Northeast
Diddy accuser says she woke up on street with date rape drug in her system after meeting mogul backstage
EXCLUSIVE: A New York woman says she was dosed with a date rape drug and then abandoned on a Manhattan street after attending a Sean “Diddy” Combs concert during a tour with his former group, Diddy-Dirty Money, and getting invited backstage.
The woman, who asked not to be identified amid fears of retaliation from the billionaire mogul, told Fox News Digital she and a friend chatted up a security guard at a Hammerstein Ballroom concert on April 22, 2011, and got to meet the performer before he stepped in front of the crowd.
WATCH ON FOX NATION: WHAT DIDDY DO?
She has hired Long Island attorney Bob Macedonio, who previously represented Combs’ hip-hop rival 50 Cent, to handle her case.
This image, provided by the accuser, shows her, a friend and two other women after she says they were invited backstage at a Diddy concert in New York City on April 22, 2011. (Obtained by Fox News Digital)
“We’re investigating and potentially going to bring action,” Macedonio told Fox News Digital. “We are in the process of obtaining any and all police and medical records and interviewing witnesses.”
Her harrowing story was corroborated by her mother, who said she met her at the hospital in the aftermath of the alleged drugging, but police said they could not find records of the incident.
“One of the girls I was close with was talking to (Combs’) security guard, and she got us backstage to speak to him and hang out,” the accuser told Fox News Digital. “We went down to this room that was covered in balloons and Ciroc from one wall to the other.”
“It taught me a lesson — now I cover my drinks everywhere I go and drink out of the bottle.”
She provided photos from the night in question that share some similarities with archive images taken of Combs on stage during that performance. He has the same haircut and goatee and appears to be wearing the same sunglasses and necklace.
The accuser remembers being taken to the side of the stage, behind the curtain, where people were handing out vodka drinks.
“They handed us a drink, and literally that’s all I remember,” she said. “I heard music, loud noise just coming from the stage, and then don’t remember anything else after that.”
Sean “Diddy” Combs of Diddy-Dirty Money performs at Hammerstein Ballroom in New York City on April 22, 2011. (D Dipasupil/FilmMagic)
DIDDY AND UNNAMED CELEBRITY ACCUSED OF SEXUAL ASSAULT AT AWARDS SHOW PARTY, TREATING VICTIM LIKE ‘PARTY FAVOR’
She woke up on a Manhattan sidewalk, near her parked car, hours later.
“I was like, what the f— happened?” the woman said. Her friend, whom she has since lost touch with, also blacked out, she said. “It’s very traumatizing not to remember.”
The accuser said she tried driving home to suburban Long Island and felt so unwell she called her mother and went to a hospital, where she underwent a sexual assault examination.
Sean “Diddy” Combs gestures at a woman in this image provided by an accuser who says she was invited backstage by the mogul during a 2011 concert at the Hammerstein Ballroom in New York City. (Obtained by Fox News Digital)
Her underwear had been torn open, and she said she later gave it to police as evidence. Although the woman said she spoke with a police officer at the hospital, Suffolk County police said they had no record of it.
Tests found the presence of date rape drugs in her system, she said, but no signs of penetration.
The woman said she found a bunch of unfamiliar numbers added to her phone and tried reaching out to piece together what happened. She called one and a man answered and invited her to Atlantic City, she said. Another picked up, gaslit her and hung up.
“This guy was like, ‘Oh, you were fine,’” she said. “I said, ‘No I was not fine, somebody slipped me something’…Nobody wanted to say anything.”
Sean “Diddy” Combs of Diddy-Dirty Money performs at Hammerstein Ballroom in New York City on April 22, 2011. (D Dipasupil/FilmMagic)
Her lawyer requested her medical records from that night earlier this year, after news of a federal investigation into Combs emerged. However, in a letter, the hospital said her medical documents had been “purged,” “in accordance with state medical record retention requirements.”
A hospital spokesperson said sex assault examination records, also called SAFE or SANE records, are treated and stored differently than general medical records. Macedonio said he planned to have his client request the SANE records specifically.
“I remember getting a phone call… that she woke up, and that she didn’t know where she was or what happened,” the woman’s mother said. “Her underwear was off.”
She raced to the hospital, she said, accompanied her daughter for the SANE exam and said she followed up with police later, although the case went nowhere.
The accuser said she decided to hire a lawyer after federal investigators raided Combs’ mansions in Miami and Los Angeles earlier this year. He has since been arrested on federal sex trafficking charges and is being held without bail. At the same time, he faces a slew of civil lawsuits involving similar allegations.
Sean “Diddy” Combs allegedly drugged and sexually assaulted a minor in a new lawsuit filed Monday. (Getty Images)
“Not knowing what happened to me, that really messes with your brain,” the New York woman told Fox News Digital. “Now, to hear all this stuff that came out, it’s horrific, especially if this man did stuff to younger kids.”
