In
a
surprising
moment,
Touré
revealed
that
Diddy
once
allegedly
made
sexual
advances
on
a
male
relative
of
his
who
was
his
intern.
In
the
wake
of
the
turbulence
surrounding
Diddy,
writer
and
cultural
critic
Touré
aired
a
new
surprising
allegation
during
an
appearance
on
MSNBC
host
Joy
Reid’s
nightly
show.
As
he
spoke
with
Reid
on
the
Tuesday
episode
of
The
ReidOut
(March
27)
he
began:
“I
was
personally
disturbed
many
years
ago,”
about
the
allegations
against
Diddy
of
sexual
abuse
and
a
burgeoning
sex
trafficking
investigation,
“I
know
this
man
well
enough
to
call
him
and
say,
‘Hey,
I
need
a
favor.’
This
might
have
been
10,
12
years
ago.”
“I
called
him
and
said,
‘Hey,
I
have
a
family
member
who
I
want
you
to
hire
as
an
intern.’
I
have
never
talked
about
this
publicly,”
Touré
explained
before
continuing:
“He
said,
‘Yes.’
And
they
were
flying
around,
on
the
jet,
in
the
house,
whatever.”
He
added:
“And
then
the
internship
stopped
abruptly,
like
three
or
four
months
into
it.
I
spoke
to
my
family
member,
like,
‘What
happened?’
And
they
wouldn’t
say.”
“Years
later,
they
finally
came
out
—
this
is
a
male
—
and
said
that
Puff
had
said,
‘Come
home,
stay
the
night
with
me
or
the
internship
is
over.’
And
they
said,
‘Absolutely
not.’
And
the
internship
ended.
From
there
I
was
like,
‘Oh!
This
is
how
it
goes.’
So
to
hear
that
things
went
even
further
with
potentially,
allegedly,
many
other
people
…
we
feel
like
we’ve
seen
this
coming.”
The
revelation
comes
as
Diddy
is
in
a
whirlwind
of
controversy
thanks
to
another
lawsuit
filed
by
Rodney
“Lil
Rod”
Jones
Jr.
earlier
this
year
accusing
the
Bad
Boy
Records
founder
of
sexual
assault.
Jones
worked
on
Diddy’s
The
Love
Album:
Off
The
Grid.
In
the
documents
of
the
suit,
Jones
alleged
that
Diddy
frequently
engaged
in
unwanted
sexual
contact
and
attempted
to
coerce
him
into
sexual
acts
with
other
men
in
addition
to
other
misdeeds
such
as
spiking
women’s
drinks
and
soliciting
underage
girls.
Diddy
is
also
dealing
with
another
lawsuit
from
a
victim
who
claims
that
he
and
Bad
Boy
Records
president
Harve
Pierre
brought
her
from
Michigan
to
New
Jersey
and
sexually
assaulted
her
when
she
was
17.