Diddy Doc: Ex-Assistant Claims He Threatened to Kill Her Over Suge Knight Connection

Clark says Diddy issued a death threat on her first day as his assistant, detailing how it would happen.

Capricorn Clark in a pinstriped outfit and sunglasses stands outside a building. Diddy in a white shirt and sunglasses stands indoors.
(Photo by Adam Gray/Getty Images),(Photo by Prince Williams/WireImage)

The allegations against Diddy continue to escalate as former assistant Capricorn Clark comes forward with explosive claims in the Netflix docuseries Sean Combs: The Reckoning.

Clark, who worked with the music mogul from 2004 to 2012, describes a disturbing incident from her very first day on the job, one she says she kept secret for nearly two decades.

"I know you Puff. I know you hide things well. I know you bury things well. I know you lie well," Clark said in the documentary.

She added, "You didn't think I would ever get to the point of telling people what you've done."

Clark said she began working for Diddy in April 2004, hired as his personal assistant.

"My first day started off cool and it got interesting over the course of the day," she recalled. Diddy spent the day showing her the ropes, telling her, "You'll take notes, you'll go with me in meetings, you'll make sure my food is ready in the morning."

But Clark said the tone shifted dramatically that night when Diddy took her to Central Park along with his head of security. "He said, 'Cap, I wanna talk to you about a couple of things,'" she explains.

At some point, Clark says Diddy learned she had a personal connection to Suge Knight, through Knight's child's mother, who remains Clark's best friend. The association, she said, immediately alarmed him. According to Clark, Diddy told her, "Hey, I didn't know you had anything to do with Suge. Like if something happens, I'm gonna have to kill you."

She alleged he went even further by describing how it would happen: "You will be in a dark park and there will be no one around. If this shit goes left… and I'm telling you, I'm telling you. Like, we're just gonna do it like this so you really understand."

Clark said she never reported the threat, adding, "I never told anyone. I never called the police. Anybody else would've said, 'Puff Daddy told me he's gonna kill me in the park.' I think his trust came from that."

She explained that her ability to cope with intense personalities came from her upbringing, where she had a history of dealing with addicts and intense personalities, mainly her mother, who was addicted to cocaine. Clark also claimed that Diddy "was a disorganized chaos that I understood."

Despite the chilling first encounter, Clark continued to work for Diddy for years, eventually climbing the ranks and becoming his global brand director from 2008 to 2012.

Clark closed out her reflection on her time under his leadership claiming that Diddy was "very good at mental games" and "getting up under your skin [...] attacking your fears and he's very good at retaliation."

Diddy has not publicly responded to the specific claims made by Clark in the documentary. His legal team has broadly denied the allegations presented throughout the series.

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