The music world is reeling from fresh allegations against Sean “Diddy” Combs, as singer Jaguar Wright claims he gave his ex, Kim Porter, a sexually transmitted disease that led to her 2018 death, covered up as pneumonia. Wright, known for her unfiltered takes on industry abuse, alleges Diddy’s “freak-off” parties weren’t just wild gatherings—they were a vector for HIV, infecting rappers like Meek Mill and Soulja Boy in coerced encounters. Backed by a bodyguard’s domestic violence account, a friend’s eerie tale of Kim’s final days, and a suspiciously swapped coroner, the claims paint a portrait of a mogul who allegedly wielded power to silence and harm. As Diddy awaits trial on sex trafficking charges, these accusations demand scrutiny of a hidden epidemic in hip-hop.
Jaguar Wright, 47, has long been a thorn in Hollywood’s side, calling out exploitation with raw honesty. In a December 2024 interview with Street Life Productions, she didn’t hold back. “Diddy’s been harmful for 30 years,” she said, accusing him of knowingly spreading HIV at his infamous parties. Wright claims Diddy, aware of his diagnosis, forced young artists into non-consensual acts, leaving them scarred and infected. She names Meek Mill and Soulja Boy, alleging tapes from a private gathering showed Soulja “ran through quite a bit,” explaining his sensitivity to similar rumors. “He’s a victim,” Wright said, urging compassion for survivors of Diddy’s alleged predation.

The allegations hit hardest with Kim Porter, Diddy’s ex and mother of three of his children. Porter died on November 15, 2018, at 47, ruled a pneumonia death by the Los Angeles County coroner. But Wright claims it was an STD from Diddy, contracted during freak-offs Porter wanted no part of. Diddy allegedly abused her, forcing surgeries to hide bruises, and even offered her up in satanic rituals. Porter’s friend Sahara, speaking to Vanessa Barger in 2024, described Kim’s eerie final days. They planned a Palm Springs trip, but Kim canceled for Turks and Caicos with Diddy. “Something about her was off,” Sahara said. Kim’s voice turned “guttural,” like she was possessed. Days later, she was dead.
Sahara’s account raises red flags. Kim, healthy and vibrant, suddenly grew distant and ill after the trip. “She had this crazy flu,” Sahara recalled, noting Kim’s melodic voice gone hoarse. A text read, “Kimberly, down,” days before her death. The coroner’s initial ruling was homicide with toxins detected, but he was replaced, and the final report—two weeks later—cited pneumonia. “Determining pneumonia shouldn’t take that long,” a source told TMZ in 2018, fueling early suspicions. Wright ties it to Diddy’s HIV, claiming he infected Porter amid freak-offs where she “felt sorry for Cassie,” knowing the hell she’d endure.
Diddy’s bodyguard, Gene Deal, adds fuel with a 1990s DV incident. Kim fought back during an attack, slashing Diddy’s wrist with a corkscrew, nearly hitting an artery. “She caught him defending herself,” Deal said. Diddy, bandaged, became “hooked” on pain meds. Deal claims Diddy broke Kim’s nose on a yacht, requiring surgeries. “Better her than me,” Kim allegedly said of Cassie, ride-or-die despite hating Diddy’s “dark energy” at her funeral.

Wright’s claims extend to Diddy’s HIV spreading through the industry. She alleges he infected Meek Mill and Soulja Boy, citing a pool video where Diddy praised Meek as a “good boy toy.” A leaked email from a Kim Porter book publisher mentions “Diddy giving Usher an STD” and “gay relationships.” Usher, who lived with Diddy at 14, faced a 2017 lawsuit from a woman claiming he exposed her to herpes, diagnosed in 2009. Rumors tie it to Diddy, who allegedly shared a bed with teen Usher. Wright says she knows “20 men” with HIV, their records proving it.
Public reaction is divided. Fans decry the “convenient” pneumonia ruling, noting Diddy’s weight loss in court suggested illness. “If she was sick, she’d be in the hospital,” one X user wrote. Skeptics dismiss Wright as unreliable, citing her legal troubles, including a lawsuit accusing her of aiding Diddy’s trafficking. But her specificity—naming victims, describing tapes—lends weight. Deal’s DV story and Sahara’s possession tale evoke Hollywood’s dark side, echoing Cassie Ventura’s settled abuse case.
Diddy’s team denies the claims, calling them “baseless.” No medical records or toxicology confirm STDs in Porter’s death, and the coroner swap remains unexplained. Yet, with Diddy’s May 2025 trial looming on trafficking and assault, these allegations amplify the narrative of a predator protected by power. Porter’s loyalty, Sahara says, kept her silent, but her death’s timing—amid Diddy’s freak-off empire—screams cover-up.
Wright’s exposé, like Deal’s and Sahara’s, forces a reckoning. If true, Diddy’s HIV spread wasn’t just personal—it was a public health crisis in hip-hop. Porter’s death, once a quiet tragedy, now looks like a silenced scream. As fans demand answers, one thing is clear: the music industry’s secrets are rotting from the inside, and Jaguar Wright’s voice won’t let them stay buried.