okay, so he was like new.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Yeah, yeah.
LAPD, right?
Uh yeah.
And so the sex worker, I think prosecutors handled that well.
I think Cassie, I gotta give it to the defense.
I think the defense elicited there's no way to defend the assault and the abuse, but I think they elicited the right things out of her where she admitted that she was seeking love, she was down to do things or open or even suggested things that she felt could keep him.
Yep, and that many of the things that beyond the abusive toxic relationship, she it was her idea to do some of these things, and I don't know if that constitutes necessarily sex trafficking, and that's why I think neutralizing some of that position, that's where I gave her the big W or gave the defense the big W for I think winning that exchange, or maybe not even winning it, but not having to be effective.
You also gotta remember, like, one point for the defense is really like three points because keep in mind the burden of perfor performance is on the is on the government.
Like the the defense, and I say this all the time like the defense's job, chat isn't to show that Diddy is innocent.
The defense's job is to make you question that he could be innocent.
Yeah, that's all they gotta do, right?
Like, damn, maybe you could be innocent and and make the and make the jurors do what?
Doubt the evidence.
You know what I mean?
That's why it's gotta be beyond a reasonable doubt.
So I think the defense did a good job of of at least establishing that, like, okay, this this nigga there was there was like at least a a 40-60 situation here.
You could go ahead and give Diddy the edge and say 6040, but at the end of the day, he wasn't like doing these freak-offs and Cassie not participating like openly.
Like, she's an adult, she's a consensus adult.
Like, you know what I mean?
Like, the is this really sex trafficking and coercion and violence and everything else like that when she could have left on multiple occasions?
I don't know.
You know, and then and then the rape situation made it worse because now her rape story isn't credible because like you you were you were cheating on your man with him, and I think that's gonna rub a lot of people the wrong way.
Rape isn't um a standalone predicate offense, even though I I think maybe some people might say it's implied with the with the predicate offense of sex trafficking, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
Yeah, and that's kind of that that's I think they brought it in because of relevance because of that, yeah, for relevance.
But the defense I noticed didn't challenge it because they had that in their back pocket.
The date discrepancies and the fact that she used it to cheat.
So they're like, you know what?
We could object this, but you know what?
She actually stepped on a mind because this is gonna make her look like a whore for the for the for the jury.
And here's the other thing that's important.
One of the things that the government fought so hard for, and bro, they argued about this for like an hour, okay?
The day before uh who was supposed to take this before cross-examination, the day before cross-examination.
They're good about this shit for like an hour.
They didn't want the defense to bring up other sexual partners and other sex acts done with sex partners.
They were so strong against that, arguing 412, all the privileges of sex uh uh, you know, victims, uh, sex crime victims, etc.
So I think the defense was kind of playing chess by allowing that to come in, this this this alleged rape, right?
And like not objecting to it, so they can hit her with the fucking UNA reverse.
No, no, I actually I remember quite the opposite, actually.
What do you remember?
So there is a part in there where they're about to get to it, but the AUSA was gonna bring it up.
And get to what uh the rape.
Okay.
AUSA was gonna bring it up, and there was an objection.
There was actually a sidebar where supposedly they said, hey, listen, this is this shouldn't be admitted.
And what I believe the judge said, or maybe I'm misquoting it.
Judge said, you guys uh introduced it in opening.
You guys mentioned that you're got you're you're gonna hear about an alleged.
The government did, yeah.
Yep.
And no, no, the defense did.
So the government did too.
Okay, okay.
Well, but but they scolded, well, not scolded, but they told the defense because basically it got brought up in the opening statements.
It did.
And that's why they're like, hey, listen.
Let me look.
Um so Agna Phillywood said it's not one of the predicate offenses.
Why is this relevant and that came out this morning?
That came out this morning.
Okay.
That that that's that's what they talked about this morning.
Okay.
But but what I'm saying is that when they did this shit with the with the um with with the rape, this was days ago.
Oh this is I think on like her last day of testimony.
Yeah.
But like what I'm saying is, um, but yes, yes, you're right.
They talked about that this morning.
Uh, that's literally what they spend the first 30 minutes or so talking about.
And they're really good.
They talked about that in the skillet.
Yeah.
Um, but but the the thing is is that um the rape with with Diddy, um, the defense, I think, was waiting the whole time to use that to own a reverse and damage her credibility as as a 304.
And they were able to do it circumventing the whole 412 and 413 shit that the government was using all this time to cock block them.
Yes, it's it worked in their favor.
It did it worked in their favor, bro.
What's your scoring of the entire thing?
What's your feeling?
Just as well.
I wasn't in the jury, I wasn't in the in the in the um main courtroom the day that that got broken, but multiple people, even people that were pro-Cassie and pro-prosecution, they're like, damn, that was that the jury was not happy when when uh when they um when they found out that she had sex with Diddy after making an allegation a month before.
Yeah, the jury was not happy with that.
What do you score um where we're at currently?
I think I think Diddy is making a decent argument for this is not a beyond a reasonable doubt, open and shut conviction that this guy's a sex trafficker.
You can call him a lot of things.
He's a domestic abuser, he's a drug addict, he has a temper, he's a freaky motherfucker, he might be better sexual.
Um what doesn't seem very easy, and again, I'm not sure.
I want to say this too.
Cassie hit him too, though.
Okay.
Like, what so they use this, they all they the the prosecution used this um this story from 2009 where uh Cassie got stomp, right?
