Sean “Diddy” Combs is facing a new lawsuit amid his arrest.
In a complaint filed on Sept. 24, Texas resident Thalia Graves accused the rapper and a bodyguard she alleged was under Combs’ employment of “violently” raping her in 2001 at a New York City recording studio.
The lawsuit, obtained by E! News, claimed “trauma of the rape came flooding back” to Graves—who is being represented by a team of attorneys, including women’s right lawyer Gloria Allred—last November, when a former boyfriend informed her that Combs and the bodyguard (identified in suit as Joseph “Big Joe” Sherman) had shown him a video of her alleged rape years earlier.
“She felt as if her life had been turned upside down, again, and like the rape had been happening again and again even as she was trying to forget it,” the filing read. “She felt intense fear, anger, and anxiety.
Graves said she was dating an unnamed executive at Combs’ Bad Boy Records at the time of her alleged rape. According to the lawsuit, Combs arranged for himself and Sherman to pick her up for a meeting about her then-boyfriend’s work performance.
On her way to the Bad Boy studio, Graves accepted a drink from the music mogul that caused her “to feel lightheaded, dizzy, and physically weak,” per the suit. Upon her arrival, the complaint alleged Combs led Graves to a private room, where she “began feeling even more woozy and sedated” before losing consciousness.
Graves woke up naked with her hands “tied behind her back with what felt like a plastic grocery bag,” according to the lawsuit. The filing alleged Graves was then “brutally” sexually abused by Combs and Sherman, leading her to lose consciousness again.
E! News has reached out to attorneys for Combs and Sherman but has not heard back. However, Sherman has denied Graves’ allegations to NBC News, telling the outlet that he did not know or rape Graves.
Sherman also said he was only employed by Combs from 1998 to 1999, two years before the alleged assault would have taken place.
Graves’ lawsuit said she left the studio after regaining consciousness and calling a driver her family knew to pick her up. When the driver drove her to a hospital and urged her to get a rape kit, Graves said she was unable to leave the car because she was “shaking and crying hysterically” and “terrified of what Combs would do to her and her family if she reported him,” according to the suit.
Graves said she sustained multiple injuries, including bruising, prolonged bleeding and hemorrhoids. She also suffers from severe depression and post-traumatic stress disorder as a result of the alleged attack, per her lawsuit.
Graves is seeking a jury trial and damages for “all physical injuries, emotional distress, psychological harm, anxiety, humiliation, physical and emotional pain and suffering, family and social disruption, and other harm” she endured in connection to the alleged incident.
Her lawsuit comes a week after Combs was arrested on federal charges of racketeering conspiracy, sex trafficking and transportation to engage in prostitution. In an unsealed indictment, prosecutors accused Combs of arranging, directing and filming women participating in sexual performances with male commercial sex workers—which he allegedly dubbed “Freak Offs.”
Combs has pleaded not guilty to his federal charges.
For a closer look at his recent legal troubles, keep reading.