Who is Dawn Richard? Danity Kane singer testifying in Diddy trial about alleged abuseNew Foto - Who is Dawn Richard? Danity Kane singer testifying in Diddy trial about alleged abuse

WithSean "Diddy" Combs' federal criminal trial underway,Dawn Richardhas taken the stand. Richard, discovered by Combs, was a prominent collaborator of the music mogul for a decade, formerly of the Bad Boy Records girl groupDanity Kaneand also part of the trio Diddy – Dirty Money. HerSeptember 2024lawsuit, then, came as a shock, as she claimed Combs subjected her to physical and sexual abuse throughout their professional relationship. Combs' lawyers at the time said Richard was trying to "rewrite history." Her lawsuit points to apparent behavior that did not escape fellow artists and the people he stood next to professionally. Richard accused Diddy of subjecting her to "inhumane" working conditions, including deprivation of food and rest, as well as assault, groping and false imprisonment. She also detailed multiple instances where she claimed to have seen the producer assault his ex-girlfriendCasandra "Cassie" Ventura Fine, who last week finished four days ofharrowing testimony in his trial. Richard's testimony on May 16 focused on her witnessing this abuse. Richard returned to the stand May 19 in Combs' trial. "I'm expecting justice," she said during her testimony. Diddy trial updates:Dawn Richard retakes the stand, alleged Combs beat Cassie Richard's accusations, which included alleged incidents during the production of Diddy – Dirty Money's highly-lauded album "Last Train to Paris," introduce a disturbing refrain into their collaborations, changing how some fans may now hear the music. Fellow Danity Kane memberAubrey O'Dayhas also been critical of the rap mogul. Revisit Richard and Diddy's relationship, her testimony and why she's suing the rap mogul. Diddy on trial newsletterStep inside the courtroom as music mogul faces sex-crimes charges In testimony on May 16, Richard described witnessing Combs attack Ventura Fine as she was making eggs in a kitchen in Combs' Los Angeles home. "He came downstairs screaming, belligerent," Richard said, noting Combs asked where his eggs were and yelled that Ventura Fine never gets anything right. Combs grabbed the skillet Ventura Fine was cooking in and tried to hit her with it, Richard testified. The skillet didn't seem to hit Ventura Fine "fully" because "she went into the fetal position," according to Richard. Combs grabbed Ventura Fine's hair and then dragged her upstairs, Richard said. Then, Richard heard glass breaking and yelling. Combs later told Richard what she saw was passion and Ventura Fine was OK, Richard testified. "Where he comes from, people go missing if they talk," Richard recalled Combs saying. Diddy's music competition series "Making the Band," which ran from 2000 to 2009 mainly on MTV, led to the formation of multiple music groups, includingDa Bandand Day26. In "Making the Band 3," the rapper held country-wide auditions to form a girl group, putting contestants through a series of intense competitions for five spots. Finalists Richard, O'Day, Aundrea Fimbres, Wanita "D. Woods" Woodgett and, later, Shannon Bex would go on to form Danity Kane, releasing their self-titled debut album in 2006, which produced the Billboard Hot 100 top 10 single "Show Stopper." Their second album, "Welcome to the Dollhouse," included their second top 10 single, pop-dance hit "Damaged," in 2008. 'Fall of Diddy' doc:Danity Kane members speak out Since its inception, the group has gone through multiple lineups, with D. Woods leaving the group in 2008 and Fimbres leaving in 2014, before the release of the group's third and final studio album, "DK3." The group has split up and reunited multiple times over the years, including as a duo for the 2020 extended play "Strawberry Milk," featuring just Richard and O'Day. Diddy – Dirty Money, with Richard and singer Kalenna Harper, was formed in 2009. The trio released "Last Train to Paris" in 2010, a cult-classic ensemble effort that has gained critical praise over the years, given its forward-thinking R&B-pop sound. The album included singles "Coming Home" with Skylar Grey, "Hello Good Morning" with T.I. and "Loving You No More" with Drake. The group disbanded in 2012 without a sophomore effort, but reunited for Diddy's 2023 album "The Love Album: Off the Grid." Sean 'Diddy' Combs accusedof sexually assaulting 'The Love Album' producer in new lawsuit Richard's September lawsuit, obtained by USA TODAY, alleged abusive behavior during her time with both Danity Kane and Diddy – Dirty Money. Richard sued Diddy on 21 counts of sexual assault and battery, sex trafficking, gender discrimination and copyright infringement. She claimed the producer stole her work, withheld payment and subjected her