And they kind of play they could say, Yeah, like Cassie, you hit him, right?
Okay, yeah.
Okay, now now tell me what what happened.
What they didn't tell you is that Cassie was talking to some nigga, did he called her a slut, they got to the car and she fucking socked him in the face.
She punched him full fist.
And that's where he got mad.
Now, of course, like hitting a woman is never acceptable.
But I do think it's important to understand that there was context in play.
She was drunk, she was talking with this nigga.
Did he call her a slut, and then she fucking socked him uh once they got out to the car in front of everybody, and that's why he got so mad and he stomped on her.
Still not acceptable, but what I'm trying to say is that the violence was definitely um on both sides, maybe a bit more pronounced on Diddy's side for sure.
Um, But you can make the argument like yo, this is domestic violence.
And that's what the what the defense is trying to do.
So my take on this is this is what I think.
I think right now we're like 50-50.
Normally, which I'm shocked.
Normally, we would be looking at it like, oh man, this defendant is getting cooked.
What the hell's going on here?
But I do think that his defense is doing a really good job.
And I think the AUSA's office is doing a really good job too.
I think we um obviously I'm you know, I'm not gonna say he's innocent yet or whatever, because there's still way more evidence, bro.
They still got like probably 10 more witnesses.
Um so we gotta see what happens.
But I will say that his defense is doing a good job, and right now, at this moment, as a closing with we have half of what's this guy's name, Daniel?
Uh the personal assistance test James, what's the name of Stan with Stain?
It's not Daniel.
Kevin James.
No, it's something James.
David James.
Davidson, yes.
Yeah.
Like, as of now, where we have half of his testimony, which apparently someone said that he gets great by Diddy too.
I don't know.
Someone was telling me that he's he got dog died by Diddy.
I will say he got emotional when someone talked about Diddy's picture.
I don't know.
We'll see what happens tomorrow.
He cried.
He got emotional when so Mia or where not Mia, whoever the the chief of staff, which was Dia.
Oh no.
Dia, chief of staff, when she was um uh uh interviewing him, she said, see that picture over there, and there's a picture of Diddy when he was doing his interview.
That's who we command and serve.
And he got like emotional and uh uh talking about that.
That that her pointing that picture and saying that.
And I was like, that's weird.
Because he was very stoic.
The whole the whole uh testimony, he was stoic, very matter-of fact, very succinct, very clear spoken, very well spoken, very articulate.
So I was like, this is weird when he showed that moment of emotion.
Then someone told me, yeah, this is the guy that gets great by Diddy.
I was like, what?
So we'll see what happens.
We'll see what happens.
But as of this moment, right now, from the evidence I have, looking at the testimonies, being there in the courtroom, looking at the witnesses testify, etc.
Here what I heard about the jury, et cetera.
It's 50-50 right now.
Fair enough.
Fair enough.
All right, man.
Listen, um, uh, unless you have some more to add, listen, I think we went through a really comprehensive breakdown.
I know you have more details, but man, after a fucking 10-hour day.
Yeah, yeah.
No, no, no.
We we we uh we gave the best bro, we gave the best breakdown by the book.
And I'm like, I I don't know how you're waking up to walk to court.
I don't know either.
Me, I'm about to, I'm about to dive in bed, get a couple of hours of sleep, and I can't wait to get up tomorrow to kind of like see what's gonna happen.
If that story gets get gets brought up, now I gotta imagine if that's supposed to be the case, I'm Diddy's lawyer, I'm trying to make sure that don't get brought up.
Yeah, but I I'm waiting on Jane Doe.
I think Jane Doe is gonna be the real key bond.
That's why that's why I'm like, okay, uh I'm reserving my judgment because that that is the other person that the government is heavily relying on.
That might be the last witness.
That that's gonna be a thing.
That's gonna be a thing, man.
Bro, what if Jane Doe?
Oh no, no, I was gonna say, what if Jane Doe is uh KK?
But no, that's not gonna be it.
Yo, we gotta see where K is, and and and here's the thing, man.
She's gotta be testifying, bro.
She's gotta be.
She didn't get indicted.
Uh again, I think, and this is just me.
Um I'm assuming right now, because we're super early in.
I think Diddy says, I got the Avengers, as in turns my lawyers.
If I get not guilty on all counts, by the way, this is a new dream team.
Clearly.
If he gets not guilty on all counts, obviously OJ was facing murder.
We get it, but this is a dream team lawyer, lawyer squad.
But secondly, I think, and I don't know if they they have probably talked to him to like measure his expectations.
I think a mixed verdict, if he gets found guilty on the prostitution charges, I think he's still hugging and kissing and walking out of that courtroom.
Because that that's something that, you know, he's gonna be already.
If he gets 10 years, not the end of the world.
That's the point right now.
I think I think that's a W. Uh, you know, yeah, reputational damage and shit like that, but he'll live.
He could walk away from the music business, he don't gotta do shit again.
I think they'll fight on appeal.
He's 55.
You know, I don't even think he does the, you know, obviously the mandatory 85%.
I I think they work this in appellate court.
I don't know how quickly that works there, but um that could probably get a couple years off.
But again, I think that's still a win.
Anything that doesn't give him like, I think anything over 20 is like a mandatory life.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
It's pretty much an effect.
Yeah, yeah.
I think I think tenant below is is I don't even want to say manageable, but he'll get out and live.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I and I've seen other cases where the trafficking and prostitution cross state lines, they've given for non-offenders, but usually with people who don't have multiple charges.
