Diddy Pink Cocaine Connects To Liam Payne In New Allegation

By Matthew Swigonski | Published

While Sean “Diddy” Combs has faced an onslaught of new sexual assault allegations in recent weeks, his legal troubles have been stirring for quite some time. In a February 2024 complaint, Rodney “Lil Rod” Jones, a music producer and former videographer for Diddy, alleged that the Bad Boy Records founder sexually harassed him over the course of the pair’s partnership. In his complaint, Jones also alleged that Diddy required all of his employees to carry “pink cocaine,” the same drug cocktail that was reportedly found in the system of Liam Payne following the pop star’s tragic death in Buenos Aires, Argentina.

Diddy And Pink Cocaine

According to his February complaint filed in a federal court in the Southern District of New York, Jones alleges that Diddy drugged him using pink cocaine, a drug that was common for all employees inside Diddy’s enterprise to have on them. Jones says that pink cocaine, also known as “Tuci,” was a requirement for every employee top to bottom, no matter their standing.

Sean “Diddy” Combs

In the complaint obtained by People, Jones says that “all employees, from the butler to the chef to the housekeepers,” needed to “walk around with a pouch or fanny pack filled with cocaine, GHB, ecstasy, marijuana gummies … and Tuci.”

In Jones’ complaint, the plaintiff states that he was in close proximity with Diddy for over a year, traveling and even living with the music mogul. During that time, Jones witnessed Kristina Khorram, chief of staff at Combs Enterprises and co-defendant in the complaint, directly order her assistants to keep Diddy “high” off gummies and pills, and other drugs, including pink cocaine. Jones alleges that Khorram made it a priority to ensure that Diddy had pink cocaine and his other drugs of choice ready at a moment’s notice for his consumption.

Diddy Denies Everything

According to Jones, he has obtained evidence of Diddy’s involvement in the sexual harassment, sexual abuse, and drugging of minors, sex workers, and non-consenting guests of his. In a statement made on Diddy’s behalf, his legal team denied all of the allegations inside Jones’ complaint and accused the producer of simply looking for a payday. “Mr. Jones is nothing more than a con man, shamelessly looking for an easy and wholly undeserved payday,” the statement said.

Liam Payne’s Substance Abuse

Liam Payne

Similar to Diddy’s alleged reliance on drugs like pink cocaine, Payne had also battled through years of addiction, even publicly acknowledging his 100-day stay at a rehab facility in 2023. During his announcement in a July 2023 YouTube video, Payne revealed that he had been in such a “bad place” that he needed time to hit the pause button on life and recover from his dependency on alcohol and other substances, declaring that the “party’s over.

Just 15 months after Payne recorded his announcement, he was killed after falling from his third-story hotel room in Argentina. Immediately after his death, authorities searched his hotel room and found evidence of alcohol and other illegal substances, resulting in an analysis of his blood content. According to the partial autopsy, pink cocaine, cocaine, benzodiazepine, and crack were found in Payne’s system.

According to the National Capital Poison Center, pink cocaine is typically a powdery mix of ketamine and various illegal substances such as methamphetamine, MDMA (also called molly or ecstasy), opioids, and even psychoactive substances. Despite the name, pink cocaine, such as the one Diddy has been accused of favoring, does not usually contain cocaine. In order to achieve the colorful nickname, pink cocaine is mixed with food coloring.

Source: Digital Music News

Loading Comments...
Sort By: