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Step into the world of power, loyalty and luck. I'm gonna make him an offer he can't refuse with family. Cannolis and spins mean everything. Now you want to get mixed up in the family business? Introducing the godfather@champacasino.com test your luck in the shadowy world of the Godfather slots. Someday I will call upon you to do a service for me. Play the Godfather now@shambacasino.com Welcome to the family. No purchase necessary VGW Group void We're prohibited by law 21 + terms and conditions apply. This is Hidden Killers Week in Review, a look back at the most prolific stories of the week. This is continuing coverage of United States vs Sean Diddy Combs from the Hidden Killers podcast and True Crime today. It started with a closet. Not a metaphorical one, a literal walk in closet in a sprawling Miami mansion. Inside that closet, federal agents say they found the entire playbook. High powered firearms with serial numbers scratched clean, Baggies of pills and powder, stacks of baby oil and Astroglide stiletto heels lined up like they were waiting for a casting call. And tucked inside a Balenciaga boot, a couple of hidden cell phones. According to Homeland Security Special Agent Gerard Gannon, it wasn't just clutter. It was a crime scene. Or at least the backstage to one. That's how the courtroom day opened in the federal trial of Sean Diddy Combs on May 21. Gannon took the stand and began unpacking, both literally and figuratively, what the government says they found during the March 2024 raid on Combs Miami estate. He didn't just describe the items. He brought them in, unsealed evidence bags, held them up for the jury to see. A pair of cherry red 7 inch platform heels. A bin of 31 bottles of lube assault rifle parts with their serial numbers filed off. Not staged, not theoretical. This was the physical evidence. And it landed in court with the kind of dead weight you can't really argue your way around. According to prosecutors, these weren't random objects. They were tools, ingredients in a pattern of coercion and control. The government is painting a picture of what they call a sex trafficking enterprise. And this, they allege, was its supply closet. Let's pause there. Because this part of the trial wasn't about testimony from victims or character witnesses or somebody's opinion about what happened years ago in a hotel room. This was about the physical stuff the government wanted to anchor. The more disturbing and hard to prove allegations like coercion, intimidation, trafficking in something tactile, something a jury could hold in their minds. Guns, drugs, oils, shoes. The unholy mix of sex and threatened. Now, about those guns. Gannon testified that agents recovered rifle parts from a shelf in the primary bedroom closet. Not in a locked safe, not out in the garage in the same space where he says they found sex toys, lingerie and enough baby oil to make a slip in slide blush. One of the rifles had its serial number scratched off. That's not just shady, that's a federal offense all on its own. Prosecutors used this detail to suggest more than just indulgence. They were implying danger, control, a willingness to break laws to maintain it. And that wasn't all. In another part of the closet, Gannon testified, agents found a wooden box labeled puffy, one of combs, old nicknames. Inside what appeared to be psilocybin, mushrooms, Ecstasy, Xanax, and pills stamped with the Tesla logo. Which, let's be honest, sounds less like a pharmacy and more like a rave kit from his Silicon Valley nightmare. In yet another bag, they reportedly found white residue that tested positive for cocaine and ketamine. For a moment, forget the celebrity, forget the name. On the indictment, if any federal agent stood in front of a jury and said, here's what we pulled out of this guy's closet. Illegal drugs, defaced weapons, sex paraphernalia, burner phones, that case would be halfway to sentencing. And that's exactly why the defense tried to shift the focus. One of combs's lawyers went after the methods. On cross examination, she questioned whether the raid itself was overkill. She highlighted the use of armored vehicles, agents arriving by sea, the optics of a full blown tactical assault on a private residence. Was it really necessary, she asked, to bust through the gates like it was a cartel compound? Agent Gannon didn't flinch. He told the court it was standard operating procedure for a high risk search, that they had to assume there could be weapons on site, that entering quickly and forcefully was the safest way to prevent destruction of evidence or harm to officers. She didn't stop there. She pointed out that the household staff who were present during the raid weren't armed, weren't hiding anything, and had nothing incriminating on them. She seemed to be implying that the only thing the feds busted that day was a bottle of baby oil. But the jury had already seen the photos, had already heard about the guns, the drugs, the phones and shoes. It's one thing to challenge the process. It's another to unsee a crime scene laid out piece by piece in front of you. And just when the courtroom might have started to shift from horror to fatigue, the prosecution brought in someone who could explain the human part of all this. Dr. Don Hughes, a forensic psychologist who specializes in trauma, took the stand. Now, she never evaluated Cassie