Granted, this would be a a verdict, not a plea.
I've seen lower than 10.
So it let's just say Well, I'll tell you this.
He's going to trial, so they're gonna cook him.
Yeah, yeah.
Oh yeah.
They're gonna you go to trial, bro.
Niggas are like, we had to prepare, fuck you.
True.
When you go to trial.
Now, I want to say this too.
Another thing that's on the table.
Prosecution could still make a plea deal in the middle of the trial.
At this point, if you're Diddy, would you take it?
It would have to be.
If they gave him five or low, lower, take that shit, bro.
Yeah, it sucks.
Like that's so embarrassing.
I think S D and Y looks too embarrassed for that.
You look crazy.
It's a conviction.
It's a conviction, but publicly, the i i this seems like a farce, and it was an overcharge from the get-go.
You guys knew he was just a freaky ass motherfucker who likes beating this bitch, backhand her every time she fucked Kid Cuddy at somebody.
And um, you know, I mean, I ain't gonna lie, a lot of this shit was it's like you can tell his they're both the same people.
He cheated on her, she cheated on him.
Well, the thing is, maybe you don't get him on the sex traffic, but you get him as a as a as a sexual pervert, woman beater, abuser.
That's the still W. He's violent.
Like they're gonna say, bro, we're gonna if they get him on some type of sex charge, yes.
It don't matter, yeah.
Um, I I just think that prostitution charge is a little bit lighter.
Uh if I was Diddy and they offered me the the five, I'll take it.
The five or below.
You take that now, hard be, right?
I think I would take that.
Shit, you get out in three years.
Yeah, right?
You get out in three years, like, man, you you're you're you're now now gonna be an MDC, you're gonna be at some point.
He's already done damn near a year.
Yeah, yeah.
Yeah, he'll yeah, he'll get yeah, he'll get a medium, he'll get a medium probably the first year, and then yeah, he'll slowly work his way to a low.
Yeah, get to a low, and then shit, a fucking halfway house, like pretty much three years in or two and a half years in, like, you're out of there.
Yeah, you know what I mean?
You set up the biggest freak off when you come back, and then you do the over again.
Like, this guy won't learn.
Come on, he won't learn, man.
He just probably knows, all right, man.
I'm gonna do this shit over at Bali with ball fucking uh I'm gonna do a Russell Will uh Russell uh Russell Simmons.
I'm gonna go body.
They want him in the US, don't they?
No, but I uh for there were there were rumors that he heard about an investigation and got out, yeah, got out of wind, and basically there was just no it's not like Diddy who was really just in the limelight all over the place, and they're like, all right, let's build something.
Yeah, Russell Wilson hasn't I haven't heard about him since like oh wait, bro.
Yeah, he's right.
Yeah, he he's chilling.
And I mean, they got a couple cases on him too, but or not cases, but like he started dating his ex-wife allegedly at like 16 when he was like in his 30s.
Kamora Lee?
Yeah.
She was a mommy.
She she filed lawsuit.
Nah, she ain't file lawsuit, gave her some kids.
I also said this.
If Diddy had given Cassie kiss, same with Shannon Sharp.
Some of these bitches just want some kids, man.
You get you're giving her some kids, she's not suing you again.
But she felt she wasted her years.
She hit 30, she's tight like a motherfucker.
She's now seen it with young Miami thought ass.
She's seen you over there with Gino, who's 22.
And once a woman is thinking, I'm 30, I w I gave you my whole 20s, and you're fucking with this new bitch doing the same shit.
I'm good.
Well, what what fucked him up, bro?
Yeah, I agree with you.
She was a side chick that never got the side chick.
And here's the other thing, too.
This nigga lied to her and sold her a dream.
He put on a red carpet like a main chick, but he treated like a fucking whore.
So she felt like, what the fuck?
I'm in the limelight with you.
Why are you not giving me this same thing behind closed doors?
So that probably burned her like all the time.
That is such a conundrum.
You treat me like the main, but but also, you see, the other girl, so I was watching her interesting.
That's a big insult.
That's probably why she got and she tolerated it for years.
Now again, I'm not saying what she did was right, whatever.
I'm not saying what did he did is right.
But he fucked up.
He didn't manage it, manage her properly.
Yo, I was thinking about the other girl, right?
And it was so interesting.
All these girls.
And he stiffed around the career.
Cause now she's looking back, like I don't got nothing.
Yeah, he had to stifle that because she was gonna get big headed.
And you know, I realized this is why I realized he's easy.
Yeah.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
He's kind of like a uh interesting person.
He he wouldn't mind if she fucked the the uh porn stars, but he would be so upset if she told him.
Carrie confirmed this.
She was talking to Michael B. Jordan while in South Africa.
Confirmed.
Oh, but But here's the thing.
That's what I'm saying.
He would be so upset about that.
He would beat her ass.
Oh, you about to go to Drake shit without me?
Beat her ass.
Yo, yo, you letting Kid Cuddy, the nigga wearing a crop top, fuck you, beat her ass.
Yo, you fuck 45 prostitutes, don't care.
Now, from what I understand over here.
The beat down before the Drake concert wasn't because she was gonna go see Drake.
It's because she was supposed to be packed and ready and she wasn't just drunk and like does whatever.
She didn't, and she was asleep.
So he's like, you useless ass bitch.
Yeah, but but it was it was definitely high tension because rumors came out that Drake was trying to sign her.
