This is the verbatim federal courtroom testimony from the Shaun “Diddy” Combs trial as reported by Inner City Press.

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In a shocking twist no one saw coming, Wendy Williams, the queen of hot topics and the woman they tried to silence, has taken the stand in federal court.

After decades of rumors, suspicions, and relentless industry backlash, Wendy is finally putting it all on record.

Her testimony isn’t just about Diddy.

It’s about a pattern of protection, silence, and systemic abuse in hip hop and entertainment.

From Jay-Z to R. Kelly, from radio blackballing to NDAs, Wendy came armed with dates, quotes, and chilling recollections.

This wasn’t a tabloid segment.

This was a bombshell deposition under oath with everyone listening closely.

What she revealed about Diddy, Jay-Z, and their twisted connections could tear down an entire industry.

Buckle up, because Wendy Williams just turned the courtroom into her purple chair.

When Wendy Williams entered the courtroom, it didn’t feel like a celebrity appearance.

 

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It felt like the arrival of someone who had been buried alive and clawed her way out just to finally tell the truth.

She wasn’t here for headlines or drama.

She was here because, for years, the media tried to silence her with lawsuits, threats, blackballing, and mockery.

Now, all those warnings and rumors she put out on her old radio show were part of a federal investigation.

Wendy sat down, looked directly at the jury, and adjusted her microphone with calm but deliberate pace.

“I was never messy.

I was never bitter.

I was never lying.

I was early.”

Wendy wasted no time reminding the court why she was there — to testify under oath about the behaviors, threats, cover-ups, and patterns she had long accused Shaun “Diddy” Combs of orchestrating.

“When I first started talking about Diddy,” she said, “I wasn’t trying to tear him down.

I was trying to wake people up.”

The courtroom watched as she placed a stack of papers in front of her.

Printouts of old show transcripts, emails from executives, and a timeline of everything Diddy allegedly did to shut her down.

She started in the early 2000s.

He was protected.

Everybody knew it.

You couldn’t talk about Puff without a phone call coming in an hour later.

She detailed moments where station managers warned her, advertisers pulled out of her show, and threats were made in subtle but unmistakable ways.

 

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“You’re doing too much, Wendy,” they’d say.

“You’re going to get hurt, Wendy.”

She described being chased quite literally out of her radio station by the girl group Total, allegedly sent by Diddy himself.

“I said they were broke, and within hours they were waiting for me outside my building.

That’s not coincidence.

That’s coordination.”

Wendy described her career like it was a war zone.

Every time she exposed something about Diddy — from his parties to the way he treated his artists — something in her world would collapse.

A sponsor.

A syndication deal.

A network invite gone.

But she refused to back down.

“You can blackball me.

You can threaten me.

But you can’t erase me.

And now I’m under oath, so I hope they’re listening because I’m not stopping until the truth is loud enough to shut their machine down.”

When the prosecution asked Wendy about the culture surrounding Diddy, she pivoted toward someone else she had long warned the public about — Jay-Z.

Her tone sharpened.

“You can’t talk about what Diddy did without talking about the people who stood next to him, smiled with him while the abuse was happening.

That includes Jay-Z.”

 

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Wendy’s eyes scanned the jury before she leaned in.

“Y’all remember Foxy Brown?

She was 15.

Jay-Z was 27.

And he was everywhere with her.”

She pulled out lyrics from Foxy’s debut album, songs Jay-Z reportedly wrote.

“Ain’t no nump like the one I got.

No one can do me better.”

She read aloud deliberately, and the courtroom recoiled.

“You tell me,” she continued, “why was a grown man writing those lyrics for a child?”

She detailed rumors only someone from the industry could know — Jay-Z picking Foxy up from high school, lavish gifts, shopping sprees, and hair appointments funded by a man almost twice her age.

This wasn’t a label signing.

This was grooming.

Then Wendy dropped something even darker — an alleged tape.

“There was a rumor for years that a tape existed — Jay-Z, Foxy, and Jamie Foxx.

You never heard about it again.

Why?

Because suddenly Foxy’s home was burglarized.

The tape gone.”

 

 

She let the words hang in the air.

Coincidence?

“I think not.”

Wendy said she was fired from her top-rated radio show shortly after suggesting Jay-Z’s relationships with underage girls needed investigation.

“They called me toxic.

But now you’re seeing that everything I asked was worth asking.”

The prosecution asked if she had concrete evidence.

Wendy nodded.

Emails.

Call logs.

Producers who backed out of her show when she brought up Jay’s name.

She told the court Jay-Z’s team made quiet calls to industry insiders to blacklist anyone who spoke about Foxy.

“They turned me into the villain,” she said, “just for asking what any decent person should have asked.”

Then she turned to the jury.

“You think I lost sponsors for being messy?

No.

I lost sponsors because I was right, and they couldn’t let that spread.”

Wendy’s testimony exposed a dark underbelly of power, silence, and manipulation in the entertainment industry.

It was a call for justice and truth long overdue.

And for the first time, the world was listening.

By Star

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