Inside Diddy Trial: Prosecutor Claims Sean Combs Used Drugs to Control Ex-Girlfriend Jane during “Hotel Night”

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Famed music industry figure Sean "Diddy" Combs appeared in Manhattan federal court on June 26, 2025, to face s*x trafficking and racketeering allegations. Combs allegedly hosted "drug-fueled" parties, sometimes known as "freak-offs" or "hotel nights," where he engaged in s*xual activity with his ex-girlfriends and hired prostitutes without their consent, according to the prosecution.

A woman identified only as "Jane" claims that Combs drugged and coerced her into attending three-day s*x parties; these claims are crucial to the prosecution's case.

Combs' drug usage, according to Deputy US Attorney Maurene Comey, was about more than just getting high. It was also about manipulating Jane and others, as she remarked during the closing remarks.


How Sean "Diddy" Combs Used Drugs to Control Ex-Girlfriends like Jane during “Hotel Nights”?

In addition to a racketeering conspiracy, Combs is accused of many counts of s*x trafficking and transporting people for prostitution. He has pleaded not guilty, saying that all of the s*xual encounters were consensual.

Prosecutors questioned 34 witnesses over six weeks about claims that Diddy Combs used drugs, threatened people, and was violent at private occasions. "Jane," Combs's ex-girlfriend Cassie Ventura, was one of the witnesses. The primary pieces of evidence include documents revealing an assault on Ventura in 2016, fight records, and witness accounts that explain what the staff were supposed to do to get drugs and speakers and arrange events.

For the protection of her privacy, Jane testified under an alias. She reportedly spent six days talking about how Diddy Combs got narcotics for her to use and "hotel nights," which included cocaine, ecstasy, and prescription medicines. These occasions, she said, made up as much as 90% of her time with Combs, and she often had male escorts while he observed or videotaped. Jane said that there were occasions when she threw up from exhaustion.

Jane also said that she had to sneak drugs over state boundaries. According to her testimony, Diddy instructed her to obtain prescription shipments from his Los Angeles residence and transport them to his Miami home in her checked baggage at least twice. She was instructed to do so by Combs himself and his staff, who claimed that it was part of a "routine."

The attorney general for the United States, James Comey, stressed throughout the closing remarks that Combs used drugs for dominance rather than recreation. She urged the jury to think about who put in the "most work" over those hotel nights, and Jane was named, from start to finish." This brought attention to the fact that Diddy had supplied the medicines that contributed to Jane's physical and mental decline.

On the other hand, Diddy's attorneys maintained that the relationships were consensual and that the extensive drug usage was their decision, not something he forced them to do. They argued that the private text messages and the evident signs of affection demonstrated that there had been no threats or use of force. The defense team doubted the witnesses' honesty and said that the accusations may be based on money or a "media frenzy."

Brendan Paul, a personal assistant, and other former workers who spoke up against Jane and Ventura alleged that they were in charge of acquiring Xanax, ketamine, cocaine, and marijuana for Combs' parties, as well as filling hotel rooms with lubricants and establishing the mood lighting.

As the jury evaluates the events, the case brings to light important concerns around responsibility, power dynamics, and consent. Not only will the decision decide Combs' fate, but it might also establish a standard for the prosecution of drug-assisted coercion under federal s*x-trafficking laws.

Edited by Sohini Biswas