And that became tension between Drake and Diddy, because again, I personally think that part of Diddy's control mechanism over her was to control every aspect of her, not only life but career.
Yeah.
And if this chick think, the worst thing you could like, it's like a girl come to me and be like, yo, I want to be a music star, and they're like, Ak, you're gonna make me a star.
The moment I bring her around, motherfucking, I don't know, Kai Snat, and she's like, oh, Kai Sonat's gonna sign me.
You know what she's gonna say, peace out, nigga.
Yeah, I'm gonna Kai now.
Well, you know, here's the other thing too that I want to also like bring to the light.
I find it incredible that like behind closed doors, he's totally okay with being a cuck and letting her get fucked by dudes, right?
But in the limelight, he has a big issue where her even talking to other dudes or being associated with that.
But Kid Cuddy, Michael B. Jordan.
It's ego.
It's it's a good one.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
It's a celebrity thing.
Yeah, yeah.
For him, it's like, yo, this is I'm the I am the alpha male in this industry.
Yes.
Yes.
And like it's one of those things where it's like he looked at as disrespectful.
Like, like the big thing with the with the director when they were talking to her about the Kit Cuddy thing.
The thing that irked him the most is that he introduced her to Kid Cuddy and of who he was.
And you're doing this to me.
Like, I ain't gonna lie.
You go fuck a bum, then I know I'm I'm shitting on and all type of women.
Yeah, here's the thing back in 11, uh 2011, though, like Kit Cuddy was tough, though.
And Kit Cuddy, not me.
I don't get for that.
So respectfully, Diddy's Diddy.
Yeah, yeah, of course.
Like, come on, Diddy.
But he was relevant, like he was more relevant.
You know, but what was that shit?
I'm gonna be honest with you.
Memories?
Remember that?
Every white boy was playing that shit back then, bro.
Listen, I love Kid Cuddy.
But if I'm Diddy, my chick can't fuck no rapper, man.
You gotta go fucking for Ronaldo.
Like, you fuck Ronaldo and be like, I see what you did.
Yeah.
I see what you direct.
And then you're single.
Yeah, yeah, you're still single.
But like, I I I definitely believe he looked at her, and he probably I do so I do have a wild theory too.
I think something happened.
Diddy was always a cheater.
Yes.
And we all know when a dude habitually cheats, the four.
I don't know what he did to J-Lo.
Well, I think she dipped before.
I think the floor was.
Oh, you don't even think she could the freak offs?
Well, well, I have a theory about everything.
I think I think I think um Lori Harvey saw the type of time he was on.
If you look at Cassie and Gina Hill, both of them that stayed around for a long time and got very docile.
Very docile.
I think Laurie Harvey seen what he was on and said, fuck you, and fucked his son and dipped.
Future was Laurie Harvey, right, to it?
Yeah.
I think she's a man-eater herself.
I don't think she did she fuck Diddy or no.
Lori Harvey?
Yeah, Gina said, Yeah, I looked at the phone.
I was trying to make a picture of me.
Oh, because she did an interview with somebody, didn't she?
Yes, Tasha Case.
I was trying to make a picture of being him, his phone saver.
I save it to the thing.
I go to his photo camera roll.
When I look, he in bed with Lori Harvey.
I could only see from the top up.
What they doing the bed?
They ain't shooting no fucking music video.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Come on, man.
So I think what happened because rumors were that her his son was talking to.
She's a chick Asian?
Yeah, something like that.
Okay.
Something like that.
But shit.
She she was giving it up.
She said a couple of things.
Bro, these tops and goes, man.
She was definitely doing the freak offs.
That's why Cassie was pissed.
I think Cassie got some Filipino in her.
Yo, let me tell this.
The shit that everybody knows.
You get a chick at 22, the shit she down to do, man.
She's sucking dick for hours.
When she gets to 29, she sucked there for 20 minutes and the time to go.
So when when when Diddy.
Especially as like uh as like a no-name.
She and an artist.
So she got up.
So when Diddy tried when Diddy saw Cassie, like.
You did freak offs with her too.
He had to have.
Gina, he had to have.
Nigga, he was doing freak-ups with everybody.
Yo, have you ever seen a man go from a girl that used to suck good dick and then go wife up another girl who don't suck dick?
No, dudes don't go.
The client dudes just go worse.
Bro, the dude was calling this hotel with Astroglide.
You think that he was like, I gotta not stop the freak-offs.
You think he did it with who?
His soulmate.
I I I out of respect for the kids, I don't want to speak About that.
But I don't think the wheel was invented with Cassie.
And I and we we could move on from there.
The wheel wasn't invented with Cassie.
Fair.
I had to ask.
And I wouldn't be surprised.
Because I don't know.
I wouldn't be surprised if he would he wasn't starting to push those boundaries, and women started to be to leave.
I think any woman who stayed had to be somewhat complicit.
And maybe You know what?
I don't think he did.
Maybe he has kiss with her.
Well no, maybe at best, she was like, yo, when you want to do that shit, go over there with them, chicks.
Yeah.
And I agree with that.
Because I I think she knew what he was on, and she said, you know what?
Go go go whatever.
Because how he described her was that that's my queen in LA with my kids.
That's what I'm saying, bro.
Yo, she had to have known as she said.
She never realized, bro.
A man who wants to have kids with you, looking at you like a queen, he's not letting 55 prostitute.
Facts, bro.
He's not letting it happen.
And she should have known that, but she was she was young and dumb.
