A former Playboy bunny has claimed that Sean ‘Diddy’ Combs’ sex parties used the same formula as Hugh Hefner’s, but the rapper’s included children and hidden cameras.
Precious Muir sat down with Daily Mail’s The Trial of Diddy podcast to give the inside details behind her experiences at both Diddy’s and Hefner’s alleged sex-filled parties that were full of high-profile celebrities and cameras.
‘The Hugh Hefner parties and the Diddy parties have the same formula,’ Muir said. ‘It’s a lot of naked, half-naked girls. There’s a lot of sex going on.
‘There’s people hooking up. There’s a lot of drug taking and there’s a lot of drinking. And they are so similar in that aspect,’ Muir added.
‘The only difference is I remember seeing children at Diddy’s parties, which I never saw at Hugh Hefner’s house parties. I think he kept them separate.’
Combs, 54, has been locked up at the Metropolitan Detention Center in Brooklyn since pleading not guilty on September 17 to federal sex trafficking charges.
He has been accused of using his ‘power and prestige’ to induce female victims into drugged-up, elaborately produced sexual performances with male sex workers in events dubbed ‘Freak Offs.’
Muir remembers seeing porn stars and celebrities ‘having sex in the grotto and threesomes and licking and touching and all of that stuff’ at Hefner’s party, and even recalled nearly sleeping with a basketball star at the mansion.
‘One of the rooms had a mattress as a floor, and the ceiling was a mirror. So we walked in and as we were going to hook up, we locked the door,’ she said.
Their fun came to an end when someone knocked on the door, which reminded Muir that Hefner, who would later be accused of abuse and rape from his former girlfriends after his death in 2017, had cameras all around the home.
‘And I just went: “Oh my God, what am I doing?” So, I could have ended up having a tape. I could have had footage somewhere going with this very famous athlete, God knows where that would have ended up,’ she said.
Muir said she was ‘aware’ that Diddy had allegedly cameras in his home too, but she ‘never saw them.’
‘His cameras maybe had been a little bit more hidden, but Hugh Hefner’s cameras were very old school, so you could see them,’ she said.
Muir also recalled Diddy having ‘very bad energy.’
‘I felt like his whole aura was off,’ she said. ‘I didn’t get too close to him. He has a very strange inner circle.
‘I don’t think anyone or any one of them speak up to him. They will never say no to him. Imagine we’re in an atmosphere where people don’t say no to you ever.’
Last week, the rapper’s lawyers launched his third bid to get him out of jail as his defense claims he is innocent and sexual encounters were ‘all consensual.’
It is alleged that as part of Diddy’s ‘Freak-Offs,’ the rapper’s associates would allegedly ply victims with drugs to keep them compliant and would make threats against anyone refusing to engage, in claims similar to those made in a civil lawsuit brought by Diddy’s ex-girlfriend Cassie last year.
His team has filed new documents, obtained by DailyMail.com, arguing the music mogul is ‘not a threat to the community’ as he sits behind bars on racketeering and sex trafficking charges.
Diddy’s attorneys also claimed several witnesses actually called Diddy, and not the other way around.
Diddy’s legal team said in the bail application their client is not a flight risk, despite what prosecutors have said.
He also agreed not to contact anymore witnesses and to submit weekly drug tests.
In the appeal, Diddy’s team argued the case has been ‘sensationalized.’
They also claimed that Diddy has proved he is keen to comply by surrendering his passport, selling his private jet and offering up his $48 million home to secure bail.
A source told People that Diddy is not getting any special accommodations at Brooklyn’s Metropolitan Detention Center.
‘He is being treated like any other detainee awaiting trial. As with all public figures in his position, he was placed on suicide watch upon admittance to the facility as a precaution.’
The rapper was accused of six more sexual assaults in lawsuits filed on Monday, including his first alleged underage victim and a man who was working at Macy’s flagship NYC store.
Houston-based attorney Tony Buzbee filed six new lawsuits on behalf of two men and four women on Monday the latest in Comb’s criminal lifestyle since he was indicted last month on sex trafficking and federal racketeering charges.
The two male victims were part of the 120 accusers who recently came forward alleging that the hip-hop mogul sexually assaulted them between 1995 and 2021.
In the suit, one of the men, who was 16 years old at the time, claimed that Combs molested him at the singer’s 1998 white party in the Hamptons. Combs is said to have done so after the boy – who was a year below New York’s age of consent – asked for advice on breaking into the music business.
Combs ordered the boy to drop his pants and proceeded to molest him, the suit alleges. The star is said to have told his alleged victim that such behavior was a rite of passage for aspiring musicians and added: ‘Don’t you want to break into the business?’
He said he complied out of fear.
The other victim, identified as John Doe, claimed he was ‘orally raped’ by Combs in the stockroom of the Macy’s Flagship store in May 2008.
John Doe claimed he was working in the Macy’s concession of Ecko Clothing – a rival to Combs’ clothing line Sean John – and was inside the stockroom when Combs, and three of his bodyguards entered the area.
The man recalled being struck in the back of the neck and when he fell down to the floor – and was on his hands and knees – that is when the alleged assault began.
Combs quipped, ‘Suck my d**k, Ecko,’ as per the lawsuit.
He then continued the sexual act by thrusting his penis into the victim’s mouth.
The suit says that Combs proceeded to ‘forcefully, and brutally, orally rape the plaintiff.
After the alleged assault ended, the victim claimed that Combs and his entourage of bodyguards made threats toward him. Combs remained on the retail floor handing out Sean Jean merchandise ‘as if nothing happened,’ the lawsuit said.