to "inhumane" working conditions, which included assault, groping and false imprisonment, throughout their association together. Dawn Richard of Danity Kaneaccuses Diddy of sexual abuse in bombshell lawsuit Richard accused the rapper of promising to advance her career in exchange for favors on the set of "Making the Band" in 2005. According to Richard, Diddy belittled and harassed the female contestants during filming. Once the group was assembled, Richard said the label founder regularly deprived them of sleep and meals, referred to them derogatorily and "denigrated their physical appearances," telling Richard in particular she was "too skinny and needed to 'do something about (her face).'" The singer also recalled an incident during rehearsals in New York for Diddy – Dirty Money's "Saturday Night Live" performance in 2010, in which she claimed she and Harper were denied food and rest. Enraged and screaming at the pair for being late, Richard alleged Diddy nearly hit her before she was escorted away by a bodyguard. When Harper ran after her, both were locked inside a car without door handles, she claimed. Richard used Harper's phone to call her father, but Harper was later removed, leaving Richard locked alone in the car for two hours. It was only after her father arrived from Baltimore that she got out. Richard also claimed to have witnessed Diddy's party behavior, including bringing in underage girls to attend dayslong "drug-fueled" parties at his homes in New York and Miami, where he and his guests "performed sexual acts on them." Inside the White Party:Diddy's star-studded parties were cultural extravaganzas The singer also recalled run-ins with Diddy's exes,Kim Porterand singerVentura Fine,that made her fear for her safety. The singer claimed to have seen Porter's face battered while she cried, leaving a music studio in 2005. Combs had an on-again, off-again relationship with Porter from 1994 to 2007. She died in August 2018 from pneumonia at 47. Richard also details in the lawsuit multiple instances where she claimed to have seen Diddy assault Ventura Fine. Who is Cassie?The singer at the center of Diddy's sex-crimes trial In one, she said a "high on drugs" Diddy slammed Ventura Fine against a wall, choked her and dragged her up the stairs in his home in Los Angeles during the recording of "Last Train to Paris" in 2009. The following day, she and Harper were locked in a room for over 20 minutes as Diddy threatened them and told them not to speak of the incident. Richard "wanted to intervene," she claimed in the lawsuit, but Harper refused to get involved and led her out of the house. On other occasions when Richard or Harper did intervene by encouraging Ventura Fine to leave, she claimed Diddy threatened them with statements like, "You want to die today," and "I end people." Richard, O'Day and D. Woods voiced theirsupport for Ventura Fine when she filed her November 2023 lawsuit. At the time,Richardtweeted she was praying for "peace and healing" for Ventura Fine. Ventura Fine accused Diddy of trafficking, raping and viciously beating her over the course of their relationship. The "Me & U" singer's lawsuit,settled just a day later, triggered thechain reaction of lawsuitsand an investigation that ultimately led to hisfederal criminal charges. In her own filing, Richard said that Ventura Fine's "bravery" in suing Diddy empowered her to come forward, saying years of Combs' alleged abuse "had become normalized for her." In June, O'Day said she did not feel "vindication" amid her former record label boss' legal trouble. "Anyone being exposed, or any truths being told, don't change the reality of what you experienced," O'Daytold People. In a December 2022episode of the "Call Her Daddy"podcast, O'Day also alleged Combs fired her because she wouldn't do things he requested "in other areas" besides music. D. Woods spoke out in the Investigation Discovery docuseries "The Fall of Diddy" in January, recalling sexually charged remarks aimed at O'Day, verbal abuse of the five women during her brief time with Danity Kane. "I see myself standing in those dark, scary, predatory spaces and hearing somebody say some of the most degrading things to me and ... having to figure out how to navigate and not let that person break me down." Harper distanced herself from Richard's claims shortly after her lawsuit was filed. In an Instagram stories post, according toPeople, she said, "Many of the allegations and incidents described in this suit are not representative of my experiences." She added she was not "involved in" nor "aware of, any behavior that could be considered abusive or unlawful." Contributing: Edward Segarra, USA TODAY staff This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:Dawn Richard, Diddy trial and Danity Kane: Singer testifying in court

