
- Select a language for the TTS:
- UK English Female
- UK English Male
- US English Female
- US English Male
- Australian Female
- Australian Male
- Language selected: (auto detect) - EN
Play all audios:
Sean “Diddy” Combs once hauled his personal assistant with him to confront rap rival Suge Knight — all while packing three guns, too, explosive testimony revealed Tuesday. The Bad Boy
Records’ former employee David James said in Manhattan federal court that the terrifying episode is what caused him to resign in 2009. “I was really shook up by it,” James told jurors at
Combs’ sex-trafficking and racketeering trial. “It was the first time being Mr. Combs’ assistant where I realized my life was in danger.” The bloody feud between Knight’s Death Row Records
and Combs’ own music label in the mid-1990s had led to tragic drive-by shooting murders of hip-hop icons Tupac Shakur and the Notorious B.I.G. Federal prosecutors hope that James’ testimony
shows that Combs — who after the murders meticulously crafted a public image as a good-natured music mogul — led a criminal enterprise where violence could erupt at any point. EXPLORE MORE
James testified that the violent East Coast-West Coast rap rivalry between Combs and Knight nearly rekindled one night in mid-November 2008. He told jurors that he encountered Suge Knight
while picking up food with Combs’ security guard D-Roc at Mel’s drive-in diner in Los Angeles. “That’s motherf–king Suge Knight,” James recalled D-Roc telling him. D-Roc told Knight — whose
real name is Marion Knight Jr. — he was “Diddy’s boy.” “What are you doing in my city?” the fearsome Knight responded, James testified. “S–t, man, just out here getting money,” James said
D-Roc responded. Then four SUVs pulled into the parking lot and someone handed Knight a gun, James told the jurors. D-Roc and James went back to Combs’ place, got in his Escalade armed with
three guns and headed back to the diner, driving in eerie silence, James said. “Mr. Combs had three handguns on his lap,” James said. But when they arrived, Knight and his crew were no
longer there. James said the incident prompted him to give his six months’ notice, to allow for someone else to get trained. He left the company by 2009. Combs’ defense attorney Marc
Agnifilo peppered James with more questions about the alleged near-hit on Knight. As the cross-examination continued, Combs sat with his hands clasped in his lap, while his eyes followed
Agnifilo’s and James’ back-and-forth as if he were watching tennis match. “Was this is a radical departure in your job responsibilities?” Agnifilo asked about the silent, gun-toting ride to
confront Knight. “That is the understatement of the day so far,” James said. Combs, 55, has pleaded not guilty. He could face life in prison, if convicted.