Cassie Ventura testimony is key to case against Sean ‘Diddy’ Combs
Cassie Ventura Fine has crucial testimony in sex-crimes trial against Sean ‘Diddy’ Combs.
Marion “Suge” Knight, the one-time music mogul and hip-hop executive who feuded with Sean “Diddy” Combs in the ’90s, is back in the spotlight amid Combs’ federal sex-crimes trial.
The Death Row Records co-founder, whose California-based label was at odds with Combs’ Bad Boy Records during the East Coast-West Coast hip-hop rivalry, was brought up during testimony at Combs’ criminal trial in Manhattan court on May 13.
Combs is facing charges of sex trafficking, racketeering and transportation to engage in prostitution following his arrest in September 2024.
Combs’ ex-girlfriend, Casandra “Cassie” Ventura Fine, referenced the music moguls’ longstanding feud as she took the witness stand and spoke about weapons allegedly stored in Combs’ homes, among the rapper’s other alleged abuses.
Ventura Fine testified that Combs left his house amid one “freak off” in Los Angeles after being tipped off by a bodyguard that Knight was at a diner nearby. “Freak offs” are a type of party featuring sexual performances that federal prosecutors have accused Combs of orchestrating as part of an alleged criminal enterprise.
At the time of Combs’ departure, Ventura Fine said she told Combs, “Please don’t do anything stupid” as she screamed and cried in fear.
Knight has also faced his fair share of legal woes over the years, including multiple stints in prison and jail. The former record executive, who was arrested in 2015 on suspicion of murder in a hit-and-run incident that killed businessman Terry Carter, reportedly agreed to a $1.5 million settlement in the wrongful death case on April 29, according to Rolling Stone.
Knight has been serving a 28-year prison sentence after pleading no contest to voluntary manslaughter.
Why did Suge Knight and Diddy feud?
As the heads of two of hip-hop’s top record labels in the 1990s, Knight and Combs became embroiled in the genre’s infamous East Coast-West Coast feud, which was epitomized by the rivalry between rappers Tupac “2Pac” Shakur and Christopher “The Notorious B.I.G.” Wallace.
The New York-born Shakur represented the West Coast after he signed with the Los Angeles-based Death Row Records. He often traded verbal jabs with New York natives Wallace and Combs, who hailed from the East Coast and represented New York City-based Bad Boy Records.
Knight appeared to call out Combs while attending the Source Awards in August 1995, making critical remarks about a music producer who makes frequent appearances in his artists’ songs and music videos, which Combs was known to do.
“Anyone out there who wanna be a recording artist and wanna stay a star and don’t have to worry about the executive producer trying to be all in the videos, all on the records, dancing, come to Death Row,” Knight reportedly said at the time.
Shakur and Wallace were both killed in drive-by shootings six months apart in September 1996 and March 1997, respectively. Knight drove the Black BMW that Shakur was traveling in at the time of the shooting. Knight was grazed by a bullet fragment or shrapnel from the car, while Shakur was shot four times, at least twice in the chest.
Two years prior to Shakur’s death, the rapper was wounded in a shooting during a robbery in the lobby of a midtown Manhattan hotel in November 1994. He was shot several times and lost $40,000.
Shakur openly accused Wallace and Combs of having prior knowledge of the shooting, which both vehemently denied.
Contributing: USA TODAY staff
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