Who is Dawn Richard? Danity Kane singer testifying in Diddy trial about alleged abuse

Who is Dawn Richard? Danity Kane singer testifying in Diddy trial about alleged abuse WithSean "Diddy" Combs' federal criminal...
Singer testifies Sean "Diddy" Combs threatened her with death after she saw him beat his girlfriend

NEW YORK (AP) — TheSean "Diddy" Combssex trafficking trial resumed Monday when a singer testified that the hip-hop mogul threatened to kill her if she told anyone that she saw him beat his longtime girlfriend. Dawn Richard told a jury in Manhattan federal court that Combs issued the threat the day after she witnessed the Bad Boy Records founder try to hit Cassie with a skillet and then beat her. She said he told her and another woman who saw the attack that "we could go missing" if either revealed what they saw. Assistant U.S. Attorney Mitzi Steiner asked Richard what she took "we could go missing" to mean. "That we could die," Richard responded, saying she was shocked because all of this happened just as she was beginning to record with "Diddy — Dirty Money," a musical trio she formed with Combs and another R&B singer. Combs, 55, is on trial in New York on sex trafficking and racketeering charges alleging that heexploited his statusas an entertainment power broker to abuse women, including Cassie, through threats and violence. He has pleaded not guilty and his lawyers have argued that prosecutors compiled proof of domestic violence, but not federal crimes. In four days on the witness stand last week, Cassie testified that she wanted a loving relationship with Combs during their nearly 11 years together but was instead subjected to weekly drug-fueled "freak-offs" with male sex workers that left her too exhausted and damaged to pursue her music career. Shortly after Cassie finished testifying on Friday, Richard began her stint on the stand, saying she witnessed Combs attack Cassie on multiple occasions, including during a visit to Combs' home recording studio in 2009, when Richard said she and another woman saw Combs hit Cassie "on the head and beat her on the ground." She said Combs tried to hit Cassie over the head with a skillet, but Cassie was able to deflect it. On Monday, Steiner asked Richard how frequently she witnessed Combs beat his girlfriend. "Frequently," Richard said. "He would punch her, choke her, drag her, slap her in the mouth. I saw him kick her, punch her in the stomach." Richard said that on other occasions, she saw Combs punch Cassie in the face with a closed fist and that she saw him punch her in the stomach during an argument at a restaurant. Cassie used makeup, clothing and sunglasses to cover up injuries, which included bruising on her face, eyes, lip, arms and knees, Richard said. Richard testified that the beatings sometimes occurred when Cassie spoke up for herself, "if she had an opinion about something." At other times, she said, "it could be random. We wouldn't even know where it came from." Richard, who also performed in the group Danity Kane, said Combs' staff, including his bodyguards, also witnessed violence. "They wouldn't react. They wouldn't do anything," Richard testified.

