Diddy Accuser Tearsly Reports Alleged Rape in New Peacock Doc

Diddy Accuser Tearsly Reports Alleged Rape in New Peacock Doc

A new documentary coming to Peacock features an interview with one of Sean “Diddy” Combs’ accusers, who accused him in a lawsuit of raping her with a remote control.

The documentary, Diddy: The Making of a Bad Boy, Premiering on the streaming platform on Tuesday, January 14th.

One of the interviewees featured in the documentary is a woman identified only by her first name, Ashley, whose face is not shown on camera. She accused Combs of raping her in 2018.

The accuser, who sued Combs in October under her full name Ashley Parham, claims she met the music mogul after he showed up with several other people at the Oakland, California, apartment of a man she had met.

In the documentary, Parham, who speaks at times through tears, says she has been isolated since the alleged assault and is unable to trust other people.

“I became incredibly withdrawn,” she says. “I don’t trust anyone.”

In her lawsuit, filed in U.S. District Court in Northern California and obtained by PEOPLE, the plaintiff claims she was with another man named as a defendant in the lawsuit, FaceTiming Combs, at a bar.

In the complaint, Parham said she was not “impressed” with Combs and believed he “had something to do with the murder of rapper Tupac Shakur.” In response, Combs reportedly said she would “pay” for the remark.

The next month, Parham says, she was at the man’s apartment when Combs showed up with several others, including Kristina Khorram, his chief of staff. The complaint alleges Combs held a knife to her face and eventually raped her with a remote control. It is also alleged that Khorram threatened the plaintiff, allegedly telling her that she could be shipped anywhere in the world and would never see her family again.

In Diddy: The Making of a Bad BoyParham and her attorney provide more detailed information about what they believe happened before the alleged rape. The accuser’s attorney, Ariel Mitchell-Kidd, claims she has since learned that the man her client was dating was a “scouter” for Combs.

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Combs has consistently denied all allegations of sexual misconduct made against him. In a statement to the documentary’s producers, Combs’ attorneys called the allegations “fictional.” Khorram’s lawyer also denied the allegations in a statement to the producers.

The documentary also features interviews with Combs’ childhood friends, his bodyguard and, for the first time, singer Al B. Sure!, who previously dated Combs’ former on-and-off girlfriend Kim Porter and is the biological father of Bad Boy Records, the founder’s adopted son, Quincy Brown.

In a statement to PEOPLE, Combs’ legal team wrote: “This documentary recycles and perpetuates the same lies and conspiracy theories that have been spread against Mr. Combs for months. It’s disappointing to see NBC and Peacock wallowing in the same mud because it’s unethical. “By giving proven liars and opportunists a platform to make false criminal accusations, the documentary is irresponsible journalism of the worst kind.”

Combs’ legal team specifically addressed Parham’s claims, writing, “As the Contra Costa Sheriff’s Department confirmed, her report was thoroughly investigated and the allegations were determined to be ‘unfounded.'” Mr. Combs was on the day the day she claims she was attacked, not even near Orinda, California. There is no evidence that Mr. Combs was ever in the same room as Ms. Parham. She is completely unbelievable and not a rational person. The evidence will believe her story.”

Combs is currently behind bars awaiting trial on federal sex trafficking charges. In September, he was charged with sex trafficking, extortion and transportation to engage in prostitution. He has pleaded not guilty.

Combs’ trial is currently scheduled for May 2025.

If you or someone you know has been sexually assaulted, please call the National Sexual Assault Hotline at 1-800-656-HOPE (4673) or go to rainn.org.

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