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The list of famous people who appear in the sexual-assault lawsuits against Sean ‘Diddy’ Combs

Aaron Hall is an R&B singer and defendant in a lawsuit brought against Combs.

Aaron Hall, an R&B singer who was part of the group Guy, was named as a defendant in a complaint filed against Combs last November in the New York Supreme Court ahead of the expiration date for New York’s Adult Survivors Act, which provided a one-year window in which people could bring cases of sexual assault outside the typical statute of limitations.

The plaintiff, named Liza Gardner, accuses Combs and Hall of sexually assaulting her and a friend in Hall’s apartment after a music-industry event hosted by MCA Records in 1990 when she was 16 years old. She says that Combs “coerced” her into having sex with him and that afterward, “Hall barged into the room, pinned her down, and forced” her to have sex with him too.

The plaintiff also alleges that Combs found her at her home and choked her until she passed out; he was worried his girlfriend would find out about the incident, the complaint says.

In one YouTube video cited in the complaint, Hall says in an interview that “Puffy” — what Combs was known as in the 1990s — had seen him have sex.

Hall couldn’t be reached for comment. His lawyer wasn’t yet identified in court documents as of April 8.

Music producer Harve Pierre
The actor Cuba Gooding Jr. is named as a defendant and accused of sexual assault.

An amended complaint filed in March in the US District Court in the Southern District of New York by Rodney Jones Jr. — a music producer who goes by Lil Rod — lists Cuba Gooding Jr. as a defendant. Jones accuses Gooding of sexual harassment and sexual assault.

Specifically, Jones accuses Combs of grooming him to “pass him off” to Gooding. The complaint says the two were left alone in a makeshift studio on a yacht rented by Combs.

There, Gooding began “touching, groping, and fondling Mr. Jones’ legs, his upper inner thighs near his groin, the small of his back near his buttocks, and his shoulders,” the complaint alleges.

The actor previously pleaded guilty to a misdemeanor count of forcible touching.

Gooding’s attorney didn’t respond to a request for comment from BI.

Justin Dior Combs
Jacob Arabo and Combs at a 2004 party for the opening of Arabo’s flagship store.

Jacob Arabo, better known as Jacob the Jeweler, is named as a defendant in a complaint filed against Combs by Adria English in July.

In the lawsuit, English accuses Combs of sexual assault, sexual harassment, and sex trafficking. The complaint alleges that she worked at Combs’ famous white parties as a go-go dancer for years and that, at at least one of the parties, he forced her to have sex with Arabo, one of the party guests.

“Plaintiff, fearing not only her safety, but her and her then-boyfriend’s job security, did as instruct and went with Defendant Jacob where she engaged in forced sexual intercourse with Defendant Jacob at the demand and behest of Defendant Combs. Plaintiff knew refusing Defendant Combs demands was not an option,” the complaint says.

The complaint also says English saw Arabo “solicit and ingest narcotics.” In a photograph included in the complaint, English and Arabo are together.

Arabo has been a character on the hip-hop scene for decades, with early clients including Notorious B.I.G. and Combs. Jay-Z raps about him in Beyoncé’s “Upgrade U,” as does Kanye West in Rick Ross’ “Live Fast, Die Young.”

“I really wanted to make statement pieces,” he told BI in 2016 about the flashy pieces that became his signature.

“They would stand there waiting for me to be available to see them to show them jewelry. A line of people waiting,” he added of his A-list clientele. “Before you know, you have Michael Jackson as a client, you have David Beckham, you have Madonna, you have all these celebrities.”

The complaint against him is not Arabo’s first run-in with the law. In 2006, he was arrested on money-laundering charges. As part of a plea deal, he was sentenced to 2 ½ years in prison for falsifying records and making false statements, CBS reported.

Arabo didn’t respond to a request for comment from BI.

Rapper Yung Miami
Stevie J and Combs have been longtime collaborators.