Singer testifies Sean "Diddy" Combs threatened her with death after she saw him beat his girlfriend

Singer testifies Sean "Diddy" Combs threatened her with death after she saw him beat his girlfriend NEW YORK (AP) — TheSean "...
"S.W.A.T." Scores All-New Spinoff Starring Shemar Moore Days After Series Finale

Sonja Flemming/CBS S.W.A.T.has secured a spinoff! Just two days after the popular crime show wrapped its eighth and final season, Sony Pictures Television announced a new spinoff series,S.W.A.T. EXILES,which "promises to deliver the same high stakes drama and intense action sequences that fans have come to know and love," a press release read. The upcoming series, currently in development, will see the return of the original show's star,Shemar Moore, reprising his role as Daniel "Hondo" Harrelson. "My eight seasons onS.W.A.T.have been epic and memorable," Moore stated in the release. "We entertained the world, defied the odds, came back from the dead twice, and continued to woo fans and families worldwide." He added, "I will keep the franchise, thrill ride action, heartfelt drama, and storytelling ofS.W.A.T.alive. WE DON'T LOSE!!!! ROLL SWAT!!!" The spinoff begins after "a high-profile mission goes sideways" and Moore's Hondo comes out of retirement to spearhead an experimental S.W.A.T. unit. The group, comprised of inexperienced recruits, must overcome clashing personalities and generational divides as Hondo seeks to "turn a squad of outsiders into a team capable of protecting the city and saving the program that made him who he is." S.W.A.T. EXILES's first season will feature 10 episodes, with production slated to begin this summer in Los Angeles. Jason Ning will serve as showrunner and executive producer, while Neal H. Mortiz, Pavun Shetty, James Scura and Shemar Moore will executive produce. Bill Inoshita/Sony Pictures Television/CBS Never miss a story — sign up forPEOPLE's free daily newsletterto stay up-to-date on the best of what PEOPLE has to offer​​, from celebrity news to compelling human interest stories. S.W.A.T.'s final two episodes debuted on May 16, and saw the team respond to one final terrorist threat. A crew of ex-pat Russian mercenaries called Red Sword held L.A. hostage with invisible mines dropped by remotely controlled drones, and demanded the return of their CIA-detained leader, Dmitri Rykov, in exchange for the bomb coordinates. CBS canceled the series in 2023 and 2024, before finalizing the decision this year. S.W.A.T.is streaming on Paramount+. Read the original article onPeople

“S.W.A.T.” Scores All-New Spinoff Starring Shemar Moore Days After Series Finale

"S.W.A.T." Scores All-New Spinoff Starring Shemar Moore Days After Series Finale Sonja Flemming/CBS S.W.A.T.has secured a spinoff!...
Movie Review: Tom Cruise goes for broke in 'Mission: Impossible — The Final Reckoning'New Foto - Movie Review: Tom Cruise goes for broke in 'Mission: Impossible — The Final Reckoning'

