Our Terms & Conditions | Our Privacy Policy
Music bosses knew about Diddy. I will expose those who helped him
When Dorothy Carvello read the criminal indictment against Sean “Diddy” Combs, it didn’t come as much of a surprise.
As the only female talent scout at a big-name record label in the late 1980s — a workplace she describes as a “circus mixed with an orgy” — she was employed by some of the executives who went on to propel the hip-hop artist turned producer to global stardom.
Combs, who would become one of the most powerful and wealthy men in the music industry, was last month charged in New York with sex trafficking, prostitution and racketeering. At the same time and in the same district, Carvello was legally pursuing the men who made Combs’s career, accusing them of a “culture of silence” around the
Images are for reference only.Images and contents gathered automatic from google or 3rd party sources.All rights on the images and contents are with their legal original owners.
Comments are closed.