Sean “Diddy” Combs allegedly used a scale to ensure that female guests at his notorious “Freak Off” parties did not weigh more than 140 pounds.
“We would do a weigh-in, if necessary,” a former party planner who worked with the “Act Bad” rapper, 54, in 2004 and 2005 told The Post Tuesday.
“The girls had to be young and hot, so I always had a scale nearby in case I needed to make sure. The number was 140 pounds, but if a girl was really tall, there was a little bit of discretion involved.”
“We would do a weigh-in, if necessary,” a former party planner who worked with the “Act Bad” rapper in 2004 and 2005 told The Post.
Per the female organizer, who asked to remain anonymous, the women had to have “no flab, no cellulite” and not be “overly pierced or tattooed.”
They also could not have short hair and needed to be “young and hot,” the planner claimed.
As for the dress code, female partygoers had to look the part as well.
The organizer said the girls had to be “young and hot.”
The women at Combs’ parties could not be heavily tattooed or pierced or have any cellulite or “flab.”
“No pants. No jeans. No flat shoes. Every girl had to wear a party dress, preferably very short, just enough to cover her butt cheeks, but no longer than mid-thigh,” the event professional told The Post.
“Cleavage showing. And every single one of them had to be wearing stilettos. That one, there was no exception: high stilettos.”
The organizer said she never asked about the girls’ ages.
The female attendees could not have short hair and had to dress sexily.
The party planner claimed she never inquired about the girls’ ages.
“It was don’t ask, don’t tell. At the time, I was really young myself, and I honestly thought that we weren’t asking their age because of drinking laws,” the party thrower claimed.
“I never stayed around for the Freak Offs and had no idea that these girls were expected to have sex with people.”
A woman, who performed at Combs’ 2005 MTV Video Music Awards afterparty, told The Post that she was paid $250 to dance at the event but then offered an extra $1,000 if she wanted to continue dancing at the hip-hop mogul’s home.
“It felt shady,” the performer, who claimed she was just 20 at the time, said, “so I didn’t go. But other girls did, and then really wouldn’t talk about what happened there.”
A woman who performed at the Revolt co-founder’s 2005 VMA afterparty told The Post she was offered an extra $1,000 to continue dancing at Combs’ home.
Combs’ wild afterparties are at the center of his recent indictment.
Through several lawsuits, people have claimed they were drugged, raped and/or sexually assaulted at his “Freak Offs,” which went down after his star-studded parties ended.
The dad of seven‘s attorney previously denied the claims, telling Page Six in a statement: “In court, the truth will prevail: that Mr. Combs has never sexually assaulted anyone — adult or minor, man or woman.”
Combs was arrested on Sept. 16 and charged with racketeering conspiracy, sex trafficking and transportation to engage in prostitution.
The Bad Boy Records founder pleaded not guilty to the charges.
Combs was arrested on Sept. 16 and charged with racketeering conspiracy, sex trafficking and transportation to engage in prostitution.
He is currently behind bars at a Brooklyn, NY, detention center awaiting his trial, which is set to begin on May 5.