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June 16, 2025 64 mins

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The Sean "Diddy" Combs sex trafficking trial has reached a critical turning point as his defense team's desperate tactics reveal the mounting pressure of a strong prosecution case. This episode dives deep into the failed mistrial attempt over the removal of Juror Number Six—a juror who repeatedly lied about his residence and appeared to have concerning non-verbal exchanges with Diddy during court proceedings.

We examine the curious pattern of behavior from Diddy's defense team, who aggressively attacked Cassie Ventura's testimony for inconsistencies while simultaneously arguing that a juror's inconsistencies should be overlooked. The courtroom drama escalated as Diddy frantically passed sticky notes to his attorneys during arguments over the juror's removal, highlighting the increasing anxiety as his case unravels.

What makes this case particularly fascinating is how the testimony from former assistants is establishing the foundation for RICO charges. Jonathan Perez testified that Diddy used corporate funds during business hours to purchase supplies for alleged "freak-offs"—creating a direct link between the legitimate business enterprise and alleged criminal activities. Meanwhile, Brendan Paul, Diddy's alleged "drug mule" from an affluent background in Shaker Heights, Ohio, is set to testify next. His privileged upbringing and elite education make him an unexpected but potentially devastating witness against Diddy.

The judge has also ruled to admit evidence regarding a secret phone Diddy allegedly concealed, potentially establishing obstruction of justice—another predicate act for RICO charges. We compare elements of this case to R. Kelly's RICO conviction, which resulted in a 30-year sentence based on similar charges of forced labor and bribery, though potentially less extensive than what Diddy faces.

Don't miss our daily coverage as this explosive trial continues to unfold. Subscribe to The Flow Show and join our community for the most insightful analysis of the proceedings as we watch in real-time whether Diddy's empire will crumble under the weight of federal charges.

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Transcript

Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:01):
Uh, it's the flow show no filter.
We back on another manic Monday.
Hope everybody had a greatweekend.
Uh, we about to get into thediddy mess.
We ain't gonna waste no time.
First let me cover my ass no,diddy.

(00:22):
The thoughts, views and opinionsshared on the flow show no
filter are for educational andentertainment purposes only.
I am not a professional, I amjust good.

(00:43):
What is going on, angie?
I see you.
Good morning Breakfast Crew.
As always in the building from7.30 am is when we start.
Monday through Friday.
What a crazy, crazy day.
Hope everybody enjoyed theFather's Day.
I enjoyed mine day.
Hope everybody enjoyed theFather's Day.

(01:06):
I enjoyed mine.
One of the most.
One of my favorite jobs isbeing a father.
Shout out to everybody on thisFather's Day.
Y'all.
Diddy was exploding.
Tinka, what up, lord, what up,what up, what up, janann I see
everybody in here.
Angie, megan, bo what's goingon y'all?

(01:28):
Oh, man, I have phone problems.
Man, I destroyed my phone.
I couldn't sleep last night soI just stayed up and was working
, working, working and I endedup dropping it and then picking
it up and the screen was loosefrom me dropping it and then I

(01:50):
forgot about that.
Later on in the night.
I swung it real quick and Idon't know what I did, but my
screen is black now.
So I got to go to T-Mobiletoday after the show sometime.
But it is all good, I'moperating off the iPad and we'll
go from there.
So Friday was a day we're goingto start with this.

(02:15):
Diddy done.
Filed for another mistrial.
Good morning I dreamer.
Diddy has filed for a frivolousanother frivolous courtroom
mistrial through the court.
What's up, kobe?
Want to know me Like the liveif y'all come in here Y'all?

(02:39):
I don't care what all thelittle mohawk diddies in the
comments saying, or people whosupport Diddy about ain't no
Rico, ain't no evidence, y'all.
If that was the case, why wouldDiddy keep trying all these
stupid ass mistrials?
He a week or two away fromgoing home, if you let the Diddy

(03:03):
supporters say it.
Why would he even want amistrial if he was?
It's been no case.
The prosecution hasn't proventheir case as far as what
they're saying.
What the people who are indenial are saying.
Ain't no RICO, ain't no sextrial.
These are consensual adults.
Yet Diddy keeps asking for amistrial.

(03:27):
That's desperation.
That's somebody who knows,including his legal counsel,
knows he is guilty Y'all.
The judge is admitting thatphone, the secret phone Diddy
had.
The judge is admitting thatevidence.
That's a killer.
We're going to talk about that.

