Sean “Diddy” Combs is accused of having suspended one person on an apartment balcony and forcing two additional women in commercial sexual acts in an enlarged indictment of federal prosecutors filed against him on Thursday.
Combs was charged in the South New York district in September for sex trafficking, racketeering and transport to engage in prostitution. The new accusation act does not add charges to his case but adds two other victims to the accusation of transport to engage in prostitution.
According to the new file, the combs “used strength, threats of force and coercion, to cause victims, including, but without limiting themselves, three victims” to engage in sexual commercial acts.
Among the new articles of the accusation act replaced, there is an allegation that Combs “swung a victim on an apartment balcony,” he said.
Prosecutors also widened the calendar and details concerning the alleged methods in which Combs committed the crimes it was accused. While the first indictment said that the alleged racketeering period dates back to 2008, the new file said it dates back four years earlier.
The accusation act expanded the accusations of kidnapping to include violations of the law of California and New York.
It also adds two other substances – Psilocyn and methamphetamine – in the activity of alleged racketeering of combits involving narcotics.
A spokesperson for the South New York district refused to comment on the new file.
Marc Agnifilo, one of the combat lawyers, said in a statement: “The theory of the accusation remains imperfect. The government added the ridiculous theory that two of Mr. Combs’ former girlfriends were not friends but were prostitutes at all. Mr. Combs is as committed as ever to fight against these accusations and to win at the trial. »»
Combs has denied all the allegations against him to date, in particular the federal criminal affair and more than 30 civil proceedings deposited against him.
He has been in police custody since September at the Metropolitan Detention Center in Brooklyn, New York. The Combs trial is expected to start in May.