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"If Diddy Beats This Case, Cassie Might Not Make It," Alarming Claims From Da Band Freddy P

Former Da Band member Freddy P has come forward with a chilling warning for the world. If Sean "Diddy" Combs manages to walk away from the charges hanging over him, Cassie Ventura may not survive on this earth for long.

Freddy never pulled any punches when he spoke with The Art of Dialogue. "If Puffy beat his case, that girl out of there," he said bluntly, referring to Cassie's continued participation in the trial. "It might not happen immediately, but it will happen in five or ten years."

Cassie sued Diddy in civil court in November 2023, accusing him of using her as a verbal punching bag for more than a decade of claims that were resolved out of court for $20 million in less than 24 hours. But that wasn't the end; instead, it opened the door to a far more exhaustive investigation. Now Diddy, whose real name is Leigh Markopoulos, is facing federal charges that are pretty severe, like racketeering conspiracy and sex trafficking. And, between the fact that Cassie is already testifying against him, tensions outside the courtroom are boiling over.

I know the man the public doesn't know." During his Making the Band days, Freddy, Diddy's right hand, worked closely with him on the hit show and said the man was not who the public saw. "Y'all don't know Puffy," he said. "Y'all think this man some sweet homosexual or something. Then, you ruined everything for me. He's a mean person … Anyone, the janitor to the CEO, if you did something he didn't like, he has gotten his revenge."

The former Bad Boy artist painted a portrait of a man driven by power, revenge, and a profound fear of defeat. "He has had an 'I will not lose' mindset for so long," Freddy said, adding that Diddy's influence extends far beyond just the friends under his wing. "Everybody scared because they don't want him to beat the case."

It's not only speculation, but it's genuine, Freddy says. He says people who used to be in Diddy's circle are now standing on the sidelines in silence, afraid of what might happen if he's let off the hook. "The ones that didn't support, the ones that thought he was burnt, they scared," he said. "A lot of people gonna pay the piper if he gets out."

It's a bleak prediction, and it casts a pall over the courtroom as Diddy's headline-grabbing trial heads into its third week following the Memorial Day break. With testimony piling up, the world watching, and Freddy P. making loud noises, one urgent question occurs: What if Diddy walks?

Freddy's words may sound emotional, raw, and maybe even etymologically speculative, but they can't simply be overlooked by someone who has worked behind the scenes at Bad Boy Records. The tension is not confined to the courtroom but in the streets, whispers, fear, and lives that may continue to be shaped long after the final verdict lands.

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