(03:48):
We're going to talk about thefact that Brendan Paul, the drug
mule who was a basketballplayer, who is now flipped
officially and testifyingagainst Diddy, and, of course,
the other assistant, jonathanPerez, laid out Rico and other
things.
We're going to talk about that.

(04:09):
But the drama is this juror andthis mistrial.
So let me pull out the iPad sowe can talk about that first.
But, like I said, don't tell mewhat's happening.
Let the receipts and let me seethe actions.
And if you don't know, did heknow they guilty with these last

(04:31):
minute out of nowhere mistrial?
They want a mistrial.
Yet people are trying to sayain't no case, but they sure
think it's one.
So let's get into this.
Let's talk about this mistrialfirst.
This is ridiculous.

(04:53):
Let's go.
So I'm going to read the actualdocket.
I want to read the actualdocket.
I want to read the actualdocket.
We're going to read this actualdocket, the mistrial docket.

(05:19):
This is crazy y'all.
Diddy is throwing anythingagainst the wall and ain't none
of it sticking?
Ain't none of it sticking.
So let's get it.
Let's read this mistrial.
Yeah, diddy is cooked.
Melissa said Desperate,desperate.
Dear Judge, this is fromDiddy's counsel.

(05:40):
The defense submits this letterin further support of his
vigorous opposition to strikingjuror number six.
A black man, mr Combs, will besubstantially prejudiced by the
dismissal of this juror and,because there is no factual
basis to remove him, the courtlacks discretion to do so.

(06:01):
Moreover, if supposedinconsistencies in his answers
to the court's questions weretruly of concern, then they got
a whole lot redacted, so I don'tknow what they said there.
They got it blacked out.
If the court strikes juror six,we respectfully request that a
mistrial be declared.

(06:22):
Let me stop right there.
So they're going to ask thejudge who is making the final
decision on even removing jurornumber six.
They're going to ask that samejudge to.
Not only he's making decisionsto remove the juror, but because
of his decision right now, theyimmediately want him to say

(06:44):
okay, here, here, I'm going tomove him to jury number six.
And then, yes, this is amistrial, come on, y'all.
This is a mistrial.
But the same judge who isruling that juryor number six
needs to be removed.

(07:05):
Five seconds later you want himto declare a mistrial based off
his own fresh decision.
Y'all.
This is desperate.
This is desperate.
So anyway, uh.
It goes on to say we understandthat the court has refused to
find any discriminatory motivein the government's actions with

(07:29):
respects to its preemptorystrikes on this motion.
However, we respectfully andregrettably disagree.
The government's motion must beevaluated in light of the
entire history of thisinvestigation and prosecution,
not in just isolation,unfortunately.
When considered against thatbackground, it is impossible to

(07:53):
believe that this motion ismerely a good faith attempt to
raise a valid question about thejuror's integrity, rather than
an effort to take advantage ofan opportunity to strike yet
another black male from thejuror.
Race card, race card.
Race card, race card, y'all.

(08:16):
Come on, man.
Now the guy said I'm going tocontinue because there's more to
that, but let's stop rightthere.
The guy lied about where he'sliving.
He admitted he's supposed to beliving in New York but he's
living in New Jersey, which headmitted on his own.

(08:36):
I don't know if he told someother jurors I don't know
exactly how they found out but Ithink he told somebody, or told
another juror, or whatever.
He has inconsistencies.
And then, when he tried toexplain it, there were more
inconsistencies.
He said he moved back to NewYork, but then he lives with his
girlfriend.
All kind of inconsistencies,but, like they say, it ain't no

(09:01):
fun when the rabbit get the gun.
Because check this out, rememberBana, remember how the defense
tried to well tore her apartbecause of inconsistencies.
But yet this juror hasinconsistencies and they're not

(09:24):
tearing him apart.
I mean they want to keep himdespite his inconsistencies and
they're not tearing him apart.
I mean they want to keep himdespite his inconsistencies.
But Banner, the one who gotdangled allegedly over a balcony
, the defense tore her apart andwanted her own testimony thrown
out because of inconsistencies.
But now, because they want thisblack juror who has allegedly

(09:47):
been nodding in agreement withDiddy and him, and Diddy had
their own little thing going Nowall of a sudden,
inconsistencies are the badthing.
Ain't that convenient?
This is crazy.
So let's go on.
Let's crazy, so let's go on.
Let's go on, let's go on.

