Prosecution focuses on Combs' alleged manipulation of partners: 'This was about control'
In their continuing summation, federal prosecutors told jurors that they've heard ample evidence that Sean Combs engaged in a coercive course of conduct that left "Jane," the former Combs girlfriend who testified under pseudonym, feeling no choice but to submit to unwanted sex with male escorts.
“This is not an adult woman making a free choice,” prosecutor Christy Slavik said. “Coercion means getting someone to agree to a commercial sex act because they’re afraid of the consequences.”
Slavik asserted that the alleged coercion involved threats to withhold rent payments, threats to release sex tapes, and threats of violence and drugs.
Slavik told jurors that some of the explicit video footage they saw of sexual encounters during defense cross-examination may have appeared to show that "Jane" was “into it” but that it actually showed Jane “super, super high” on a liquid form of molly that made her feel a “sexual energy unlike anything she had ever experienced.”
Next, the jury was shown photos of Combs with a young Cassie Ventura, as Slavik reminded the jury that he's nearly 20 years older than Ventura.
“The defendant made it so it didn’t matter if she was making money through her music,” Slavik said. “He made her dependent on him.”
That control, Slavik said, extended to Ventura’s parents. She showed the jury bank records that documented a $20,000 payment that Ventura's mother and father made to Combs after he found out about her relationship with Kid Cudi. Combs allegedly demanded the money as payment to prevent him from releasing video tapes of Ventura engaging in sexual encounters. The payment was later returned to Ventura's parents.
“This wasn’t about the $20,000," Slavik told the jury. “This was about control."
Slavik also told the jury that Combs' alleged physical abuse of Ventura started early in their relationship. The prosecutor said the defense doesn't deny the abuse occurred -- “they just want to call it domestic violence,” Slavik said -- but she argued that it’s an element of sex trafficking because the so-called “'freak-offs' happened before, after and sometimes during” the violence.
“They were intertwined,” Slavik said.





