CASSY SAID SHE PARTICIPATED IN HUNDREDS OF FREAK OFFS

I want to provide characteristics of a narcissistic sociopath and a sexual sadist to my audience, because through my research as a crime writer, I believe that Sean “Diddy” Combs is both.

One of the traits of a narcissistic sociopath is a person who believes that anything, no matter how harmful, he or she does to someone is justified, and the victim better be content with it. However, if their victim performs the same act on them, there will be a problem. The narcissist will seek retribution.

A characteristic of a sexual sadist is person, usually a man, who believes every woman is a slut or a whore and wants to prove it. When looking for a mate, he doesn’t seek a woman who society deems a whore—prostitute, drug user, or stripper. He searches for a woman who may be respected in her community, perhaps comes from a good home, is highly educated, or is just decent. He then drags her into his sexual deviancy, sullies her name and reputation, so he can then say to her and himself, “See? I told you that every woman was just like you—a slut and a whore.”

This is what I believe Diddy did to Cassie.

The first week of the music mogul’s trial is behind us, and I spent two days listening to testimony and opening arguments. I am not a psychiatrist or psychologist, but I am still satisfied with my analysis that the Bad Boy Records founder is a sexual sadist and sociopath.

I listened to Diddy’s ex-girlfriend, Cassie, state that she attended hundreds of freak-offs. I listened to a broken woman on the witness stand tell a jury that she was never supposed to be in those videos and that she was very concerned about her mother seeing her in those tapes.

The latter is the part men like Diddy enjoy the most. He probably thought, “What would Cassie’s mother think about her ‘good little girl’ now?”

I won’t identify her, but I sat near a journalist who was laughing her ass off in court. She didn’t enjoy that Cassie had a horrible experience, but every other phrase seemed to be, “He [Diddy] wanted a freak-off.”

Prosecutor: “What did you do when you exited the plane?” Cassie: “Diddy wanted a freak-off.” Prosecutor: “Where did you go after your event?” Cassie: “Well, Diddy wanted a freak-off.” Prosecutor: “What did you do after the two of you argued?” Cassie: “Diddy wanted a freak-off.”

The journalist probably found humor in how unbelievable it was that freaking off consumed Diddy’s life. The sad thing is that he dragged a woman, nearly a generation younger than him, into his web of sexual deviancy. I wonder how many “Cassies” are there in small towns and quiet cities with men, or women, who are not as successful, rich, powerful, or famous as Diddy, but stay in a cycle of that kind of abuse for reasons only they and their abuser understand.

My TikTok account was nearly permanently terminated on Friday because I posted the question, “If the prosecution isn’t going to ask whether k!ds were present, then what’s the point? I appealed, asking them if they’d redacted Kendrick Lamar’s “A-minor” verse in his Grammy Award-winning song, Not Like Us. I also reminded them that my platform brings attention to issues that affect women, children, and poor people of all races, more than it ever did any harm. I suppose I pleaded my case well enough for them to reinstate my account so that I could post again.

Nonetheless, this trial is one for the history books; bigger than O.J. Simpson’s; the trial of the century, and I’m covering it my way—the mistakes, the judgment, the bias, and the nervousness showing in some of my shaky footage.

The prosecution introduced Diddy as “larger than life,” and she was right to do so. Mr. Combs defined and ruled the ‘90s radio airwaves with massive hits. He had a vision and didn’t stop until his goals came to fruition. With the man and his trial being larger than life, it is clear how bizarre the mogul is. We are perhaps watching a sexual sadist, music mogul, narcissistic sociopath, who refused to plead out because he sees even the courtroom as a stage to show up and show out.

Stay tuned because next week, outside the courtroom, I will ask Diddy’s mother, Janice Combs, some interesting and informative questions.

For more on this story from other sources, click here.

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DIDDY’S DEFENSE: SEAN COMBS IS A COMPLICATED MAN, BUT THIS IS NOT A COMPLICATED CASE