Tom Cruise'sEthan Hunt is getting a bit of a god complex. It's not exactly his fault after defying death andcompleting impossible missionstime and time again. But in "Mission: Impossible – The Final Reckoning," out Friday, there's a breathlessness to the naive trust from his growing band of disciples, including the U.S. president (the formerly skeptical Erika Sloane of "Fallout," played byAngela Bassett), and Paris (Pom Klementieff), the once delightfully fun maniac assassin who has been reduced to brooding French philosopher. In a series that has often been best when it's not taking itself too seriously, these dour developments start to feel a little unintentionally silly. And, for at least the first hour, it's all we have to hang onto. Perhaps this is part of the point in pitting a human man against a parasiticartificial intelligenceset on inciting nuclear extinction, something we're meant to believe has been brewing in some way since the beginning of the franchise. You can almost see the behind-the-scenes wheels turning: Gravity is kind of a prerequisite when this much is on the line, and when so much pain has been taken to link 30 years and seven movies that were certainly never meant to be connected by anything other than Ethan Hunt. But we don't come to "Mission: Impossible" movies for the bigger picture, and definitely not to learn what the rabbit's foot was in the third movie. We come to be awed by the thrills and Cruise's execution, whether he's speeding through Paris on a motorbike, driving one-handed through Rome in a tiny old Fiat, or hanging on the outside of an airbus, or bullet train, or helicopter, or the Burj Khalifa. And unlike, say, the "Fast & Furious" movies, which long ago jumped the shark, the "Mission" stunts have always felt grounded in some reality and playfulness. It's not just Cruise's willingness to tether himself to all forms of high-speed transportation for our enjoyment. His reactions — surprise, panic, doubt — are unparalleled. Ethan Hunt is never too cool to look unsure. "Final Reckoning," Christopher McQuarrie's fourth "Mission" movie in the director's chair, does deliver two truly unforgettable sequences. One is in a long-defunct submarine at the bottom of the sea that will have you squirming; another involves two classic biplanes careening at 170 miles per hour (274 kilometers per hour) over lush South African landscapes. Though they may induce vertigo on IMAX, these are the things that make the trip to the theater worth it. But be warned: It takes a good long while of labored exposition, manic flashbacks and Oscar broadcast-ready greatest-hits montages to get there. McQuarrie, who co-wrote the script with Erik Jendresen, might have learned the wrong lessons from the past decade of overly interconnected franchise filmmaking. Or perhaps it still seemed like the right call when this two-part finale was put into motion seven years ago. Not only does realizing one previously enjoyable character is related to and motivated by a character from the past do little to raise the stakes, it also bogs everything down. "Final Reckoning" also overstuffs the cast with faces that are almost distracting (likeHannah Waddinghamas a U.S. Navy officer, though her American accent is quite good). Maybe it's overcompensating for the movie's flesh-and-bone villain Gabriel (Esai Morales), who seems to be there because Ethan needs someone to chase. There are some fun additions to the lot: "Severance's" Tramell Tillman as a submarine captain, as well as Lucy Tulugarjuk and Rolf Saxon, for anyone wondering what became of the poor guy in the Langley vault. Simon Pegg, as the capably flustered tech wiz Benji, is still great, Ving Rhames gets to flex emotionally, and Bassett really makes you believe she's chosen a U.S. city to destroy as an offering to "The Entity." But many get lost in the unnatural, one-size-fits-all dialogue, which is especially true in the bizarrely sweaty Situation Room where everyone is always finishing each other's sentences. Maybe when you have a larger-than-life movie star, you need larger-than-life character actors. Besides, everyone knows they're there as side players supporting the Cruise show — no one more so than Hayley Atwell as Grace, the once inscrutable pickpocket turned wide-eyed Madonna supporting and tending to Ethan. The loss of Rebecca Ferguson is acutely felt here. The "Mission: Impossible" movies, even when they're mediocre, remain some of the most effortlessly enjoyable cinematic experiences out there, a pure expression of "let's put on a show." There's nothing else quite like it and maybe they've earned this self-important victory lap, though it seems to have gone to the characters' heads. Saving the showstopper for last will certainly leave audiences exiting the theater on a happy high note. But it's hard to shake the feeling that in attempting to tie everything together, "Mission: Impossible" lost the plot. "Mission: Impossible: The Final Reckoning," a Paramount Pictures release in theaters Friday, is rated PG-13 by the Motion Picture Association for "bloody images, action, brief language, and sequences of strong violence." Running time: 179 minutes. Two and a half stars out of four.

