Yung Miami Accused of Being Diddy's Drug Mule in Lawsuit
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Celebrity

According to amended court documents filed by producer Lil Rod, the 'F**k Dat N***a' raptress was also paid monthly to be the Bad Boy Records founder's 'mistress.'

AceShowbiz - Yung Miami has been named in Sean "P. Diddy" Combs lawsuit. The one-half of City Girls has been accused of being the hip-hop mogul's drug mule and sex worker in an amended lawsuit by producer Rodney "Lil Rod" Jones.

On Monday, March 25, Lil Rod amended the lawsuit which he first filed against Diddy in February. According to XXL which obtained the documents on Wednesday, Lil Rod added an additional 25 pages of information to the lengthy filing.

In the updated suit, Lil Rod goes into detail about Diddy's alleged love for "pink cocaine," which is a synthetic drug made up of "a combination of pink food coloring, strawberry flavoring, ketamine, caffeine, and MDMA." It's also commonly referred to as "tuci" or "tusi."

"Plaintiff and the Combs Rico Enterprise were rehearsing for 'Something in the Westival' in Virginia," the court filing reads. "Plaintiff Jones personally witnessed Mr. Combs do a few lines of coke in his dressing room. Defendant Sean Combs wanted tuci but Brendan forgot it, so Defendant Kristina Khorram called Yung Miami. Who then brought it on the private jet from Miami."

The allegation did not stop there. In the amended lawsuit, Lil Rod also accuses Yung Miami of accepting monthly payments from Diddy in exchange for sex work. According to Lil Rod, the raptress along with multiple other women were "paid a monthly fee to work as Mr. Combs' sex workers."

Other women named as the "sex workers" were wellness coach Jade Ramey and 50 Cent's ex-girlfriend and baby mama Daphne Joy. Lil Rod additionally accuses Cuba Gooding Jr. of sexual assault in the new court docs.

Diddy has previously vehemently denied the allegations by Lil Rod. "Lil Rod is nothing more than a liar who filed a $30 million lawsuit shamelessly looking for an undeserved payday," his attorney Shawn Holley said in a statement back in February. "His reckless name-dropping about events that are pure fiction and simply did not happen is nothing more than a transparent attempt to garner headlines."

Recently, Diddy's homes in Miami and Los Angeles were raided by Homeland Security. Following the Monday raids, his attorney Aaron Dyer released a statement condemning "gross overuse of military-level force" and "excessive show of force" during the raids, emphasizing that Diddy's children and employees were treated in a hostile manner. He affirmed that the rapper was not detained but cooperated with authorities.

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