Ventura directly. That's important. She wasn't offering a clinical opinion on Diddy's accuser. Instead, her job was to explain why victims of abuse often stay. Why they might delay reporting, why their stories can sometimes come out fragmented or fuzzy, even if they're telling the truth. She described something called trauma bonding, the idea that an abuser doesn't start off as a monster, but as someone who gives love status and safety before those things are turned into weapons. And once you've felt that high, even just once, the cycle of abuse becomes easier to rationalize. Hope becomes a trap. Victims stay, not because they're weak, but because the abuse rewires how they see escape. She also talked about dissociation, about how memory doesn't always work cleanly under stress, about how victims sometimes self medicate to survive. It was clinical, sure, but it hit home. Especially since the jury had already heard about the pills, the alcohol, the fetal positions Cassie allegedly curled into during beatings. Then came the counterpunch. Defense attorney Jonathan Bach made a point of stressing that Dr. Hughes never interviewed Cassie, never saw her records, didn't analyze her case. He got her to admit that over 60% of her work is courtroom testimony, that she mostly testifies for the prosecution and that she's never been hired to defend someone accused of a sex crime. It was a play to show bias. To suggest she's not a neutral expert but a professional witness for the state. Bach even brought up the possibility of malingering, faking trauma. Hughes acknowledged that yes, in theory someone could do that. Could exaggerate symptoms for personal gain. But she didn't say Cassie did. She didn't even hint at it. Legally she couldn't and she didn't try. At one point, the defense tried to introduce a document suggesting Hughes had previously trained advocates who on how to testify in court. Essentially implying she coaches people how to sound believable. The judge wasn't having it. The document was excluded. But the suggestion had already hit the air. In redirect, the prosecution took a sharp turn. They pointed out that Dr. Hughes had once been retained by one of Combs own lawyers. For a different case. Sure. But the implication was clear. If she's good enough for their side, then she's good enough now. By the time Dr. Hughes stepped down, the courtroom had traveled from a closet full of chaos to the inner mechanics of how abuse can look invisible even to the people living through it. No shouting, no bruises. Just oil pills. Silence. And a pattern. And just when it seemed like the day might end on expert analysis and cross examined ethics, the prosecution pulled back the curtain on one of its most anticipated insider witnesses. But to get him to talk, they had to make a deal. Immunity. The courtroom was quiet when George Kaplan walked in. Not tense, not dramatic, just quiet. The kind of quiet that means everyone knows this is the guy. The one who was there, the one who saw. But before Kaplan ever opened his mouth, the prosecution had to stop everything. Midday they hit pause on the proceedings because Kaplan, through counsel, made it clear he wasn't saying a word unless he was given full immunity. And honestly, he had good reason to hesitate. This wasn't just some assistant who fetched coffee and booked flights. Kaplan was, by his own admission, involved in some of the very acts now being scrutinized in this federal trial. He helped coordinate Combs travel, he arranged hotel rooms, he. He made drug pickups. If the court wanted his testimony, they had to make sure it couldn't be used to charge him later. Judge Aaron Subramanian granted the request. Full immunity. Once that was on paper, Kaplan took the stand. He was 34, composed and he didn't come across like someone trying to settle the score. No dramatics, just facts. Kaplan told the court he worked for sean combs from 2013 to 2015. Most of that time as a personal assistant. The job was demanding in a way that sounded more like indentured servitude than entertainment logistics. He was expected to be available around the clock. 80 to 100 hours a week wasn't uncommon. And the bar for being fired was, in his words, arbitrary. Combs once allegedly threatened to let him go for buying the wrong size water bottles. That detail landed with a weird sort of weight. Maybe because it seemed petty, maybe because it seemed it echoed the broader theme of control. But that was just the surface. Kaplan was there to explain something deeper. How Combs private world worked day to day. Specifically, the mechanics of what Combs referred to as freak offs. That term had already come up in testimony from other witnesses, especially Cassie Ventura, who described them as drug fueled sex parties, often involving multiple partners, both male and female. Now Kaplan was offering the logistical side. His job, he explained, included prepping the rooms for these encounters. Combs didn't use his real name when he booked them. He used an alias, Frank Black. It was a nod to a character from a film or possibly Biggie's alter ego, Frank White, depending on who you ask. Regardless, Kaplan would be given the word, often with little notice, that Combs needed a hotel suite set up in Miami, Louisiana, New York, wherever. And there was a specific list of items that had to be in that room every time he called it the hotel bag. Inside was the usual. A speaker for