Prosecution details so-called 'freak-offs' while focusing closing argument on sex trafficking charge
During testimony, Cassie Ventura called them “freak-offs.” Combs’ ex-girlfriend known by the pseudonym "Jane" called them “hotel nights.” Combs' assistants knew them as “wild king nights.”
However they're referenced, those sex encounters are evidence of sex trafficking because Combs used force, threats, fraud and coercion to compel Ventura and "Jane" to participate, prosecutor Christy Slavik told the jury during the government’s closing argument.
“The charge is about the defendant’s use of illegal actions to get Cassie and 'Jane' to say yes,” Slavik said. “This is not an attempt to criminalize dysfunctional relationships or unconventional sexual conduct.”
The defense has argued that Ventura and "Jane" were not victims of sex trafficking, but long-term girlfriends who willingly participated in Combs’ “polyamorous” lifestyle.
Slavik told the eight men and four women in the jury box that they do not need to find that all the "freak-offs" were the products of force, fraud or coercion.
“You only need to find the elements of sex trafficking are met on one occasion,” she said. “So, if there was one time, one single 'freak-off,' when the defendant knew or recklessly disregarded that Cassie or 'Jane'" was participating because of his lies, his threats or his violence, that’s it.”
The jury was shown a collage of male escorts with whom prosecutors said Ventura and "Jane" were made to have sex in a “slow progression from masturbating and touching to oral sex to intercourse,” often multiple times over multiple nights.
“They were done when the defendant said they were done and not any sooner than that,” Slavik said.




