The allegations against Diddy keep mounting as former assistant Capricorn Clark steps forward with shocking accusations in the Netflix docuseries Sean Combs: The Reckoning.
Clark, who worked for the hip-hop mogul from 2004 to 2012, recounts a disturbing encounter from her very first day—an incident she says she kept buried for almost 20 years.
“I know you Puff. I know you hide things well. I know you bury things well. I know you lie well,” Clark says in the documentary.
She continued, “You didn’t think I would ever get to the point of telling people what you’ve done.”
Clark said she began her job as Diddy’s personal assistant in April 2004.
“My first day started off cool and it got interesting over the course of the day,” she recalled. Diddy spent the day showing her the basics, telling her, “You’ll take notes, you’ll go with me in meetings, you’ll make sure my food is ready in the morning.”
But according to Clark, everything shifted that night when Diddy took her to Central Park with his head of security. “He said, ‘Cap, I wanna talk to you about a couple of things,'” she explained.
At some point, Clark says Diddy discovered she had a personal link to Suge Knight through Knight’s child’s mother, who is still her best friend. The connection reportedly sent him into panic mode. According to Clark, Diddy told her, “Hey, I didn’t know you had anything to do with Suge. Like if something happens, I’m gonna have to kill you.”
She claimed he even detailed how it would happen: “You will be in a dark park and there will be no one around. If this shit goes left… and I’m telling you, I’m telling you. Like, we’re just gonna do it like this so you really understand.”
Clark said she never reported the threat. “I never told anyone. I never called the police. Anybody else would’ve said, ‘Puff Daddy told me he’s gonna kill me in the park.’ I think his trust came from that.”
She explained that her upbringing—growing up around addicts and intense personalities, especially her mother who struggled with cocaine addiction—made her more accustomed to “chaos,” which she felt mirrored Diddy’s behavior. Clark also described Diddy as “a disorganized chaos that I understood.”
Despite the terrifying first encounter, Clark stayed on his team for years, eventually rising to global brand director from 2008 to 2012.
Reflecting on her time working with him, Clark claimed Diddy excelled at “mental games,” adding that he was skilled at “getting up under your skin […] attacking your fears and he’s very good at retaliation.”
Diddy has not addressed Clark’s specific allegations. His legal team has broadly denied the claims made throughout the docuseries.