“It taught me a lesson — now I cover my drinks everywhere I go and drink out of the bottle,” she said.
This image repeatedly appears in some of the lawsuits against Sean “Diddy” Combs, described as “an actual exemplary container” allegedly used by Combs and alleged conspirators “to insert GHB into alcoholic drinks.” GHB is a common date rape drug. (Southern District of NY)
Reps for Combs did not immediately respond to a request for comment on the woman’s accusations.
Combs is being held without bail at a jail in Brooklyn on federal sex trafficking and racketeering charges. He pleaded not guilty. The criminal trial is expected to begin on May 5.
Combs is also facing more than a dozen sex assault lawsuits, and attorneys for the victims expect to file many more.
If you or someone you know has been sexually assaulted, please contact the National Sexual Assault Hotline at 1-800-656-HOPE (4673) or go to rainn.org.
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Northeast
Millionaire philanthropist allegedly gunned down by worker in female wig; ambushes Maryland trooper: police
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A 22-year-old assisted living employee accused of disguising himself in long female wigs and executing an 87-year-old millionaire philanthropist he treated nightly, is now also charged with shooting at a Maryland state trooper Tuesday while on the run.
The Montgomery County Department of Police’s Major Crimes Division confirmed during a news conference on Wednesday that Marquis Emilio James, 22, of White Marsh, Maryland, was arrested in connection with the Valentine’s Day homicide of 87-year-old Robert G. Fuller Jr. at the Cogir Potomac Senior Living Facility, and the shooting of a Maryland State Police trooper Tuesday during a traffic stop in West Baltimore.
James, who had been employed as a medication technician at the senior living facility since October, was allegedly seen on surveillance footage entering and exiting through a tampered courtyard door around the time Fuller was fatally shot in the head in his apartment.
Nothing appeared to have been taken from Fuller’s home during the crime, according to Montgomery County Police Chief Marc Yamada.
Robert Fuller Jr., left, gives remarks at the 2017 opening of Veterans Academic Center in Augusta, Me., a project to which he donated. (Joe Phelan/Centralmaine.com)
Investigators later determined the door’s alarm sensor had been disabled in January — on a day when James had been the only person seen using the door.
During a search, folded paper towels used to prop doors open on the day of the murder and again days later, were found by police.
Yamada said that days after Fuller’s death, James was found inside the facility after his shift ended, gave a suspicious explanation to other workers, triggered another exterior door alarm, and fled when a supervisor was going to be notified.
The door he used to exit had also been tampered with, according to authorities.
Marquis James, 22, is charged in connection to the murder and traffic stop shooting. (Montgomery County Police Department)
At about 3:30 a.m. Tuesday, a Maryland State Police trooper pulled over James’ car to conduct a traffic stop after noticing he was missing license plates.
As the trooper approached the car, James, who was driving, suddenly opened the car door and fired two shots, said Maryland State Police Lt. Col. Steve Decerbo.
The bullets narrowly missed the trooper by inches, and he only sustained minor injuries.
“Without a doubt, our Maryland State trooper escaped an outcome that could have ended much differently,” Decerbo said.
Marquis James was allegedly seen on video wearing a long wig. (Montgomery County Police Department)
James immediately drove away, and investigators later recovered a shell casing from the scene that matched ballistic evidence from Fuller’s murder, linking the two cases.
Montgomery County Police, Maryland State Police and the U.S. Marshals took James into custody Wednesday afternoon in Rockville after a brief foot chase.
James is charged in Montgomery County with first-degree murder, which carries a maximum penalty of life in prison.
He is being held without bond, with a court hearing scheduled.
ROBERT CARRADINE, ‘LIZZIE MCGUIRE’ AND ‘REVENGE OF THE NERDS’ STAR, DEAD AT 71
While conducting two search warrants in Baltimore County, investigators recovered “numerous” wigs and a mask, consistent with what appeared to be a disguise in surveillance footage.
Police initially said there was no clear description of the person’s gender or race, adding the suspect seen in the footage could be male or female due to the long wig.
Yamada added police “do not have a good sense of why” James allegedly shot and killed Fuller.
Police Chief Yamada did not reveal a motive for the shootings. (Montgomery County Police Department)
“Upon speaking with him, he said their relationship was very good, and he would never have hurt Mr. Fuller,” he said. “So we’re hopeful that as we get further in … we’re going to get a better sense of what was going on behind the scenes, what types of communications Marquis James had, [and] what he was searching on his electronic devices. We’re hopeful that that’s going to lead us to a better sense of why.”
Yamada would not confirm if James had a criminal record.
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Maine State Rep. Bill Bridgeo, who met Fuller while working as city manager in Augusta, told NBC 4 Washington Fuller was a prominent attorney and a retired Navy Reserve officer.
Bridgeo told the local station Fuller donated millions to the community to build a new YMCA, hospital and expand a high school.