(10:08):
They say letter A this is part Aof their motion, their bullshit
motion.
There is no valid basis todismiss the juror.
To begin with, as the courtnoted during the morning session
on Friday, it does not havediscretion to remove a juror
where there's a bias in theremoval of the juror or where

(10:30):
there would be prejudice to thedefendant, with prejudice
meaning that the discharge iswithout factual support or for a
legal irrelevant reason.
Here there will be significantbias and prejudice to the
defendant and there is nofactual support for dismissing
the juror.
First, there is no question, mrCombs would be severely

(10:53):
prejudiced if the juror inquestion were removed and
replaced by the first alternate.
We have previously pointed outthat this juror is one of the
only two black men on the jury,but it should also be noted that
he is the juror who is perhapsmost similar to Mr Combs in

(11:13):
other important ways.
He is a black man, blackity,black.
They keep, they keep doing, andthis is Diddy.
Let me stop right there.
We're going to get through thismotion because we need to read.
All this is important.
This is another desperatemistrial.
I want to give you all thisinformation.
But check this out.

(11:34):
See, diddy told on his own selfhe had a little vibe going on
with this juror, going on withthis juror, and what happened
was it went from little bittysignals, little bitty
non-verbals.
It went from that and then itprogressed to just did.

(11:54):
He got so comfortable.
Y'all know he, y'all know he.
He don't obey no rules.
He haven't obeyed rules sincehe was in, even locked up, he'd
been breaking rules but it gotto the point where him and the
juror just nodding and shakingtheir head, they got comfortable

(12:15):
and got caught.
Furthermore, y'all making itlook shady that y'all are going
so hard for this juror.
Like what is so special aboutthis juror?
In most cases when a juror getsremoved, they just move on to
the alternate.
They don't spend all this timeand all these resources and

(12:36):
mistrial filings and all of thatover one juror being removed,
what you think they gotalternates for.
So this is really making itlook shady.
They don't even realize, likethat's what they have alternates
for Other than that.
What the hell are they for?

(13:08):
But y'all want this juror sobad.
I told y'all on Friday if y'allsaw my breakdown.
Oh no, actually I dropped it onSaturday.
On Saturday I did a breakdownof this man.
Diddy was handing his lawyerssticky notes like Uno cards.
Like everybody, he had BrianSteele, he writing down stuff
for Brian Steele to say, theother lawyer, donaldson, and
every lawyer.
Diddy had every lawyer talkingon his behalf trying to save

(13:32):
this juror.
Diddy was visibly shaking hishead.
He threw his hands down whenthe judge said I'm sorry this
juror going to have kick rocksand flip-flops with no socks.
This screams.

(13:54):
Something was up.
I don't know, I'm justspeculating, I don't know what,
but I know this juror and Diddyhad a thing and Diddy is pissed,
he was having a virtualmeltdown.
And then he had all his lawyers, one by one, speaking for the

(14:18):
jurors on trial.
Diddy, you got a case to fight.
You think y'allall he fightingfor one juror?
Let y'all tell it, some ofy'all Diddy apologists.
Ain't no case.
Do this sound like somebody whodon't think it's a case?
Do this sound like Somebody who?

(14:42):
There's no Rico been proven.
Y'all better wake up.
Y'all better wake up.
They are fighting for theirlife over one juror.
It's like eight men, four women, very diverse.

(15:04):
I don't know, but let'scontinue.
As the opening statements andthe witness's testimony have
revealed, the principal disputebetween the party is whether
Cassie Ventura and Janewillingly participated in the
sexual activity at issue duringtheir relationships and Mr Combs

(15:25):
for their own reasons andbecause they chose to do so, or
whether, as the governmentclaims, they were coerced.
The fairness of the trialdepends in part of having jurors
with backgrounds similar to MrCombs, you know, share their
perspective on evidence withother jurors from diverse
backgrounds during deliberations.
Removing this particular jurorwould deprive Mr Combs of the

(15:50):
important perspective and it isno answer to simply say there
that there are other blackjurors or other male, other
males on the juror.
So the fact that there areblack jurors, the fact that
they're majority men, theysaying that, don't matter.
Second, there is no factualsupport for the government's

(16:13):
position or, respectively, thecourt statements Friday
afternoon, which were in starkconflict with the court's
apparent recognition Fridaymorning that the purported
inconsistencies were likelycompletely benign.
As we explained at length inour letter on June 12th on this

(16:34):
topic, there were no materialinconsistencies with respect to
anything juror number six saidand in June or June 9th, and the
juror's willingness to performhis public service and his civic
duty should be considered apositive rather than a negative.
There is no evidence whatsoeverthat he had an agenda or a bias

(16:56):
in favor of either party and nolegitimate reason to jump to
that conclusion.
Reason to jump to thatconclusion Indeed, the court had
an opportunity to assess thejuror's demeanor not only during
the interview but also atcloser proximity in the robing
room during the two interviewson June 9th.

