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Diddy punched Cassie in a celebrity-filled Hollywood restaurant, Dawn Richard testifies

Published 10 hours ago6 minute read

Sean “Diddy” Combs didn’t hide his brutal abuse of Casandra “Cassie” Ventura, once hurtling a skillet full of eggs at her head in front of guests at his home — and another time gut-punching her at a restaurant dinner attended by Usher and Ne-Yo, jurors heard at the rap mogul’s Manhattan trial Monday.

Testifying as the fifth witness at Combs’ Manhattan Federal Court trial, Danity Kane member Dawn Richard, 42, of New Orleans, told jurors about witnessing the Bad Boy Records co-founder attack Ventura multiple times. Richard was selected for stardom as a member of Danity Kane by Combs in MTV’s reality series “Making the Band.”

In one 2009 incident, she recalled a “belligerent“ Combs throwing a skillet Ventura was cooking eggs in toward her head.

“He came downstairs angry and was saying where the f–k was his eggs. Excuse my language,“ Richard said.

“And he was telling Cassie that she never gets anything right, where the f–k is his food, and he proceeded to come over to her and took the skillet with the eggs in it and tried to hit her over the head with it, and she fell to the ground.“

Ventura assumed a fetal position to defend herself, Richard testified. She said Combs started to punch and kick Ventura in her body and head and then proceeded to grab her by the neck and drag her to a room on another floor. Richard then heard glass breaking and yelling.

The next day, Combs summoned Richard and another woman who witnessed the incident, Kaleena Harper, to return to his place, locking them in his recording studio to deliver a thinly veiled threat, Richard testified.

“He said that what we saw was a passion and what lovers in relationships do. He said that she was OK and that it would be in our best interests if we didn’t say anything,“ Richard recalled, adding Combs also told them, “where he comes from, people go missing if they say things like that, like, if people talk.”

Richard, who was later in the musical trio Diddy Dirty Money, shared the account of the kitchen assault Friday after jurors heard four days of bombshell testimony from Ventura about suffering for 11 years under Combs.

Richard told prosecutors about seeing Combs assault Ventura on other occasions. She testified Combs gut-punched Ventura at a West Hollywood restaurant where celebrities Usher, Ne-Yo, and Beats co-founder Jimmy Iovine were present, but without saying whether they witnessed it. She also told the jury about seeing firearms in the presence of Combs and his security guards and witnessing drug dealers drop off cocaine and marijuana.

Richard is among more than 70 plaintiffs who have sued “Diddy“ since sexual misconduct and violence allegations first surfaced against the once larger-than-life producer in 2023, alleging he assaulted, imprisoned and threatened her life.

In her cross-examination Monday, Combs’ defense attorney Nicole Westmoreland attempted to portray Richard as motivated by money and highlighted discrepancies in her testimony and initial interviews with the feds. Westmoreland said Richard hadn’t previously recounted Combs making the threat about people going missing. Richard said she’d remembered more over time and acknowledged contacting Combs about professional opportunities after Danity Kane disbanded.

When Assistant U.S. Attorney Mitzi Steiner resumed questioning Richard after her tense cross-examination with Westmoreland, she reiterated that she did not doubt her recollection of the kitchen attack and the threat that followed.

In addition to experiencing frequent savage beatings, Ventura, 17 years Combs’ junior, last week told the jury she was coerced into participating in “hundreds“ of degrading sexual performances with male commercial sex workers that he dubbed “freakoffs.”

That activity began soon after she started dating him after being signed to his record label at 19. As she recovered from beatings, Combs, in essence, imprisoned her in hotel rooms and at his properties, refusing to let her leave until her injuries were no longer visible, she said. She also said he threatened to release videos of her participating in humiliating freakoff sessions as blackmail.

Later Monday, jurors heard more detailed allegations about Combs’ firm grip on Ventura as the prosecution sought to establish the controlling and coercive nature of their relationship.

Kerry Morgan, once one of Ventura’s best friends before they fell out in 2018, testified about witnessing Combs brutally assault Ventura on trips to Los Angeles and Jamaica, obsessively contacting her and making demeaning comments that saw her lose her confidence.

The Buffalo native said she and Ventura met in their late teens on a modeling gig in New York City and lived together in Manhattan. She said Combs’ violence brought about the end of their yearslong friendship after she became a victim of it.

Recounting being home with Ventura in April 2018, Morgan said Combs turned up unannounced and started ranting about Ventura cheating on him. The next thing she knew, he was choking Morgan and “boomeranged a wooden hanger” at her head, she said.

Morgan said she wound up receiving a $30,000 settlement and signed a nondisclosure agreement to stay silent about the assault. She never spoke with Ventura again after the incident.

Morgan said she had “often” talked to Ventura about leaving Combs, but Ventura said it would be impossible, with him controlling her career and financing every aspect of her life, “all of her livelihood.”

After Morgan, the jury heard a similar account from David James, Combs’ personal assistant from 2007 to 2009. He recalled speaking with Ventura and asking her why she didn’t “get out” of the lifestyle she found “crazy.”

“I can’t get out,” James recalled Ventura saying, adding that she told him Combs controlled her music career, apartment, allowance and everything else in her life.

James also recalled Combs commenting on how Ventura was “moldable.”

“Cassie’s good,” the former assistant recalled Combs saying. “I’ve got her right where I want her — she’s young.”

The Manhattan U.S. attorney’s office alleges that Combs, from 2004 to 2024, coerced Ventura and another woman into participating in dehumanizing “freakoffs“ with assistance from a network of high-ranking employees and committed other abuse.

The 55-year-old has pleaded not guilty to racketeering conspiracy, two counts of sex trafficking, and two counts of transportation to engage in prostitution and could face life in prison if convicted.

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