Yeah, well, she thought that eventually she got all this kinks out the way, he was gonna be like, you're what I want.
And the music shit, too.
Oh, yeah.
The music shit was a huge thing.
And and early in the relationship, she admits this.
Like, like, she was like just wanted his attention.
Like, she couldn't get him at 09.
Like, he was so busy.
Yeah, but that's the other thing I was gonna say.
She shouldn't use to a side chick.
If you can't, come on, bro.
Like, well, here's the other thing I was gonna say.
Yo, he's right.
This is my soulmate Kim.
Yo, if that was if it took her 10 years, like, yo, it took you 10 years to realize he gave this kid this chick mad kids.
But the girls didn't have game like that, bro.
Bitches were used.
Yo, this they pulled Blackberry messages, bro.
But here's the other thing, too.
I want to say BBM, that's crazy.
Yo, she was gassed because she looked good.
So what happened is he started bringing around a trophy wife.
Yeah, yeah.
And a lot of times the trophy wife started thinking, I'm the chick.
You're not.
Even now I'm shocked, even while she she still has a pretty face, even though she cooked.
But here's the thing.
Sometimes you meet a chick, she a hoe, she she might be pretty.
Yo, a man chooses with his sperm.
Facts.
Yo, listen, we want to fuck the we know a couple pretty bad whores that will fuck all day, all night, but you won't put a kid in.
Whoever you give your kid to.
Or if you do, you'll regret it.
Yeah.
Yeah.
You kind of do like it.
If you're proud about her, choose this for you, but if you're proud, yeah, you gotta get it.
You gotta be proud.
You gotta reproduce.
The sperm in the proud.
Yo, he was permanent.
She's super proud.
You know what the fucked up thing is?
And and this is why I think he loved replacing her with 22-year-olds.
It's the Shannon Sharp syndrome.
A lot of these women, once they get like they like these men that represent a different lifestyle.
Remember, she was none of those girls were black either.
She was dating.
He was on that pro black shit with her, and then just dogging out these other girls.
Yo, she was dating um Ryan Leslie.
Yep.
They went to um, he made up a lie to isolate her.
Remember, Ryan Leslie introduced her to Diddy, and Diddy stole his girl.
You know how he stole her?
Yeah.
He made up a lie.
He said, I have an event that made me have to go to my bullshit billboard, yeah.
Piped her down, took her from him.
You get what I'm saying?
And yo, and they were together for three years, bro.
Yeah.
She said that on the stand.
When Cassie came back, Cassie told Carrie Morgan, she said the lifestyle, like she was bragging about the lifestyle she was expecting.
Well, she said the lifestyle was crazy, even what to the assistant.
Yeah.
Like this lifestyle is crazy.
She was bragging about the life stuff.
Oh, that's what it was.
She told the personal assistant, he said, let me fucking read this shit so it sounds better.
And then the other thing I would say before I read this shit to show the Cassie thing.
Before I forget.
I find it crazy how behind closed doors he would, you know, cuck his girl out to these dudes or whatever.
But out in the limelight, if she even talked to another nigga, he'd lose his mind and like beat her and all this other shit.
And it goes to show how in control of his personal image he was.
Spending millions of dollars on OD.
Um, you know, making sure that this shit never got out.
Bro, the reason why this trial is so shocking is because no one saw this coming.
He did a great job of covering this up for 30 years.
Now, I I would have to know his past with that.
That's why it's so shocking.
Because right when Kim Porter's ending, that's when he gets with Cassie.
I have a theory.
I have a theory.
Let me say this.
It's a lot of times when you get with a beautiful girl, she does something, and she eliminates whatever in your eyes that she's wifey.
And you get to the point of your you could only smut her out.
Because it's it just doesn't, it's either that or it's his home, she was the beard.
Like the the the the mask of his home erotic design.
That's that's that's the 80s term.
I like that.
I heard that, admit it.
What he was doing.
What he was doing, it was like in a lot of these sexual things, it was almost like he was punishing her.
Like, I don't know.
Maybe when he first met her, he was just like, yo, yeah, whatever.
And and who knows.
He asked earlier.
He asked it within the first year, bro.
She was cheating too.
She was cheating too.
And I think she made it in the first three years.
I don't think so.
I don't know, bro.
She cheated on Kid Cuddy with Diddy.
Yeah, that's what I'm cheating on Diddy with the trainer.
That's 2011.
I think up until 2009, because she used to write this nigga long ass, stupid ass poems, BBM.
And hey, man, texting on a blackberry is not fun.
So I think up until at least 09.
I think she had they had two uh she had a two-year run where she wasn't a whore.
That's what I think.
Something must have happened.
Because Diddy felt comfortable enough.
And and and for any any nigga who watching this, you know the time.
If you never did a three thing, in the picture.
No, no, Gina didn't come yet.
Gina came in and 2011?
Um Gina came in a picture of that.
No, no, but the free cough started in 2009.
No, no.
So I'm I'm back in 2009.
So here's my theory.
If anybody ever suggested a threesome today, chick.
Stupid.
No, no.
Well, it's usually at the point where you have some leverage.
I think something happened, and he brought up this difference type of lifestyle because she said he was vulnerable with me and I wanted to do it.
I don't think they were in a healthy relationship.
And he just popped the question.
I don't think they had a we're in a healthy relationship.
She's not cheating.
He's not doing nothing.
And he just says, hey, baby, just to let you know, I know we've been good for the last two years, but I need to do freak-offs where another man fucks you.