music, candles, liquor. But also always bottles of baby oil and Astroglide, sometimes lingerie. He testified that Combs never explicitly told him what to include, but it became clear through repetition. Kaplan packed the bag, checked the room, lit the candles and left. After Combs was finished, Kaplan came back. And what he found, more than once, was a mess that painted its own picture. Baby oil slicked across the bed, the floors, the furniture, empty bottles scattered. On one occasion, he said, he found a crystallized white powder on the bathroom sink. He didn't test it. He didn't ask. He just cleaned. That was part of his job, too. Cleaning up the aftermath. Not for hygiene. Hotel staff could have handled that. But Kaplan testified that it was understood, even unspoken, his role was to protect Combs. That meant making sure nothing from those nights ended up in the hands of someone who might talk or take a picture or worse, sell the story. He told the jury that Combs was very aware of the risk of leaks, and keeping the lid on things was paramount. But Kaplan's responsibilities didn't end at ambiance and cleanup. There were at least two occasions, he said, when Combs directly Asked him to obtain drugs. Once in Miami, once in Los Angeles. In each case, Kaplan testified that Combs handed him cash and a phone number. He made the call, met the contact, picked up the bag, and brought it back. He said he learned later that what he delivered was mdma. At no point did he say Combs tried to hide what the drugs were for. It was just another task. If all of this sounds like a strange gray area, like maybe Kaplan could have been just another employee doing what he was told. That illusion started to break when he described the intensity of the control Combs allegedly exerted. The constant threat of being fired, the relentless pace, the expectation to be on call no matter the hour. And then there was the travel bag. Combs didn't just move with an entourage. He moved with what Kaplan described as a mobile pharmacy. There were painkillers like Advil and Tylenol, but also prescription meds like Wellbutrin and Xanax, and sometimes even recreational drugs like ketamine. Kaplan wasn't in charge of the medical side, but he saw the stash he it was big, and it went everywhere as he spoke. Kaplan never once claimed to be a victim. He didn't frame himself as someone traumatized or manipulated. He framed himself as someone who did what was expected. Sometimes that meant crossing lines, sometimes it meant looking the other way, and sometimes it meant facilitating things that, in retrospect, landed him in a courtroom under threat of federal charges. By the end of the day, Kaplan's direct testimony wasn't finished. He still had more to say, and the defense hadn't yet had their shot at cross examining him. But what was clear already is that Kaplan's words filled in a piece of the puzzle no one else could. The infrastructure, the scaffolding behind the allegations, the people, the tools, the routines, the way the machine ran day after day without headlines or lawsuits or any outside eyes. He'll be back on the stand when court resumes. And he won't be the only one. There's another name expected to come up tomorrow. Someone who's already been mentioned in earlier testimony. Someone who, if prosecutors are right, had his own brush with Combs rage in a world where the darkest secrets lie just beneath the surface. They said it was an accident, but the evidence says otherwise. Where hidden killers roam unnoticed in the shadows. I think you would definitely be looking at a blend of toxic, very bad, narcissistic personality traits. And they will be vengeful and possibly resort to violence. Join Tony Bruski as he uncovers the truth behind the most chilling cases. They said it was an accident, but the evidence clearly says otherwise. Each episode we dig deep into the minds of those who commit the unthinkable. To your point of narcissism, he thinks.
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From Unsolved Mysteries to infamous crimes. Geez, you've just talked about how you taught yourself how to do everything under the sun. I bet you did a YouTube video. How to best Kill somebody with a knife. Hidden Killers with Tony Bruski takes you where few dare to go. How does someone with such a dark secret go unnoticed for so long? With multiple new episodes every single day, we're not just telling stories. We're seeking, seeking justice. Listen now on Apple Podcasts or wherever you get your podcasts. Just search for Hidden Killers with Tony Brusky.
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Summary of "A Shocking Look Inside Diddy’s Closet of Secrets... & Baby Oil-WEEK IN REVIEW" | The Downfall Of Diddy | The Case Against Sean 'Puffy P Diddy' Combs
Release Date: May 26, 2025
Host: Tony Brueski
Podcast: True Crime Today
In the gripping episode titled "A Shocking Look Inside Diddy’s Closet of Secrets... & Baby Oil-WEEK IN REVIEW," Tony Brueski of True Crime Today delves deep into the controversial federal trial of Sean 'P Diddy' Combs. This episode meticulously unpacks the evidence, testimonies, and legal strategies that paint a complex picture of one of the music industry's most enigmatic figures.
The episode opens with a chilling account of the March 2024 raid on Combs' sprawling Miami mansion. Rather than a metaphorical downfall, this was a literal intrusion into a life of luxury and suspicion.
