Diddy rape accuser makes stomach-churning claim about star and remote control in upcoming documentary
A woman who accused Diddy of raping her with a remote control will be featured in an upcoming documentary about the disgraced hip-hop mogul.
The Peacock documentary “Diddy: The Making of a Bad Boy” features an interview with the alleged victim, identified only by her first name, Ashley. Her face won’t be seen on camera, People reported.
In October, she sued Sean “Diddy” Combs in U.S. District Court in Northern California, where documents identify her as Ashley Parham.
Her lawsuit came just under a month after Diddy was arrested and charged with racketeering, sex trafficking and transportation to engage in prostitution.
In the lawsuit, she claimed that she met Diddy in March 2018 after he unexpectedly barged into her boyfriend’s apartment in Orinda, California, along with several other people, including Diddy’s longtime right-hand woman Kristina Khorram.
Her friend, Shane Pearce, had a FaceTime call with Diddy outside a bar the month before, according to the complaint.
During the phone call, Parham claimed she told Pearce she was unimpressed because she believed Diddy “had something to do” with the 1996 murder of rapper Tupac Shakur in Las Vegas, according to the complaint.
According to the lawsuit, Diddy heard this comment and promised to make her “pay up.”
One of Diddy’s rape accusers is featured in a Peacock documentary that will be available on the streaming service on Tuesday
Tupac with Diddy and Biggie Smalls, also known as the Notorious BIG
Pictured: The cover photo for ‘Diddy: The Making of a Bad Boy’
According to the lawsuit, Pearce later “set her up” by inviting her to his apartment under the guise of helping him with his cancer medication.
At that moment, Diddy showed up at the house with his bodyguard, Khorram and others. Diddy, hold on a knife to her face and threatened to cut her cheeks in a “Glasgow smile,” the suit says.
After this, Khorram allegedly threatened Parham and told her they could ship her abroad, where she would never be heard from again. Parham also makes this claim in the documentary.
According to People, Parham sometimes speaks through tears in the documentary and says she has been isolated since the alleged assault.
“I’ve become incredibly withdrawn,” she says. “I don’t trust anyone.”
The lawsuit states that both Pearce and Diddy removed all of Parham’s clothing, after which Diddy covered her with “oil or lubricant.”
Diddy then pushed a TV remote into her vagina, the lawsuit said.
‘Diddy, while violently raping [Parham] with a television remote control, telling plaintiff that her life was in his hands and that if he wanted, he could ‘take her away’ and she would never be seen again,” the lawsuit alleged.
After this, Diddy ordered Pearce to turn Parham onto her stomach, according to the lawsuit, before telling him to rape her as well.
The lawsuit alleged that Diddy, Pearce and two other unnamed individuals took turns raping her.
Diddy also allegedly offered Parham money saying the rape was consensual and that she was a sex worker, the complaint said.
Diddy is pictured with his chief of staff Kristina Khorram, who was named in Parham’s lawsuit
The Peacock documentary features interviews with Diddy’s childhood friends, his bodyguard and singer Al B. Sure! (pictured), who previously dated Kim Porter, the music mogul’s on-and-off girlfriend
Diddy is currently incarcerated at the Metropolitan Detention Center in Brooklyn along with Luigi Mangione, who is accused of killing UnitedHealthcare CEO Brian Thompson.
Diddy has denied all allegations of sexual misconduct against him and his legal team called Parham’s claims “fabricated” in a statement to the documentary’s producers.
“This documentary recycles and perpetuates the same lies and conspiracy theories that have been leveled against Mr. Combs for months,” the statement to People read.
“It’s disappointing to see NBC and Peacock rolling in the same mud as unethical tabloid reporters. By providing proven liars and opportunists with a platform to make false criminal accusations, the documentary is irresponsible journalism of the worst kind.”
His attorneys also said the Contra Costa County Sheriff’s Department “conducted a thorough investigation and determined that the claims were ‘baseless.’
The attorney added that Diddy “was nowhere near Orinda, California, on the day she claims she was attacked.”
The upcoming documentary also features interviews with Diddy’s childhood friends, his bodyguard and singer Al B. Sure!, who previously dated Kim Porter, the music mogul’s on-and-off girlfriend. It will be available on Peacock Tuesday.
Diddy is currently being held at the Metropolitan Detention Center in Brooklyn as he awaits his trial, which is expected to begin in May.
Diddy is locked up with Luigi Mangione, 26, who is suspected of murdering UnitedHealthcare CEO Brian Thompson.
He is furious that Mangione is seen as a bigger star by inmates at the prison, DailyMail.com revealed, “throwing tantrums over Luigi getting all the attention.”
The complaint against him accuses Diddy of planning and controlling sex performances that he called “freak-offs” and that sometimes lasted “for days on end.”
These alleged parties involved sex workers and a variety of narcotics such as ketamine, ecstasy and GHB, “which Combs distributed to the victims to keep them obedient and compliant,” according to the indictment.