NEW YORK — Hip-hop impresario Sean ''Diddy'' Combs once presided like a prince over his White Parties in the Hamptons, attracting A-list celebrities, gossip columnists and photographers. But at a trial starting Monday, prosecutors will cast the entertainer as a criminal sexual deviant who exploited his fame to abuse women at gatherings held far out of public view.
For over two decades, prosecutors allege, the Bad Boy Records founder used the power and prestige he'd gained in building a hip-hop empire to destroy young lives.
He faces an indictment that includes descriptions of ''Freak Offs,'' drugged-up orgies in which women were forced to have sex with male sex workers while Combs filmed them.
Numerous witnesses have come forward to accuse Combs of terrorizing people into silence by choking, hitting, kicking and dragging them, often by the hair, prosecutors say. Once, the indictment alleges, he even dangled someone from a balcony.
Combs' lawyers contend prosecutors are trying to police consensual sexual activity.
And while Combs, 55, has acknowledged one episode of violence — the caught-on-camera beating of his former girlfriend, R&B singer Cassie — his lawyers say other allegations are false.
Jury selection is scheduled to begin Monday at a federal courthouse in Manhattan. Testimony will likely start the following week.
If convicted on all charges, which include racketeering conspiracy, sex trafficking, and transporting people across state lines to engage in prostitution, Combs faces a possible sentence of decades in prison.