Jones alleges in his amended complaint filed in the US District Court in the Southern District of New York that the Grammy winner Stevie J, Combs’ longtime collaborator, recruited sex workers and participated in Combs’ “freak-offs,” though he doesn’t name Stevie J as a defendant.

Jones accuses Combs of instructing Stevie J to teach him “the type of sex workers to solicit, and way to solicit them.”

Jones also accuses Stevie J of sending threatening messages when Jones publicly asked Combs to pay him for his work on Combs’ “The Love Album.”

The complaint also says Combs used his connection to Stevie J — Jones’ “idol” — to pressure Jones into sex.

“I’ve never seen my man doing anything foul like they talking about,” Stevie J told TMZ earlier this month, adding: ‘”I’ve never seen it. I’ve known him for 29 years.”

His attorney didn’t reply to a request for comment from BI.

Singer Kalenna Harper
One complaint says Jimmy Iovine witnessed Combs assault Casandra Ventura.

Richard’s complaint also includes mention of Jimmy Iovine, the cofounder of Interscope Records and Beats Electronics.

The complaint recounts a dinner party held by Combs in the months leading up to a deal between his Bad Boy Entertainment and Iovine’s Interscope Geffen A&M Records.

The complaint says that at the dinner, in front of Iovine, as well as the dinner guests Ne-Yo and Usher, Ventura and Combs had an argument that resulted in Combs punching her in the stomach, “causing her to double over in visible pain, crying.”

“Even after Mr. Iovine watched Mr. Combs commit a violent assault in front of numerous high-profile witnesses, the Bad Boy-Interscope deal took place and remained in effect, providing Mr. Combs with immense financial rewards and enabling him to commit further acts of violence without fear of repercussions,” the complaint says.

Usher, Ne-Yo, and Iovine didn’t reply to a request for comment from BI about the allegations in Richard’s complaint.

Universal Music Group CEO Lucian Grainge
Universal Music Group CEO Lucian Grainge has denied all wrongdoing.

The CEO of Universal Music Group and father-in-law to Sofia Richie, Lucian Grainge, was originally listed as a defendant in Jones’ amended complaint filed in the US District Court in the Southern District of New York, along with Universal Music Group and its label Motown Records. He has since been removed.

He was initially accused of aiding and abetting Combs, specifically in racketeering and sex trafficking. Universal’s Motown Records had a licensing agreement with Combs’ Love Records.

The complaint says that as CEO, Grainge “had a duty to ensure that the financial support they provided to Sean Combs and Love Records was not being used for sex workers, drugs, and laced alcohol.”

Attorneys for Grainge filed a motion to dismiss, in which they called the accusations “offensively false.” In a sworn statement to the court, Grainge called the accusations “completely untrue and absurd” and said he planned to “pursue both plaintiffs and his counsel for having made such false accusations.”

Grainge also noted that he’s the CEO of a “multi-national public company” — and said he wasn’t involved in the “day-to-day operations” of the company’s “thousands of agreements.”

In a statement to BI when the lawsuit was first filed, Grainge’s attorney Donald S. Zakarin called the complaint “offensively reckless” and said they would seek legal repercussions against Jones’ attorney.

“The plaintiff has now attempted to amend his claims against Sir Lucian, removing the original set of outrageous falsehoods related to Sir Lucian, replacing them with wholly contradictory new falsehoods that are equally absurd,” he said. “Not only will we demonstrate the offensive falsity of these claims, but we will seek recovery of every penny of cost and damage caused by their assertion.”

In May, Jones’ attorney dropped the claims against Grainge, Motown Records, and Universal Music Group with prejudice — which means they cannot be refiled at a later date.

“Based on my examination of all of the papers submitted in support of both motions to dismiss, which addressed the issues I had, I have concluded that there is no legal basis for the claims and allegations that were made against the UMG Defendants,” Jones’ attorney wrote.

October 16, 2024: This story has been updated with new details from a lawsuit.