I think something happens because it almost feels like she was doing it out of guilt.
She was doing it out of guilt.
And doing it to keep him.
If it's a healthy relationship, I think she'll be like, nigga, what are you talking about right now?
Like, we've been doing this for like two years, doing regular shit.
What are you talking about?
I was giving mind that she wanted him so bad in 2009 that she was willing to do anything.
She was begging for his intention with the BBM too, if you remember.
She was yo, she was writing cringe ass poems.
I was uh I was taking my notes, like, what the fuck is this?
But let me say this.
So she um he met Cass, the personal assistant guy, um James.
Uh met Cass at uh the house in Miami uh when she came down for the weekend to be with uh Diddy Diddy Rent to the Yacht, Diddy was trying to impress Cass.
This was 2007, had two convos with Cass.
First one, Starlin, 2007, her friend Kerry uh and them smoking cigarettes, and then Cassie says, Man, this lifestyle is crazy.
And then uh he says, if it's crazy, why don't you leave?
And she says, No, uh, Diddy pays for all my stuff, gives me an allowance and my career.
Then at the second conversation, Sundance Music Festival.
Uh he looked at her.
Uh, she was so excited about her track list um and happy about it, and this was at uh this was like 08 or some shit like that, but the album never came out.
So that was really important that um she said, I'm not going anywhere uh because he gives me an allowance, he pays for all my stuff.
She was living life on easy mode.
Yo, the she was probably still getting bad boy money from fucking does she get money from me and you?
Nah, he owed a problem.
Hey, the point what I was trying to do.
Not even a percentage?
Nah.
She would get in advance, but that's it.
Nah, Diddy owned everything.
The point I was definitely trying to make, though, is that because we're in the show made the song Me and Me.
She should have.
Um No, he should make it me and me.
Oh, because you get all the money.
So you get a lot more than that, huh?
I mean, to Siemen from the men.
Yo, I I I'll definitely say this.
And this is why I'm I'd be trying to use this like almost thinking outside the box.
And people might say I'm reaching.
This is a trial where Diddy's on.
We're never going to hear Diddy's side of why did you beat her ass?
That's not you don't even try to explain it.
Yeah.
Why did you bring up the freak-offs?
You could never know.
He could have found out, yo, I heard she was in a train with like three other rappers.
I was in love with her, and at that point, that was the only way to make me feel whole as a man and she was down to do it.
Niggas will feel that every single time.
No, no, no, no, no.
I'm not saying that's not a good thing.
But I'm saying other guys might.
No, no.
That could never be part of um his defense.
But I do think there's a rhyme and a reason why these things are happening.
That I mean, in the overall scheme of things, we don't care.
Like, if you're letting your girl get fucked, you're just a weirdo.
We get it.
But I do think if Diddy, which we'll never know.
We'll hear rumors if he ever beats this, but we'll hear rumors of hey, nah, like, yo, matter of fact, he didn't want to bring her in a freak off.
She wanted to stay.
He was hurt over A B and C, and then she was willing to do anything.
He got drunk off that power of her being down to do anything, and it turned into ABNC.
You know, I would love for Diddy to take the stand, but he never will.
You know what he'll do?
I'll tell you this.
If you ever beat this shit and he does an interview, nah, he didn't tell them.
Uh huh.
It'll never look good.
It's like Chris Brown.
Chris Brown did a documentary try to explain that, yeah, Rihanna was beating me.
They're like, nigga, but what about the pictures?
Like, it's just, again, it's one of those things, he'll tell his homies.
Like, he'll tell his homies it'll be an industry thing.
Yeah.
And maybe people, you know, who once I hear it, I'm telling everybody.
But he could never say that because once you see that video, nobody wants to hear nothing else.
It's over.
Like, we want to hear you say sorry, you're getting help, and you're wrong.
That's it.
Anything else is not taking accountability, he's gaslighting or whatever else.
Yeah.
Yeah, especially in this woman first society.
I'll tell you this.
Um, is the industry waking up that Tori's innocent finally?
Or no.
Um Bro, I've been saying forever that that fucking chick shot her friend, bro.
I don't know if the the the industry believes the majority of the industry believes he's innocent.
I think they believe he got railroaded, which it might be two different things.
They believe that this was an aggressive prosecution, that we still didn't get the full truth, and um him being found guilty.
And again, I think it's more of a uh a court thing where it's like, yo, there was an attack.
Dare I say it?
He should have taken a stand, man.
Well, well, let's talk about let's talk about Diddy though.
Yeah.
If if this week was brutal, and Diddy can't take the stand.
It would be great to hear a story, but he can't he can't, bro.
If it was an 80-20 and Cassie absolutely fucking annihilated with these very harrowing stories that painted it in where she's like this real real deal slave that no one else could take a contact.
At that point, is a bigger L. But but you have to explain it.
You have to explain it.
I think right now, they're again the explanations without him having to do it.
If Cassie was if Cassie painted a crystal clear picture that the defense couldn't twist at all, they might be like, yo, hey, listen.
And I think they carved out away from him to take the stand with them saying that hey, he he could use the defense that he was incapacitated.
Um, all these years I was drawing a couple of things.
I wonder if they have any uh any witnesses.
Who?
The defense.
That's gonna be interesting.
They might develop some later.
Uh well, I would imagine they would have some.
Uh I I they were arguing over a uh clinical psychologist, which would be supporting the theory, and and the the government was saying they had one, they were trying to rule out the government's one because the government's one was like um they it was the same one that was using Amber Hurd's case, and they were like, yo, get this bitch out of here.
