Court is now in session for day 13 of Combs’ racketeering and sex trafficking trial.
The defense continued its call for more time to meet with Combs outside courtroom hours and U.S. District Court Judge Arun Subramanian appeared to say there might not be much more he can do to help.
The judge said he could have Combs available to his lawyers, in person, for up to 90 minutes in the morning following at 7 a.m. courthouse arrival and then for another 2½ hours after jurors are sent home.
Those hours are already maxing out the U.S. Marshals Service, the judge added.
Defense attorney Marc Agnifilo said his side can’t properly show Combs documents and exhibits in his holding space.
Subramanian said he appreciates Combs’ unique needs and will try to get more time and space for the defense. But at some point, the defense might have to accept it’s getting more time with Combs than almost any other federal defendant, the judge added.
Mia has returned to the stand, wearing a cream blouse and white jacket, for a second day of direct examination.
In an Oct. 26, 2015, WhatsApp chat between “Mia” and Combs’ then-chief of staff Kristina Khorram, the witness said Combs “doesn’t sound in his right mind.”
Combs was threatening to kill her and take her to HR, Mia testified.
The peculiar threat of both violence and taking formal employment measures could be one more piece of evidence for prosecutors seeking to show how Combs allegedly used his work as part of a criminal enterprise.
Failure to follow every one of Combs’ orders had a range of consequences, Mia said.
“I would have been in big trouble, gotten fired, lost my job, emotionally or possibly physically abused,” the witness said.
Cassie Ventura had caught Combs cheating on her and was left “devastated” and stopped answering his calls when she was in South Africa shooting a movie and Combs was in Miami, “Mia” told the court.
Mia said she woke up to 48 missed calls and messages from Combs and others who worked for him.
The jury got a look at Combs’ alleged insatiable need for employees to respond immediately.
The government showed an odd text conversation between “Mia” and Combs with the defendant spouting off with seven consecutive lines of: “Call me now.”
“Mia” testified about her recollection of a 2011 incident when she says Combs reacted violently after he asked her to bring him some workout clothes — and the defendant allegedly lost it when he disliked all options presented to him.
“He was just screaming and cursing at me and wouldn’t stop, and then something violent happened,” Mia said, though she couldn’t remember the exact details of this alleged violent act.
When James Cruz, a Bad Boy manager, emailed Mia that day asking who in the company was handling Kids’ Choice Awards ticket requests, the witness responded: “I’d totally help but I’m he is currently firing me at the moment.”
In the fall of 2016, Combs no longer wanted to be involved in Revolt Films and wanted to end it, “Mia” testified. Revolt Films is a media company founded by Combs that Mia worked for as director of development and acquisition.
She said she felt betrayed, confused and rejected by the decision. She continued to work on a documentary project until spring of 2017. She testified she was “heartbroken” by the decision to close Revolt Films, meaning she’d lose her position, and avoided calls from Combs and staff.
She eventually hired an employment attorney to work out severance, which hurt Combs. After nine months of back-and-forth, she ended up with a sum of $400,000, and took home $200,000 with attorneys taking the rest as compensation for bonuses owed, severance and overtime, she said.
After Ventura filed her lawsuit against Combs, “Mia” testified the defendant reached out to her, but she said she steered clear of him.
The government showed a Feb. 7, 2024, email from Combs to Mia in which he used kind words in asking for a phone call to have “my memory jogged on a few things.”
But Mia said she didn’t respond.
“I was terrified,” she said. “I know this was a front.”
Mia said she’s believed Combs was fearful of her telling anyone what she’d seen the defendant do over the years.
“Puff wanted (Combs security guard) D-Roc to get to me and make sure I wasn’t a threat,” Mia told jurors.
When asked under direct examination if she works now, “Mia” said she hasn’t been able to because “I suffer from severe complex PTSD” following her employment with Combs.
She explained that normal situations are “overwhelming” and she feels triggered when someone asks “Where are you?” or if someone says her name across the room.
The defense will now begin to question “Mia.”
Combs’ defense is clearly trying to undermine “Mia’s” gripping testimony by showing her — and jurors — pictures and social media posts between the two in less-fraught times.
Defense attorney Brian Steele had Mia go through a binder of material showing her and the defendant appearing to enjoy each other’s company.
One picture, which appeared to be from a Burning Man festival in 2013, included Mia, Ventura and Combs.
“You’re standing right next to and leaning toward him, the man who terrorized you?” Steele asked, drawing a “yes” from Mia.
Mia was also shown a YouTube comedy bit, directed by Andy Samberg, depicting her in a hospital gown giving birth with Combs acting as obstetrician.
S: NBC News
The post Diddy Trial: Day 13 (LIVE UPDATES) Ex-assistant Says She Left Combs’ Employment With PTSD. first appeared on Rap Industry: New Hip Hop, Rap Videos, Music, News, & more..
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