Sean “Diddy” Combs sued NBC Wednesday for broadcasting “an outrageous set of fresh lies” in a documentary — where the accused sexual predator is allegedly branded a “monster” with “a lot of similarities” to disgraced financier Jeffrey Epstein.
The defamation suit claims that NBC’s parent company and the production company Ample “shamelessly” capitalized on the public’s “insatiable appetite” for Combs content by airing alleged “conspiracy theories” about the fallen rap kingpin in its “Diddy: The Making of a Bad Boy” film released on Peacock last month.
The “Diddy: Making Of a Bad Boy” documentary was released in January, while Combs is awaiting trial. PEACOCKThe doc “falsely, recklessly, and maliciously” accuses Combs, 55, of “murdering” his ex-girlfriend Kimberly Porter, Brooklyn hip-hop legend Christopher Wallace — also known as “Biggie Smalls” or “The Notorious B.I.G.” — and others, the suit filed in Manhattan Supreme Court alleges.
The flick “assumes that Mr. Combs has committed numerous heinous crimes, including serial murder, rape of minors, and sex trafficking of minors, and attempts to crudely psychologize him,” Combs’ lawyers wrote.
“It maliciously and baselessly jumps to the conclusion that Mr. Combs is a ‘monster’ and ‘an embodiment of Lucifer’ with ‘a lot of similarities’ to Jeffrey Epstein,” the suit adds.
The documentary “features YouTube channel clips from a known conspiracy theorist,” and “shamelessly advances conspiracy theories that lack any foundation in reality, repeatedly insinuating that Mr. Combs is a serial killer because it cannot be a ‘coincidence’ that multiple people in Mr. Combs’ orbit have died,” the suit claims.
Combs has pleaded not guilty to racketeering and sex trafficking charges in a federal indictment. WireImageThe lawsuit, first reported on by Page Six, asks for the jailed multi-millionaire hip hop impresario to receive a whopping $100 million in damages.
The film was released as Combs is being held without bail in a Brooklyn lockup after pleading not guilty to federal racketeering and sex trafficking charges in a bombshell indictment accusing him of a decades-long alleged reign of sexual terror.
Prosecutors have dubbed the music mogul, fashion and spirits entrepreneur a “serial abuser” for allegedly forcing women into days-long drugged-up sexual performances, which he called “freak-offs.”
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Combs is being held at Brooklyn’s Metropolitan Detention Center. Getty ImagesHe’s also accused of several assaults — including punching and kicking his ex-girlfriend Cassie Ventura in a violent attack caught on camera — and dangling one of his alleged victims over an apartment balcony.
Combs’ lawyer, Erica Wolff, claimed Wednesday that the Peacock doc comes “at the expense of Mr. Combs’s right to a fair trial.”
“Mr. Combs brings this lawsuit to hold Defendants accountable for the extraordinary damage their reckless statements have caused,” Wolff said in a statement.
Reps for NBC and Ample could not immediately be reached for comment.