(17:22):
The court never suggested at thetime or at any time before
Friday afternoon that it had anyreason to doubt that the juror
was doing his best to beforthright and honest with the
court.
During Friday morning session,after having reviewed both
parties' submissions, includingthe government's lengthy quotes

(17:44):
from the relevant transcripts,the court indicated it was
inclined to agree that there wasan insufficient basis to find
that jury was being deceitful,and intentionally so, as the
government charged.
And so the defense's submissionis really that the answers,
given the nature of the inquiryboth in jury selection and

(18:06):
during the current process, wasvague enough so that the answers
could easily be reconciled witheach other and the subject
matter of what was beingaddressed is so far afield from
the juror's performance of dutythat it's not a reason to remove
the juror.
They basically saying theyshould commend the juror for

(18:29):
handling his civic duty and itdon't matter about the
inconsistencies.
They just putting it togetherin word salad and making it just
sound like mumbo jumbo, but ina sense they saying look past
the inconsistencies and heshould be rewarded because he's

(18:49):
serving his civic duty.
It goes on to say the realquestion from the government as
to the reason why the jurorsshould be removed is because if
you take the interferenceagainst the juror's credibility,
there is a view that if youcan't reconcile the answers and
the juror was being deceitful,and intentionally so, either in
jury selection or in the robingroom, then what would be the

(19:13):
grounds to disqualify the juror?
And then, finally, they say,for the foregoing reasons, the
court should allow juror numbersix to remain on jury If the
court truly believes hisstatements raise serious
concerns about his ability tofollow instructions, which we
respectfully submit, would be anunfair and unsupportive

(19:34):
conclusion Based on what we'reat.
We're at worse impreciseanswers to the court's.
Then fairness.
Then they got a lot of stuffredacted to the court's.
Then, fairness, then they got alot of stuff redacted.
Then they say, if the courtdismisses juror number six, the
unfair prejudice from replacinghim with the first alternate at
this late stage of theproceeding warrants a mistrial

(19:55):
respectfully submitted.
Alexandra sapir, y'all.
They are crying, they are.
That sounds like some desperate.
Like Melissa said, to be ajuror you need honesty and
transparency.

(20:16):
Yeah, what's wrong with that?
What's wrong with a littlehonesty and a little
transparency?
And then they act like I'mtelling you this is crazy.
They making it look so if youdidn't think something was up
with that juror.
You think something up now.
If you didn't think it before,you thinking it now.

(20:38):
I don't know.
This is crazy.
Juror number six has caused allhell to break loose and Diddy is
having a virtual meltdown andhe has his legal team having a

(21:00):
meltdown as well.
Did y'all hear that word, saladmalarkey?
So because of all that, theywant to, mistry Tinky says a
mistry is reaching, reaching,reaching, reaching, reaching.
I mean, come on, just say thatDiddy has something going on

(21:24):
with this juror and we need himback.
We was counting on that.
Everybody's losing control.
The legal defense, diddy, and Ibet you it's pissing the judge
off.
I bet you it's pissing thejudge off.
I told you that Diddy and themwas going to piss this judge off
eventually and they're doing it.

(21:48):
They got to.
Why would he?
Why would the judge make aruling and then immediately call
it a mistrial based on his ownruling?
Right then and there, like you,don't even have to be a legal
analyst to understand how crazythat sounds.

(22:09):
So the judge himself, he tookhis time on this ruling.
Think about this.
Y'all Remember he waited thewhole week, all the way from
starting, basically Monday,monday, tuesday.
He waited all the way tillFriday evening, the last minute,

(22:33):
thought on it, thought on it,let everybody speak their piece.
I mean, how fair can you be?
And then he comes up with thisruling.
And y'all think he did all thatto come up with this ruling, to
call it a mistrial based on hisown rule.

