A sex trafficking expert analyzes the allegations against Sean ‘Diddy’ Combs – The Mercury News

August Brown | (TNS) Los Angeles Times

Monday night’s indictment of Sean “Diddy” Combs escalated the rapper and mogul’s legal peril significantly. The charges of sex trafficking, racketeering and transportation to engage in prostitution followed a high-profile federal investigation, including a raid on Combs’ Los Angeles and Miami homes. Civil suits filed by Combs’ ex-girlfriend Cassie Ventura and others allege sexual abuse, physical assault and a litany of other disturbing allegations that have tarnished his reputation.

On Tuesday, Combs pleaded not guilty to all charges in the indictment in a federal courtroom in Manhattan.

According to the indictment, Combs allegedly used a pattern of coercion, threats and violence to keep victims under his control. How might a relationship — romantic, musical or otherwise — turn into what prosecutors allege to be a violent sex trafficking network run by a rap celebrity?

The Times spoke with Lauren Hersh, the national director of the activist group World Without Exploitation and the former chief of the sex trafficking unit at the Kings County district attorney’s office in Brooklyn, about the methods Combs is accused of using to entice and control victims, and what this indictment means about our changing views on how sex trafficking works.

Most people who follow this know about the individual cases of alleged abuse involving Cassie and others. How does the indictment aim to connect several alleged incidents into a pattern of organized trafficking?

What we saw trickle out were these individual stories of individual women. For anyone who understands the complexity of these echoes, when we start seeing situations trickle out, there is often something bigger and often more organized. It didn’t come as a surprise to me that this was a complex operation, that he [allegedly] utilized his business enterprise to carry out all sorts of criminal activity … they all fell under the broad umbrella of his business.

How might people — some of them successful musicians in their own right — get pulled into an alleged sex trafficking operation in the first place?

It’s a classic situation in that you have two things at play — a dynamic with a position of power and a position of vulnerability. Different trafficking schemes have a varying ability in terms of power. The more powerful a person is, the more that person can utilize power to prey on vulnerable people…. He [allegedly] has the ability to manipulate and deceive to create a culture of silence and deference, to bribe people into silence, to force people to conceal his conduct.

But at first, it’s very enticing for people to be in his company, to be on his payroll, to be in his hotel rooms. He has cachet that people are drawn to, he uses that mechanism to lure people in.

How does the indictment describe the ways he allegedly turned that power exchange into criminal trafficking?

What we’re seeing here is an extraordinary level of [alleged] coercion. [The indictment alleges] he plied people with drugs, he forced people to perform sex acts for days, and then would get them to comply by threatening their career. He’d record videos of sex acts, then dangle videos over people’s heads, where “If you speak or reveal anything I will disseminate this.” That’s terrifying, that’s life wrecking. There was violence, physical and sexual.

He’d have people sign NDAs and [allegedly] bribe his enablers into silence. From a legal perspective that’s an effective tool, but when you think about power and vulnerability, handing them an NDA is really intimidating, one more tool in this guy’s toolbox to [create] intimidated silence. That’s what traffickers do, utilize all sorts of mechanisms to make victims too terrified and traumatized to speak.

He’s been very effective at using NDAs over the years. Could some of the information or testimony held back by those documents emerge during a trial?

FOLLOW US ON GOOGLE NEWS

Read original article here

Denial of responsibility! Todays Chronic is an automatic aggregator of the all world’s media. In each content, the hyperlink to the primary source is specified. All trademarks belong to their rightful owners, all materials to their authors. If you are the owner of the content and do not want us to publish your materials, please contact us by email – todayschronic.com. The content will be deleted within 24 hours.

Leave a Comment