The newly leaked text messages between Cassie Ventura and Sean “Diddy” Combs don’t just expose a toxic relationship—they paint a picture of psychological control and physical destruction that’s left even veteran investigators shaken.
In a series of private texts submitted as evidence in her ongoing legal battle against the music mogul, Cassie details how the infamous “freak off” parties left her disassociated, scarred, and—most disturbingly—convinced her body was no longer her own.
“You kept filming me when I couldn’t even walk,” she wrote in one message. “Do you even remember that night in Atlanta? I blacked out. You didn’t stop.”

The court-confirmed messages—part of a sealed trove now leaking into the public sphere—show a disturbing pattern of emotional manipulation and coercion. In another text, Cassie pleads: “I wake up and I can’t feel my legs sometimes. That’s not sexy. That’s not love.”
The screenshots were verified by two digital forensics experts and are now being dissected across the internet, with fans and media outlets calling them the most damning evidence yet of Diddy’s alleged abuse.
A particularly haunting exchange, dated April 2022, includes this line from Cassie: “My ribs were bruised for days and you said I should be grateful for the attention.”
Public reaction to the messages has been swift and furious.
One viral tweet by @aliciascottfree reads: “This man didn’t just control her—he broke her down cell by cell. This is monstrous.”
According to her legal team, Cassie’s health was so compromised following some of these nights that she required IV rehydration treatments and painkillers for internal bruising. “She was treated like a product,” said her attorney, “not a person.”
Among the messages was a chilling moment where Diddy allegedly responds dismissively to Cassie’s complaints. “Don’t make this dramatic. You said yes.”

The three-word reply—you said yes—has since been blasted across TikTok and Twitter as a symbol of gaslighting and power abuse, with thousands using it in protest posts.
“This isn’t consent,” wrote one post. “It’s survival.”
In the texts, Cassie also describes losing weight rapidly, losing chunks of her hair, and experiencing extreme muscle spasms following some of the nights he arranged. “I couldn’t eat for three days after Paris,” she wrote. “I thought I had a stroke.”
Medical records included in sealed court filings, according to a recent report by Rolling Stone, back up her claims of dehydration, bruising, and physical collapse—all occurring within 24 to 48 hours of “freak off” events.
Diddy’s lawyers argue the texts are “cherry-picked” and taken “out of emotional context,” but the mounting evidence—including videos, hotel logs, and private correspondence—tell a chillingly consistent story.
“He curated these nights like events,” said a former security staffer who testified anonymously last week. “They weren’t spontaneous. They were programmed—down to the drugs, the cameras, the people.”
Cassie’s pain isn’t just visible—it’s visceral.
In a message dated December 2021, she writes: “I look in the mirror and see someone you built. But she’s broken.”
And yet, even in her desperation, there are glimmers of defiance.
“You don’t own me anymore,” she writes in the final message submitted to the court. “Not my body. Not my mind. I’m not yours.”
Now, as public pressure mounts and more disturbing details come to light, questions are swirling not just around Diddy—but around the system that let this go on so long.
How many people knew? How many stayed silent?
And how much damage can one man cause before someone finally says enough?