Jane Undermines Prosecution with Defiant Testimony and Mixed Messages
Day 20 of the Sean “Diddy” Combs trial saw the prosecution take another serious hit, thanks to its own witness. Jane, testifying under immunity, told the jury she still loves Diddy. Not in the past tense—right now. She even said if he asked her to take him back, she’d walk off the stand. That revelation alone rattled the room, but Jane kept going. She called herself “a beautiful woman,” claimed she didn’t try to be sexy during the alleged abuse because she already was, and said she only endured the infamous “freak offs” to end the night in bed with Diddy.
Defense attorney Jenny Geragos took full advantage. Jane was coaxed into describing sweet moments like watching gospel sermons with Diddy and talking about religion afterward. She confirmed her $10,000-a-month rent was still being paid by him. She even admitted to jealousy when Diddy was photographed with other women, saying she felt like a side piece. On top of that, she has a pending $10 million civil suit against him. What started as prosecution testimony ended up sounding like a character reference.
Earlier in the day, the judge blocked the prosecution’s attempt to bring back their psychologist to explain why abuse victims stay with their abusers. That explanation, he said, had already been covered. The court wasn’t interested in hearing a repeat performance.
To make things worse, the defense played recordings of Jane telling Diddy she wanted to “f*** or die trying,” followed by a syrupy exchange in which she embraced being called his “crack pipe.” She then launched into a psychological breakdown of Diddy’s alleged voyeurism and described him as a “cuck” who might be suppressing bisexual curiosity. She even compared their sexual trio with Diddy’s trainer Paul to Jordan, Kobe, and Shaq. Somewhere in all that, Jane paused to tell the court how much she respected Paul’s lovemaking.
Whatever credibility Jane may have brought as a witness is now lost in a whirlwind of mixed signals, romantic nostalgia, and courtroom bravado. The prosecution’s star witness might just have become the defense’s greatest gift.
Podcast (diddy): Play in new window | Download (Duration: 39:31 — 27.1MB)
Subscribe: Apple Podcasts | Spotify | RSS