Get her out of here.
Yeah, uh, yeah, yeah.
They're like, so they're like, Oh, because the psychologist that made Amber Heard look like shit, right?
Yeah, yeah.
Yeah, they're like, nah, nah, yeah.
Yeah, so um.
Yeah, this is gonna be interesting.
No, it will be.
If this is a coin coin toss going forward, I'll be surprised.
Uh but but but I think Diddy lives to fight another day.
And I am gonna say, if Diddy does beat this, it's two things that's gonna happen.
Yeah, there's a domino effect that's about to happen.
Oh, and he's suing everybody.
Well, well, forget that.
I think the larger picture, which I think that's absolutely into an oblivion, and he has the money to make them pour from the lawsuits.
If we think about everything that's gonna happen in the next few years, this is a last stance for like me too and these people that say believe all women.
Good point.
Yeah.
If Tori gets out, Hallie Bailey, people are already like again, she's oh yeah, people are looking at her as you're a fraud.
If I'm not even Diddy beats this, I'm I'm gonna be honest with you.
Bro, the look, me and DDG don't even get along.
We've had problems, but I'd be fucking damned if I'm gonna just like sit here and be like, I don't like this nigga, so I'm gonna side with the bitch.
Hell no, bro.
She lied.
He didn't, bro.
It doesn't beat his chick.
Here's the thing women are devious like that.
She'll want to, she's mad that he has girls.
She's mad that he streams with girls.
She's mad that his son is on camera.
She's mad about all this shit.
A lot of women, when they have a child, think that you're the babysitter and it belongs to them.
Yep, exactly.
You know, like they don't want to sperm donor, and you get no decisions.
And here's the other thing, too.
Yo, she wrote in court documents, he wants to take my child and not tell me when I'm getting him back.
And look.
Basically he's saying the child belongs with me, you get him sometimes.
You could get him for a weekend, but make sure you bring back a money eight.
And let me tell you this too.
Let me put my clan on hood for a second.
Bro, black women, they think, oh, this is why niggas don't want to be with the kids.
They think, oh, it's my kid.
I'm gonna do what I want to do, and there's no respect for male authority.
Like in the black community, bro.
And this is a perfect example of that.
He's clearly a good father, clearly takes care of his kid.
Hey, he loves his kid.
He wants to be there.
He's fighting to get his kid.
This chick is over here.
Nah, I don't want you to see your kid.
And then the the part that pissed me up the most.
Here's the other part that pissed me off the most.
Again, me and DDG are enemies.
But what she did is vile.
She got a restraining order against him.
That impedes his ability to get a gun and protect himself.
This guy's a fucking celebrity rapper that walks around with jewelry.
Now you're impeding this man's ability to defend himself.
In in LA where the people are getting robbed all the fucking time, he can't even get a gun now.
So what the fuck?
So he's when he is with his son, he can't protect himself.
Or his guy, or his or or his son, he's gotta get security who isn't gonna have the same stake.
That's what pissed me off.
Cause I know as someone that has a restraining order on you, you can't get a gun, bro.
That's true.
That that's what that's when I was like, fuck this bitch.
Like, this is ridiculous.
I gotta say something.
And by the way, and what's what's gonna happen next, and uh, and I and some people have called me to Oracle and I hate that I was right in this situation, but niggas gonna call me a racist in the chat, bro.
Yo, yo, we know what's hap we know what's happening next.
If this ain't successful, let me tell you this.
She only files shit because women love within the public narrative.
They love the ancient dad, the the the single mom who's doing whatever she gotta do.
When people start saying he's not that bad of a guy, you look like you're trying to leverage the kid because he's not complying, and you seen with other women, so she put the look.
Think about this.
She wants him to be a degenerate, like, like um not want to be father so bad.
Now, why?
She mentioned in the the the affidavit and the application for the for the um domestic violence um restraining order.
She said, and it's a temporary restraining order, now they're gonna have to go to court for the permanent one, but but still she says, I file this after he went on stream.
Like when you're seeing shit like that in the restraint and he weaponized his audience.
She has exhibits of like 30 tweets.
Oh, niggas just cooking her.
Yes, and she said he he he sent them.
And and you know what she says?
He's playing victim.
When they play victim, it's so it's cool when they do it.
It's a problem when we do it.
So here's the next step.
And I and I hope I'm not right about this one.
If this don't work.
She's a celebrity, bro.
Niggas gonna fry her anyway.
Well, you gotta realize here's the same.
What is she?
The nigga made?
Bro, we don't want a black mermaid.
Niggas been cooking her for years.
Yo, yeah, here's the problem.
Yo, yo, here's the problem.
DDG is like most men in America.
My man leave know about this.
A lot of men in America are good fathers.
They love their kid, but they don't want to go to court.
DDG, or they don't got the money to fight it to go to court.
That's what I'm saying.
I said to DDG months ago, I said, DDG, you did.
Don't come online and talk about it.
Go to court.
Yeah.
She beat him to the punch.
She got a domestic violence.
She basically got temporary custody just off beating him to court.
Yeah.
Because she thought, he thought she would have been like, no, let's be amicable, blah, blah, blah.
She couldn't win the public narrative, and she said, let me put the courts on you.
And here's the thing.
If she can't, the next thing she's gonna use it for an arrest.
And also, here's the thing too.
I think the DA might look into this because she said proudly in a thing.
