Combs contacted Cassie Ventura after 2016 hotel attack: 'Call me now'
After his 2016 caught-on-camera attack on then-girlfriend Cassie Ventura at InterContinental Hotel in Los Angeles, Sean Combs called and messaged her repeatedly but Ventura-ignored most of the communications, according to phone records introduced at trial.
The jury first saw messages arranging the "freak-off" that Ventura testified preceded the violence that was captured on hotel surveillance footage the jury has repeatedly been shown.
The jury next saw phone records that showed Combs made dozens of unanswered phone calls to Ventura following her departure from the hotel. He also messaged her.
"Call me now," one message from Combs demanded. "You gonna abandon me all alone," another message said.
Ventura responded once. "I have a premiere Monday for the biggest thing I have ever done in my life. I have a black eye and a fat lip. You are sick for thinking it's OK to do what you have done," her message read. The premiere in question was for the film "The Perfect Match," in which Ventura starred.
Over the next several hours came more unanswered phone calls from Combs to Ventura, according to records shown to the jury.
The jury saw additional communications that indicated that in the afternoon, Combs' then-chief of staff, Kristina Khorram, intervened. "Just talk to him," she asked Ventura in a message. "Sorry don't want to be in the middle just don't want him to go back over there."
Prosecutors also presented a separate exchange in which Khorram instructed an assistant to "say they had a fun drunk night try to get more info."
The jury has heard and seen Khorram's name repeatedly during trial. Though she hasn't testified and is not charged with a crime, federal prosecutors have portrayed her as a central figure in the alleged racketeering conspiracy with which Combs is charged and that he has denied.
Khorram has been named as a defendant in civil lawsuits against Combs. She denied the allegations contained in the lawsuits in a March 2025 statement which her lawyer has told ABC News still stands.
"For months, horrific accusations have been made about me in various lawsuits regarding my former boss. These false allegations of my involvement are causing irreparable and incalculable damage to my reputation and the emotional well-being of myself and my family. I have never condoned or aided and abetted the sexual assault of anyone. Nor have I ever drugged anyone," Khorram stated.
"The idea that I could be accused of playing a role in - or even being a bystander to - the rape of anyone is beyond upsetting, disturbing, and unthinkable. That is not who I am and my heart goes out to all victims of sexual assault," Khorram's statement continued. "I am confident that the allegations against me will be proven to be untrue."