Movie Review: Tom Cruise goes for broke in ‘Mission: Impossible — The Final Reckoning’

Movie Review: Tom Cruise goes for broke in 'Mission: Impossible — The Final Reckoning' Tom Cruise'sEthan Hunt is getting a bit o...
Tim Roth Opens Up About Making 'Poignant' Film About Bereavement Months Before His Son Cormac's Death from Cancer at Age 25New Foto - Tim Roth Opens Up About Making 'Poignant' Film About Bereavement Months Before His Son Cormac's Death from Cancer at Age 25

Niviere David/ABACAPRESS.COM/Shutterstock Tim Roth spoke out about filming a movie about bereavement just months before he lost his son Cormac at age 25 "The film was actually dealing with something which now is very, very poignant as far as our family is concerned," the actor toldThe Guardianof his filmPoison Cormac died on Oct. 16, 2022 after "a courageous battle with cancer," his family previously said in a statement obtained by PEOPLE Tim Rothis opening up about dealing with grief afterlosing his son Cormac Roth to cancerat age 25. While speaking toThe Guardian, the actor, 64, discussed his new filmPoison, which is about an estranged couple who reunite a decade after the death of their son. Filming on the movie — which Roth stars in as Lucas alongside Trine Dyrholm's Edith — wrapped just a few months before Cormac's death in October 2022, the outlet noted. "The film was actually dealing with something which now is very, very poignant as far as our family is concerned," Tim told the U.K. publication. "There is no one way of grieving. People react differently — everyone does — otherwise there would be a cure for it." Deal Productions In the film, the couple's son "must be exhumed because toxins are leaking into the cemetery." The majority of the movie was shot at a real cemetery in Luxembourg,The Guardianstated. Before reuniting, the characters had been "torn apart by bereavement." Tim, who lives in Los Angeles with his family, admitted he considered dropping out of the film but said that Cormac insisted that he continue filming. "He was unfazed by me doing the film. He thought it was a good thing. He was probably wanting to get me out of the house as well," thePlanet of the Apesstar told the outlet. "It had his seal of approval, otherwise I wouldn't have done it. If he needed me to stay close, I would have been staying close," he added. "At that point we were trying to remain positive because he was still with us." Marechal Aurore/ABACA/Shutterstock Discussing how the movie portrays grief, Tim said, "The film has such a truth to it because it shows that how you grieve is as individual as a fingerprint. Now with my friends and family I see that everyone is doing and handling that differently and need to be respected for it." The Roth family confirmed in a statement shared with PEOPLE that they "lost our beautiful boy Cormac after a courageous battle with cancer" on Oct. 16, 2022. Cormac announced in a July 2022Instagrampost that he'd been diagnosed with stage three germ cell cancer in November 2021. "He died peacefully in the arms of his family who loved and adored him," the Roth family's statement continued. "He fought with incredible bravery for the past year, and maintained his wicked wit and humour to the very end." The family described Cormac as "a wild and electric ball of energy" whose spirit "was filled with light and goodness." "As wild as he was, Cormac was also the embodiment of kindness," the statement continued. "A gentle soul who brought so much happiness and hope to those around him. The grief comes in waves, as do the tears and laughter, when we think of that beautiful boy across the 25 years and 10 months that we knew him." "An irrepressible and joyful and wild and wonderful child. Only recently a man," the family shared. "We love him. We will carry him with us wherever we go," they insisted, revealing that Cormac was a graduate of Bennington College in Vermont and "was an exceptionally gifted and extraordinary musician whose passion and love for making music stretched back to when his guitar was bigger than he was." Never miss a story — sign up forPEOPLE's free daily newsletterto stay up-to-date on the best of what PEOPLE has to offer​​, from celebrity news to compelling human interest stories. Cormac shared his finalInstagrampost in August 2022. In it, he urged his followers to "just sink your teeth in and remember that life is short" while thanking them for their continued support. "You don't always get to choose your destiny and you don't always get to choose your future, but be an undeniable force that lives and breathes," he said in the video post. "[Take] that thing that you claim that you love and are, and really do it. If it makes you happy, really do it." A U.S. release date forPoisonhas not yet been announced. Read the original article onPeople

Tim Roth Opens Up About Making 'Poignant' Film About Bereavement Months Before His Son Cormac's Death from Cancer at Age 25

Tim Roth Opens Up About Making 'Poignant' Film About Bereavement Months Before His Son Cormac's Death from Cancer at Age 25 Nivi...

 

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