Newly resurfaced allegations that Sean “Diddy” Combs allegedly raped a woman with a TV remote — and tried to insert an IUD into her — will be featured in an upcoming documentary about the embattled music mogul.
Ashely Parham, who sued Combs in October over claims he “gang-raped” her for suggesting he had a role in Tupac Shakur’s death, is set to be featured in a new 90-minute documentary on Peacock about the rash of sexual assault allegations that have been mounted against the rapper over the last year.
The program, titled “Diddy: The Making of a Bad Boy” and out Tuesday, and will feature interviews from his former colleagues, employees and accusers — including one alleged victim only referred to as Ashley, according to a report by People.
Ashley — whose face will not be shown in the new series — says in the show that since going public with her claims, her life has changed.
“I’ve become incredibly reclusive. I don’t trust anyone,” she says.
In the documentary, Ashley and her lawyer, Ariel Mitchell-Kidd, lay out in detail the events that lead to the alleged rape.
Parham’s $50 million suit was filed in California federal court on Oct. 15 and spells out in graphic detail the alleged 2018 rape.
She claimed she met a friend of the Bad Boy Records founder at a bar in February 2018 who bragged about knowing Combs before calling up him up on a video call where Parham told Combs she thought he was involved in Shakur’s 1996 death.
Combs allegedly responded by threatening that she would “pay” for what she said.
Then the pal — her Ashley and Mitchell-Kidd say in the doc they have since discovered was a “scouter” for Combs’ alleged victims — “set her up” to be raped by inviting her to his Orinda, Calif., home on the pretense that she would help him take cancer drugs because he was weak from the illness, the court papers alleged.
But Combs showed up with a knife, which he pressed against her face, threatening to cut her over the Shakur comment.
He then allegedly stripped her of her clothes, covered her in liquid and drugged her before he and a female consultant, Kristina Khorram, attempted to insert an IUD contraceptive device in Parham, the filing claimed.
Unsuccessful, Combs then allegedly raped Parham with a TV remote controller before anally raping her and telling two other men to do the same. A fourth man then vaginally raped Parham, she claimed in the suit.
After, Combs tried to buy Parham’s silence and threatened to harm her family if she ever reported what happened, the suit claims.
Combs was arrested in September on sex-trafficking, prostitution and racketeering charges for allegedly arranging “freak offs” where he drugged and raped women, the feds have claimed. He’s been behind bars awaiting trial.
A wave of lawsuits by both men and women who claim they were sexually assaulted by Combs and others have since been filed.
He has denied any wrongdoing in both the civil and criminal cases.
Combs’ legal team responded by saying Parham’s claims were “thoroughly investigated” at the time of the alleged attack and were determined to be “unfounded.”
“Mr. Combs was nowhere near Orinda, California, on the day she claims she was assaulted,” the statement said. “There is no evidence that Mr. Combs was ever even in the same room as Ms. Parham.”
“She is completely unbelievable and no sane person who views the evidence will credit her story,” the statement concluded.
Another documentary called “The Fall of Diddy,” is scheduled for release on Jan. 27 and Jan. 28 on Investigation Discovery and on Max, People reported.
Mitchell-Kidd didn’t immediately return a request for comment Monday to Combs’ team’s claims about Parham.