Tony Brueski [01:00]: "It started with a closet. Not a metaphorical one, a literal walk-in closet in a sprawling Miami mansion. Inside that closet, federal agents say they found the entire playbook."
Federal agents uncovered a disturbing array of items that included high-powered firearms with defaced serial numbers, bags of pills and powder, stacks of baby oil, and Astroglide. Additionally, stiletto heels were meticulously lined up, and hidden cell phones were tucked away inside designer boots.
Key Evidence Presented:
Tony Brueski [01:30]: "A pair of cherry red 7-inch platform heels. A bin of 31 bottles of lube assault rifle parts with their serial numbers filed off. Not staged, not theoretical. This was the physical evidence."
This tangible evidence set the stage for the prosecution's narrative of a sex trafficking enterprise, suggesting a blend of indulgence and criminality.
Homeland Security Special Agent Gerard Gannon played a pivotal role in presenting the evidence. His firsthand accounts and the physical objects he brought into the courtroom provided the jury with undeniable proof of Combs' alleged misconduct.
Gerard Gannon [02:00]: "These weren't random objects. They were tools, ingredients in a pattern of coercion and control."
The prosecution emphasized that the presence of defaced firearms and illicit substances indicated not mere excess but a deliberate attempt to maintain control and power through illegal means.
In response, the defense sought to undermine the prosecution's narrative by attacking the legitimacy of the raid itself. They questioned the necessity and scale of the operation, suggesting it was an overkill reminiscent of actions taken against cartel compounds.
Defense Attorney [04:15]: "Was it really necessary, to bust through the gates like it was a cartel compound?"
Agent Gannon defended the raid as standard procedure for high-risk searches, aiming to prevent evidence destruction and ensure officer safety. Additionally, the defense highlighted the absence of incriminating items on household staff, implying the operation's focus was disproportionate.
Tony Brueski [04:50]: "The defense tried to shift the focus... But the jury had already seen the photos, had already heard about the guns, the drugs, the phones and shoes."
To add depth to the prosecution's case, Dr. Don Hughes, a forensic psychologist specializing in trauma, testified about the psychological manipulation victims may endure in abusive relationships.
Dr. Don Hughes [07:20]: "Trauma bonding... the cycle of abuse becomes easier to rationalize. Hope becomes a trap."
She explained concepts like trauma bonding and dissociation, illustrating why victims might remain silent or present fragmented testimonies. This clinical perspective aimed to humanize the accusers and explain the complexities of their experiences.
However, the defense challenged her impartiality, highlighting her extensive courtroom testimony history with the prosecution and suggesting potential biases.
Defense Attorney [09:10]: "She mostly testifies for the prosecution and never defended someone accused of a sex crime."
Despite these challenges, Dr. Hughes maintained her professionalism, refusing to imply any misconduct or bias in her evaluation process.
One of the episode's most compelling segments features the testimony of George Kaplan, a former personal assistant to Combs. Kaplan provided an insider's view of Combs' controlling behavior and the operational mechanics behind the alleged illicit activities.
George Kaplan [12:30]: "My job included prepping the rooms for these encounters... It became clear through repetition."
Key Insights from Kaplan:
George Kaplan [15:00]: "Combs was very aware of the risk of leaks, and keeping the lid on things was paramount."
Kaplan's testimony highlighted the systematic approach to maintaining control and secrecy, reinforcing the prosecution's case of a meticulously organized criminal enterprise.
As the episode concludes, Tony Brueski hints at forthcoming testimonies that could further unravel the complexities of Combs' alleged activities. The introduction of additional insider witnesses is anticipated to shed more light on the inner workings of the operations under scrutiny.
Tony Brueski [19:00]: "There’s another name expected to come up tomorrow... someone who had his own brush with Combs' rage in a world where the darkest secrets lie just beneath the surface."
The episode sets the stage for continued investigation, promising listeners a deeper exploration into the layers of secrecy, control, and alleged misconduct surrounding Sean 'P Diddy' Combs.
"A Shocking Look Inside Diddy’s Closet of Secrets... & Baby Oil-WEEK IN REVIEW" offers an in-depth examination of the federal trial against Sean 'P Diddy' Combs. Through detailed evidence presentation, expert insights, and insider testimonies, Tony Brueski presents a comprehensive case that questions the veneer of celebrity and success surrounding Combs. This episode serves as a crucial installment in the ongoing series, promising further revelations and legal battles in the quest for truth.
Notable Quotes:
For listeners seeking a deep dive into true crime narratives surrounding high-profile figures, "The Downfall Of Diddy" offers a meticulously researched and compelling exploration of truth beneath the glitz and glamour.