Diddy May Face 120 New Lawsuits
A Houston personal-injury attorney states that his law firm is currently representing 120 individuals who alleged they were victimized by Sean “Diddy” Combs. Tony Buzbee held a press conference on October 1 stating that he plans to continue to investigate allegations of sexual assault brought to him and to file individual cases on his clients’ behalf against Combs and others who may have facilitated or participated in any alleged assaults within the next 30 days.
“We’re going to follow this evidence wherever it takes us and find the silent accomplices, the enablers [who] enabled this conduct behind closed doors,” Buzzbee said at the press conference. “The wall of silence has now been broken and victims are coming forward.”
Buzbee, who is licensed in Texas and New York, said his law firm, the Buzbee Law Firm, received more than 3,200 calls from individuals regarding Combs. After vetting the individual claims through medical reports and other corroborating evidence, he is now preparing to file 120 individual lawsuits against Combs. He said the alleged assaults reported to him span more than three decades, from 1991 to 2024.
Buzbee said that 25 of the alleged victims were minors at the time of the alleged assaults, including alleged victims as young as 9, 14, and 15 years old. While he did not provide exact details on the alleged individual assaults, Buzbee did breakdown the demographics of his clients. He said the 120 alleged victims were split evenly in gender — 60 were males and 60 were females — and 62 percent were Black, 30 percent white, and the remaining Hispanic or of other demographics. The majority of the alleged victims were from California, Georgia, and Florida, and the majority filed reports to the police or to a hospital after they had been assaulted. He also said to the extent the alleged victims feel comfortable that they will be made available to the authorities, and specifically to the FBI.
“Most of these people are scared,” Buzbee said. “They fear backlash … and retaliations from the perpetrators.”
In talking to the victims, Buzbee said his firm noticed a pattern where the alleged victim was given a laced drink — which in several cases he alleged was a type of horse tranquilizer — and then passed out for perpetrators to perform sexual acts without consent while other people watched. Buzbeee said he intends on behalf of the alleged victims to pursue claims of violent sexual assault, facilitated sexual with a controlled substance, false imprisonment, sexual misconduct, and dissemination of video recording, among other claims.
In addition to Combs, Buzbee said his firm intends to go after his “silent accomplices” and the “cowardly bystanders who watched and egged the assaults on, the facilitators and the corporate entities that profited off the behavior.”
“Many powerful people will be exposed,” Buzbee said. “Many dirty secrets will be revealed.”
However, Combs’s attorney Erica Wolff issued a statement saying that her client “categorically denies as false and defamatory” the claims being made against him.
“As Mr. Combs’ legal team has emphasized, he cannot address every meritless allegation in what has become a reckless media circus,” Wolff said in a statement sent to Vulture. “That said, Mr. Combs emphatically and categorically denies as false and defamatory any claim that he sexually abused anyone, including minors. He looks forward to proving his innocence and vindicating himself in court, where the truth will be established based on evidence, not speculation.”
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