Druski brought records of receipts and time stamps to a court in California to prove that he worked as a waiter in Georgia, rather than a comb party with Sean Diddy, who was accused of sexually assaulting at a 2018 “freakoff” party.
The comedian demanded that his case be abandoned and is seeking sanctions against the plaintiff and his attorneys, saying the allegations are “actually impossible.”
Druski’s legal team submitted phone logs, debit card activity and employment records to show that he was more than 2,000 miles from the alleged incident in Olinda, California.
“Mr. Desbordes’ debit card records show he made a purchase at a gas station in Loganville, Georgia on March 23, 2018,” his attorney David Grossman said. “The plaintiff claimed that Mr. Desbordes started the new job in Olinda, California, and he was referring to the start date of March 25, 2018 at Longhorn Steakhouse.
A lawsuit filed by Ashley Parham and two anonymous women accused Druski of participating in Diddy’s orchestrated violent sexual assault.
Parham claims that several men, including Druski and NFL star Odell Beckham Jr., were drugged, kidnapped and raped at the party hosted by the comb.
The complaint said Druski poured oil or lubricant on Parham and then jumped on her “treat it as a skateboard and slide” before allegedly raped Diddy while watching and recording the bill.
Druski’s lawyers say the claims are wrong and physically impossible.
“He certainly had very little social media as a waiter in a local restaurant, and certainly did not fly across the country with people he didn’t know to attack women he didn’t know, in a small town he had never been to.

The bill also points to the inconsistency in Parham’s original police report, who described the attack by two men who neither matched Druski’s appearance. One of the so-called attackers was described as a “white male adult aged about 35 to 40.”
At the time of the alleged attack, Drusky has not been infamous online yet and still lives with his mother in Duluth, Georgia. His team stressed that he “never met Mr. Combs” or any other defendant in the lawsuit.
Druski asked the court to completely dismiss the claim against him and sought more than $50,000 in legal fees from plaintiffs and their attorneys Ariel Mitchell and Sean Perez as his team called it a “despicable, fabricated” lawsuit.
A hearing on the motion is scheduled for June 17, 2025, ahead of Judge Rita F. Lin in San Francisco.
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