Kristina Khorram saw six accusers dismiss their claims in a lawsuit against Diddy, leaving only one plaintiff.
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Kristina Khorram has achieved a major legal victory in New York in a thorough sexual abuse lawsuit kidnapped with his boss Diddy.
Allhiphop confirmed that Latasha Forbes, Billie Cummings, Ian Fearon, Amad Jenkins, Laquay Applewhite and Jane Doe voluntarily withdrew allegations against former Bad Boy Records directors.
The move comes after Khorram’s legal team presented evidence that she didn’t start working for Diddy until 2013, with most reported events that allegedly happened after most.
In some of the charges, it was impossible for Khorram to work for Diddy when it happened because she was less than 10 years old.
The initial lawsuit accused Didi of planning decades of sexual misconduct, coercion and physical abuse under the guise of his hip-hop empire.
Several plaintiffs detailed the graphic claims from the mid-1990s to the early 2010s.
Forbes claimed she was 17 years old when Diddy raped her in 1994 in Bad Boy’s Manhattan’s office. Cummings said she was between 14 and 15 in 1995 when she was attacked by the infamous Big Fearon filming while filming, claiming he was forced to have sex on the 19th inside Diddy’s New York Residence in 2003.
Applewhite accused Diddy of groping and beating her on his Miami property in 2004. Jenkins said he was attacked at a Florida launch party held by a bad boy in Florida in the mid-2000s. Jane Doe claims she was drugged and raped for producing a band during her 2010 audition.
Khorram was nominated for allegedly helping to cover up Diddy. The complaints also target Sony, Universal and Warner Music, claiming that the tags ignore red flags and allow his wild behavior to be able to.
There are now six plaintiffs, only Matthews’ charges. She claimed that after a night of drinking, the comb attacked her in Illinois in 2014.
Hallam’s lawyers have filed a motion to dismiss Matthews’ complaint.
They believe that the cited laws do not apply for retroactively, are restrictive regulations and do not cover events outside of New York City.
They also said the document failed to meet the legal threshold for claims for sex trafficking.
If the court approves the motion, Halllam will be removed from the case completely.
Diddy’s own court victory was six times after his July 2 victory, when a jury cleared charges of federal sex trafficking and Rico, but he was found guilty of two counts of traffic charges for prostitution.
His sentence was decided on October 3.