Diddy’s former assistant says she was abducted and threatened with death because of a jewelry dispute

The former brand director and assistant talks about her unpleasant encounters with Sean “Diddy” Combs, including being detained for days and allegedly threatened over missing jewels.

Capricorn Clark, a brand strategist and former music assistant, is taking center stage in Sean “Diddy” Combs’ federal trial. Her evidence is revealing unsettling details about the music mogul’s inner life.

Clark, who previously worked for major labels including Death Row Records and Def Jam, said that after relocating to New York in 2002, she became a part of Combs’ inner circle. She met the founder of Bad Boy Records through a headhunter, and by 2004 she was working closely with him as his personal assistant. Her responsibilities? She said, “Shadow him from wake-up.”

She said that Combs and his accomplice “Uncle Paulie” took her to Central Park late at night, where she said Diddy gave her a terrifying warning: “Since you worked for Suge Knight, if anything happens, I might have to kill you.” She attempted to avoid becoming involved, but Clark said she took it seriously. But that moment stayed with her, she told the court.

She kept working with Diddy until she was fired in 2012, but she came back in 2016 to work on Cassie Ventura’s artistic endeavors. 2018 marked the end of that term.

But Clark’s account of being detained against her will for many days in December 2011 was the most shocking aspect of her testimony.

Clark claims that Diddy’s team took drastic measures when she was suspected of stealing jewelry, which she claimed was lent to her. She said that after being carried to a secured upper floor of a building at 1710 Broadway, she was met by a heavyset man and several others who demanded that she take a lie detector test. The inference? She would be cast into the East River if she failed.

Clark stated in his testimony, “They said I couldn’t leave.” “It went on for five days.”

One of the main characters in her story, Uncle Paulie, allegedly questioned her and even searched her Queens house. Clark claimed that throughout her whole detention, she was not allowed to leave. The judge permitted the majority of the testimony to go forward in spite of Combs’ lawyer’s protests.

The prosecution’s case against Diddy, who is dealing with growing accusations of abuse, misconduct, and intimidation from several former partners and allies, is anticipated to heavily rely on her evidence.

Clark’s voice is the most recent to come out of Diddy’s inner circle during the trial, providing a unique glimpse into the power struggles and purported threats that surrounded one of the biggest moguls in hip-hop.

Watch this space for additional testimony.

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