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Boston, MA
Boston police officials dominate the list of highest-paid city workers in 2025 – The Boston Globe
That was more than what every other city department spent on overtime combined, though it was a slight drop from the $103 million the police department spent on overtime in 2024.
High overtime spending inside the police department has long been controversial and a source of frustration for police-reform advocates. Last year’s nine-figure total comes as Mayor Michelle Wu warns of a challenging budget season to come for the city, which is grappling with inflation and the possibility of more federal funding cuts.
In a December letter, Wu told the city council that she instructed city department heads to find ways to cut 2 percent of their budgets in the next fiscal year. She also imposed a delay on new hires. Boston Public Schools Superintendent Mary Skipper has also proposed cutting somewhere between 300 and 400 positions next fiscal year due to budget constraints.
Overall, the city spent about $2.5 billion on employee salaries in 2025, up around 1.5 percent from $2.4 billion in 2024. The city employs roughly 21,000 workers, according to a public dashboard.
In a statement, Emma Pettit, a spokesperson for Wu’s office, attributed the payroll increase to raises, and in some cases, employees receiving retroactive pay, that were part of contracts the city negotiated with its various labor unions.
“We’re grateful to our city employees for their hard work to hold Boston to the highest standard for delivering city services,” Pettit said.
When Wu won her first mayoral race in November 2021, all of the city’s 44 union contracts had expired. Since then, Wu’s office has negotiated new agreements with all of them, and last year, agreed to a one-year contract extension with the Boston Police Patrolmen’s Association, the city’s largest police union.
But as the city heads back to the bargaining table to negotiate extensions or new contracts with others, city leaders should keep cost at the forefront of those conversations, said Steve Poftak, president of the Boston Municipal Research Bureau, a business-backed budget watchdog group.
“As budgets tighten, I’m hopeful that it increases the scrutiny on these collective bargaining agreements,” Poftak said.
The top earner on the city’s payroll last year was Boston Police Captain Timothy Connolly. In addition to his $194,000 base salary, Connolly took home nearly $230,000 in overtime, about $26,000 in undefined “other pay,” and roughly $49,000 as part of a higher-education bonus, for a total of $498,145 in compensation.
Skipper, as BPS superintendent, was the 55th-highest earner among city workers, coming behind 54 members of the police department. She made a total of $378,000 in 2025.
Nearly 300 city employees made more than $300,000 last year. In contrast, Wu made $207,000, though her salary increased to $250,000 this year. More than 1,700 city employees made more than the mayor in 2025.
Larry Calderone, president of the Boston Police Patrolmen’s Association, argued that the high overtime costs in the police department are, in part, a result of understaffing.
The department is short roughly 400 rank-and-file police officers, Calderone said, meaning the department has to pay its staff to work overtime and fill vacant shifts. The average salary for an officer in the BPPA is roughly $195,000, Calderone said.
With several large events approaching, including a Boston-based fan fest around this summer’s World Cup matches and the return of a fleet of tall ships to Boston Harbor, Calderone said most of the members of his union are likely to be working the maximum allowable 90 hours a week.
“We just don’t have the bodies on the street,” he said.
The Boston Police Department and the Boston Police Superior Officers Federation — the union that represents the department’s sergeants, captains, and lieutenants — did not immediately return requests for comment Monday.
Jamarhl Crawford, an activist and former member of the Boston Police Reform Task Force, said while high spending on overtime is not new for the police department, it’s a pressing problem the city should tackle.
The police and fire departments are “essential components of the city and society in general … [and] folks should be getting a fair wage. But it also has to be within fiscal responsibility,” Crawford said.
“In another 10 years,” he continued, “with pensions and everything else, this type of thing can bankrupt the city.”
Niki Griswold can be reached at niki.griswold@globe.com. Follow her @nikigriswold. Yoohyun Jung can be reached at y.jung@globe.com.
Pittsburg, PA
Man’s body found underneath trailer behind former Shop ‘n Save in Carrick
Pittsburgh Police detectives are investigating after a man’s body was found underneath a trailer behind the former Shop ‘n Save store in the city’s Carrick neighborhood.
Pittsburgh Public Safety said late Monday night that detectives from the Violent Crime division responded to the area of Amanda Street and Wynoka Street in Carrick after a man’s body was found around 8:30 p.m.
Public Safety said the man’s body was found underneath a trailer and that he was pronounced dead by medics at the scene.
A photo provided by Pittsburgh Public Safety shows officers surrounding a taped off area and what appears to be a refrigerated trailer parked at the loading dock along Amanda Street behind the former Brownsville Shop n’ Save, which closed its doors last month.
No details surrounding the circumstances of the man’s death were provided by Public Safety, who said that the cause and the manner of the man’s death will be determined by the Allegheny County Medical Examiner’s Office.
The man’s identity has not been released.
Public Safety said the investigation into the man’s death is “ongoing.”
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