Crime Stories with Nancy Grace - Diddy's "Love Contract": Rent Money for Freak-Offs | Crime Alert 6AM 06.11.25
Episode Date: June 11, 2025Jane Doe, Sean "Diddy" Combs’s most recent ex-girlfriend testifies for another day, that "hotel nights" were the only way she'd ever see him. Growing fears of a serial killer as a young woman is... found dead in the woods of Massachusetts, marking the 13th unexplained death across New England since March. A Los Angeles protester is now on the FBI's "Most Wanted" list for allegedly throwing rocks at federal officers. Drew Nelson reports.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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Crime Alert, I'm Nancy Grace. Breaking crime news now. Both Cassie Ventura and Jane, not
her real name, testified they were coerced into freak-offs due to Sean Combs' immense
control over their lives and his propensity toward violence. Will their stories be enough
to convince a jury Combs is guilty? With the latest from the Sean Combs trial, our Drew
Nelson. Drew, what With the latest from the Sean Combs trial, our Drew Nelson. Drew, what's
the latest? Nancy, Jane Doe returning to the stand. Combs' most recent ex-girlfriend
testifying that she agreed to repeated sex acts with strangers to please him.
She said she felt like she was, quote, breaking all of her own boundaries just
to make him feel extremely loved. In the beginning, she thought his requests were
signs of trusts. She said, quote, I didn't want him to feel loved. In the beginning, she thought his requests were signs of trusts.
She said, quote, I didn't want him to feel judged. She described hotel nights as carefully
staged events often set up to mimic cheating. Combs would pretend to be out of town. Jane
would text an entertainer under his direction, asking for explicit pictures and flirting
with him. After the encounter, Combs liked to watch videos of it while having sex with
Jane. After the escort left, she said to watch videos of it while having sex with Jane.
After the escort left, she said these nights became routine.
Jane told the court the relationship hurt her income.
She said she earned only 10 percent of what she could have.
Still, she admitted he gave her money and gifts, paid her rent, covered expenses after
they broke up, and invested $20,000 in her fashion business.
She says the total value has been about $150,000 over three years.
In 2023, during a trip to Turks and Caicos, Jane said he surprised her with another hotel
night which led to an argument and a so-called love contract in which Combs agreed to pay
her rent.
In a voice message, he told her he loved her.
She replied, quote, everything just feels so good and I'm so happy. She told the jury that it was true at the time,
except for the time spent with the entertainer. Defense attorney, Tenny
Garagos, pointed out that Combs had paid rent for her for months in advance. Jane
responded that he used these payments to pressure her. She called it a, quote,
little tool to keep her from saying no. Jane said she felt overlooked, like rapper Young Miami,
whom he was also dating at the time he was seeing Jane,
and Dana Tran, who ended up having his baby.
Jane says she got less, even though she gave much more,
including having sex with strangers.
Jane said she only messaged escorts when Combs told her to,
refuting the defense's argument that she had been the one
to send texts to the entertainers.
In one case, she reached out to a performer named Sly after watching his porn video with
Combs.
Later, Sly blackmailed them.
Asked to plan a date night in a text thread, Jane suggested going out.
Combs said he was tired.
They stayed in and had a hotel night instead.
She said she stopped fighting it, knowing it was the only way to see him. She said she sometimes wrote nice things about the hotel nights to keep him from feeling rejected.
She also offered to re-watch old hotel night videos so he wouldn't ask for another live encounter.
She called it her way to cope.
Thanks Drew. More crime and justice news after this. Growing fears of a serial killer as a young woman is found dead in the woods of Massachusetts,
marking the 13th unexplained death across New England since March.
The body of 21-year-old Adriana Suazo was found at Milton, about eight miles south of
Boston.
There were no signs of trauma.
Her family said they don't know why she was in Milton.
Suazo's death follows a string of other disturbing discoveries across Massachusetts, Connecticut, Rhode Island, and Maine since early March.
Bodies have been turning up in rivers, parks, woods, many found in remote areas.
The first body was found on March 6th in the Norwalk River in Connecticut. That same day a skull was discovered near Route 3 in Plymouth, Mass.
Connecticut. That same day, a skull was discovered near Route 3 in Plymouth, Mass. March 19th dismembered remains found in a suitcase in Groton, Connecticut. A body found March 25th
in New Haven. The next day, another recovered from the woods in Foster, Rhode Island. On
April 9th, unidentified remains found in Killingly. April 20th, a body surfaced in the Seekonk
River in Pawtucket. Between April 22nd and 27th, four more were found in Springfield, Rocky
Hill, Taunton, and Framingham. On May 30th, a body was found in Edgewood Park in New Haven.
Swazo, the last body, discovered two days later. A Facebook group named New England
Serial Killer now has more than 68,000 members. One case that has drawn special attention
was that of Donald Coughel, who was arrested for killing one of the women. He died in custody. Police say he acted alone.
A Los Angeles protester is now on the FBI's most wanted list for allegedly throwing rocks
at federal officers and damaging government vehicles during the violent anti-ice demonstrations
in California. Elpidio Reina, age 40, is from Compton. He faces federal charges of assaulting
an officer and damaging government property.
The FBI has announced a $50,000 reward for information leading to his capture. He's facing eight years.
Protests in Los Angeles started on Friday after federal immigration agents arrested 118 people across the Los Angeles area.
It escalated quickly after President Trump deployed 4,000 National Guard troops and 700 Marines to Los Angeles, California Governor Gavin Newsom and Attorney General Rob Bonta have
sued Trump over the military deployments.
Two women who ran a so-called wellness company known to others as an orgasm cult in New York
are found guilty of forcing their employees into unpaid labor and sex acts under the guise
of empowerment.
A federal jury in Brooklyn convicted 57-year-old founder Nicole Daydome
and 44-year-old Rachel Sherwitz of conspiracy to commit forced labor.
Both women led One Taste, a company that taught so-called orgasmic meditation,
which they refer to by the abbreviation OM, OM.
They now face 20 years each.
One Taste offered classes as expensive as $60,000 that claimed to heal trauma and promote
connection through OM.
The practice involved a clothed person stroking a woman's genitals for 15 minutes.
One former employee testified she was told to be open to OM with anybody off the street.
Witnesses also said Daydon's boyfriend was routinely pleasured by staff.
Another victim says she was instructed to perform oral sex
in front of others to reenact her own rape.
Both convicted women say they will appeal.
Sentencing is set for September.
For the latest crime and justice news,
go to crimeonline.com and please join us
for our daily podcast, Crime Stories,
where we do our best to find missing people,
especially children, and help solve unsolved homicides. With this Crime Alert, I'm Nancy Grace.
This is an iHeart Podcast.