She says, I have the ring footage of him doing A, B, and C. She's trying to get the DA to look into it.
The next thing, if that don't work, if all else fails, she's gonna claim that he's abusive to the kid.
I guarantee it.
And I hope that don't happen.
I hope that's not good.
No, no, no.
Again, like I said, when a woman looks at a kid as that's my property, and you're the you're you're the babysitter.
Trust.
They got to say, Al, you know it's fucking bad when the OP is defending him.
You're a fucking piece of shit for that.
The dude wants to see his kid.
I hope he gets his kid back.
Regardless of our differences, I hope the man gets the kid back because I could see that he's a good father.
So yeah, bro, fucking ridiculous.
And the fact that like the restraining order, that's the lowest blow.
The guy is a fucking famous rapper.
People try to rob him in LA, he can't even fucking defend himself because your dumbass is mad over him streaming with some bitches on Twitch.
Yeah.
Incredible, bro.
Incredible.
So yeah, man.
I hope he gets his kid back.
Like I said, I still make fun of him every now and then, but bro, until he gets the kid back, I ain't gonna roast him, bro.
I hope he gets his kid back.
This is fucking ridiculous, bro.
Yeah, we'll see how all these.
We're gonna see how old situations resolve himself, man.
Um listen, uh, another day of court tomorrow.
Yeah.
Ready?
Yeah, bro.
Yeah, man.
Uh, if you want to do something, let me know.
We could do another breakdown.
Shit.
Yeah, if you're around tomorrow, we we could do some shit.
I'm I'm I'm running on MT, but shit.
I got a little bit more.
Go to sleep, get some rest.
And uh, we can make something happen.
Because I think from what I say, heard this guy's gonna give some crazy testimony tomorrow.
That's what they were telling me.
Now you got me hyped.
Somebody flew out from all the way from LA and told me that shit.
Like, yeah, this is the dude that gets um pegged or some shit.
Oh shit.
Yeah.
If that's the case, I'll pull up.
We'll we'll work it.
The salacious details is really what like keeps us like.
Yo, this is daily TV, right?
Yeah, yeah.
We could do it late night or some shit.
Whatever.
All right, let's do it.
Let's do it.
All right, listen, man.
Uh, thank you guys for watching.
If you whether you're watching on mine, Gains X or you were watching on uh Rumble on either of our channels.
Yeah, or you were watching on YouTube.
Thank you to the guys on the King Academics and the Academy channel, and also my people, my loves, my people go subscribe to my kick.
And they're making fun of my booster whole show and my clothes.
Fuck y'all niggas.
I go to the gym, all right?
So I I gotta be form fitting a little bit here, okay?
I had some nigga shit here.
And they want to see you with the Jays so bad, man.
I you know, I used to be a Jordan collector.
Really?
Yeah.
I got like 30 pairs.
I just never wear them.
Yeah, also.
But I got a pair of fours at the house and uh uh and a pair of 11s, but I just never wear them.
They don't know that also like like you're you're not the necessary like casual, like yo, I'm about to go to the club type of person.
Like, nah, no, I hate that shit.
You used to be working on the city.
But I can become a nigga in 30 seconds if needed.
Like I could get the waves back and wear the Jordans and you know they want you to do the Mr. Beast transformation.
They want you, you know what I mean?
You gotta look like a like a scammer real quick, you know what I mean?
Like you gotta look like a scammer still.
Yeah, nah, nah, nah.
Cause I was always a Jordan fan.
So I would I always love Michael Jordan.
So I know I play basketball, but like, yeah, man, I got a bunch of like the rare shits.
I got like spiz likes that you can't even find no more motherfuckers.
Wait, huh?
You have it in Miami?
I don't got I got them in Connecticut.
Oh, yeah, you got to be like people to shoot your bro.
Yo, they're dead stock.
I got Flint Sevens, I got fucking uh I got a bunch of different eights.
I got the playoffs, I got the aquas, I got um sixes, sevens, fives, fours, threes, twos, fifteens.
Shit.
No, the sixteens are ugly.
Those are trash.
Anything after 15, honestly, is trash.
So yeah.
Yeah, I'm an average Jordan collector back in the day, bro.
But other than that, man, yeah, no.
Dunks are lame.
All right, guys.
Uh we are good.
We're going to sleep, man.
Oh, by the way, Eddie.
My man on kick.
Yo, everybody, if you're watching me, go over to kick.com, kick.com slash academics.
Please go make an account.
Um, we're gonna be doing a kick exclusive stream.
You know, I mean, I gotta run some some money.
And um, yeah, we'll be having a good time on this.
And I and I get to just chill out and riff, especially after a long day of hearing about all the guys that did he as pegged, got skied on his chest.
Like, this is crazy.
So please make sure you guys go follow kick with uh academics uh on kick.
Kick.com slash academics are trying to get to uh 100,000.
We just made it to 10, so appreciate all you guys.
Yo, thank you for coming through, my brother.
Yeah, yeah, of course, bro.
And um, guys, sorry that I started late.
I normally start at five or whatever, but I'll talk with Ack right now.
We'll figure something out if we do a stream for you guys tomorrow, awesome.
If not, then you know it is what it is, depending on what time this guy goes to sleep or whatever.
But yeah, we'll see if we can make something happen.
I think the testimony tomorrow's gonna be crazy.
And I think tomorrow's gonna be my last day, bro.
Be honest.
Yeah, or or or at the latest, I'm out of here Thursday.