Diddy Accused: Aubrey O’Day Alleges Sexual Advances Led to Danity Kane Exit

In the Netflix docuseries Sean Combs: The Reckoning, former Danity Kane member Aubrey O’Day accuses Sean “Diddy” Combs of explicit sexual advances and claims her firing was retaliation for rejecting him, reigniting scrutiny over the music mogul’s alleged misconduct.
Precious Eseaye
Precious EseayeMusic7 months ago2 minute read
Diddy Accused: Aubrey O’Day Alleges Sexual Advances Led to Danity Kane Exit

Former Danity Kane singer Aubrey O’Day has made grave allegations against Sean “Diddy” Combs in Sean Combs: The Reckoning, a new Netflix docuseries. In the series, she recounts disturbing experiences during her time with the group — including claims of sexually explicit emails, explicit images, and a hostile environment she says began when Diddy singled her out as “the looker.” (Rolling Stone)

According to O’Day, the emails she received included photos of his genitals and graphic messages telling her to “turn you out,” describing extreme sexual pressure to meet his demands. She asserts that her refusal led to her removal from Danity Kane in 2008, framing the dismissal not as a creative decision but as retaliation for rejecting those advances.

The docuseries goes further: in one episode, O’Day reads aloud from an affidavit by a woman who claims to have witnessed an alleged sexual assault involving Diddy and another man, with O’Day unconscious and partially unclothed. The witness’s account describes a harrowing scene — though O’Day herself says she does not remember the incident, noting she does not drink and had no recollection of being intoxicated or assaulted. This uncertainty—“Does this mean I was raped? I don’t even know if I was raped,” she says—reflects the heavy emotional burden she continues to carry. (AOL)

Diddy’s legal team, represented by spokesperson Juda Engelmayer, has condemned the allegations, calling the documentary a “one-sided narrative” built around “longstanding personal grievances, financial motives, or credibility issues.” They argue many of the stories have been addressed in court filings, or never raised, labeling them “not true.”

For survivors of sexual assault, resources remain available through organizations such as RAINN, the National Sexual Assault Hotline.

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