Sean “Diddy” Combs’ lawyer is on the defensive.
Combs’ lawyer, Marc Agnifilo, spoke recently about the “freak off” accusations against his client along with the 1,000 bottles of baby oil that were seized from his home.
Combs, 54, was taken into police custody earlier this month in New York City and charged with sex trafficking, racketeering and transportation to engage in prostitution.
“I don’t know where the number 1,000 came,” Agnifilo said to TMZ in a preview of their documentary “The Downfall of Diddy: The Indictment,” released Sept. 25. “I can’t imagine it’s thousands.”
When it was confirmed that the number came from the federal document, Agnifilo added that he wasn’t “really sure what the baby oil has to do with anything,” although it’s been suggested during the interview that the baby oil was used as lubrication during orgies.
“I guess,” Agnifilo replied. “I don’t know what you need 1,000 — one bottle of baby oil goes a long way. I don’t know what you’d even need 1,000 for.”
Agnifilo also had an answer as to why he believes Combs had droves of bottles at the ready in the first place.
“He has a big house, he buys in bulk,” Agnifilo claimed. “I think they have Costcos in every place where he has a home.”
“Have you sat in the parking lot of a Costco and see what people walk out of there with?” he added, jokingly.
Agnifilo also called the number of bottles of baby oil into question, saying, “I don’t think it was a thousand. I think it was — let’s just say it’s a lot.”
The subject of Diddy’s “Freak Offs” also came up, where he told TMZ, “They called them ‘freak offs.’ But, you know, when I was a kid in the late ‘70s, they were called threesomes.”
In the federal indictment, obtained by E! News, the “Freak Offs” were described as “elaborate sex performances” where female victims were compelled through “force, threats of force, and coercion, to cause victims to engage in extended sex acts with male commercial sex workers.”
The music mogul was also accused in the document of arranging, directing, masturbating during and often “electronically recording” the Freak Offs, as well as of transporting commercial sex workers “across state lines and internationally.”
“During the Freak Offs, Combs distributed a variety of controlled substances to victims, in part to keep the victims obedient and compliant,” the indictment read, adding the victims and Combs often received IV fluids to recover from the exertion and drug use. “Sometimes unbeknownst to the victims, Combs kept videos he filmed of victims engaging in sex acts with commercial sex workers.”
Regarding the discovery of baby oil, the indictment said, “In or about March 2024, during searches of Combs’ residences in Miami, Florida and Los Angeles, California, law enforcement seized various Freak Off supplies, including narcotics and more than 1,000 bottles of baby oil and lubricant.”