(22:53):
Make it make sense.
This is desperate and I don'tlike it.
I don't like it.
I don't like it.
I don't like it, but I don'twant to hear nobody else talk
about that.
Ain't no case, because all thepeople involved in the case

(23:17):
think it's a case.
Diddy's lawyers are desperate.
Diddy is desperate.
They have alternates.
What is the big idea, y'all?
But I'm telling you what makesthem.

(23:38):
They already know they werelosing.
But the judge also made anotherruling.
Remember that phone we weretalking about, uh, the phone
that the fed supposedly didn'tfind when they raided and did.
He sent messages from anotherphone, from that phone to
another phone and the, and ithad messages between diddy and

(24:03):
like shady messages between himand christinaorn, saying he
found something and they didn'tget this phone or something to
that effect.
Remember, they want to admitthat as evidence and because
it'll show clear obstruction ofjustice, because Diddy was

(24:23):
supposed to hand over that phoneand he refused to.
Now remember, obstruction ofjustice doesn't mean you have to
actually hold the phone to theend.
The fact that you attempted tohold on to the phone and refused
to give it up, that'sobstruction of justice, right

(24:43):
there.
That could play into the RICO.
That could be one of the RICOcrimes.
Who knows?
That could be part of it.
But the judge ruled that thatis admissible and he just ruled
on that.
So that is why another reasonwhy they are scared and shaking

(25:06):
in their boots they are shakingin their boots.
We got another Flo fan in thebuilding.
Y'all they love to come here.
They don't got nothing else todo.
Hey, look, I'm not even.

(25:27):
It's no need to just ask allthese mistrials.
Ask Diddy and his counsel wherethe Rico is.
Ask Diddy where they at theybegging for mistrials.
If there was no Rico, they'd bea week away from going home.
What you want a mistrial for Ifthere's no Rico?

(25:49):
Like the idiots are saying whodon't know how to critically
think Rico, like the idiots aresaying who don't know how to
critically think, you are a weekor two away from getting your
not guilty.
Since there's no Rico, whywould you even want a mistrial?
If you get a mistrial, you haveto stay in prison, stay in jail
.
You got to wait for anotheryear to get a new trial and all
they're going to do is retry you.

(26:10):
You don't go home, everythingstays as is.
But the idiots who don't knowhow to critically think don't
pay attention and realize ifthere was no Rico, diddy
wouldn't be asking for nomistrial right now.
He a week or two from goinghome.
But he actually knows that.

(26:34):
But he actually knows that.
He actually knows that therewill be a Rico and it feels good
.
Everybody's in shambles.
Even look at the, even look atthe um, even look at the Diddy,
the Diddy people.
They in shambles.
They just over here pushing thecontent out more.

(26:55):
Nobody even cares what theythink at all.
They in shambles.
They type in paragraphs hey,nobody cares about y'all.
The whole Diddy, his littleMohawk Diddies.

(27:15):
They all in shambles, and Ilike it.
They are scrambling, theyarguing with themselves.
They don't have anywhere togather, so all they can do is
follow around the rest of usbecause they don't have a place
to gather, they don't have aplatform, and I love it.
And I love it the more I seethem they don't understand, the

(27:39):
more I see them fuss and fightand argue.
It tickles me so much.
Do y'all remember when itreally, maybe for a second, it
was looking like Diddy had achance, a little bit man?
The trolls were happy and theywere so confident.
And now it's all changed.

(28:01):
They are arguing, abusing alltheir caps letters, they being
violent, vulgar.
I love it.
I love it.
I love it.
I love it.
I love it.
It's just more proof you got.
The Diddy's lawyers are inshambles.
His supporters are in shambles.

(28:23):
Diddy is in shambles.
He passing sticky notes allover the place.
I'm sure they had to re-up onmore sticky notes.
And then the Diddy supportersare so dumb they come to a
platform where nobody cares whatthey're saying.
All their comments do is justpush out this content to more

(28:44):
and more people.
They're not.
They're not accomplishinganything by being where they're
not wanted.
Their voices don't matter.
We feel Diddy is guilty as hell.

(29:04):
Diddy is guilty as hell, andthat ain't no troll, ain't
enough capital letters in theworld.
That's going to change that.
But we appreciate theengagement to help continue to
push out this content becausefor some reason, the Diddy
supporters don't have the workethic nor the smarts to build
their own platform so they canpush their message out.

(29:25):
That's too much work and ittakes too much intelligence to
do that.
So they just come help push ourcontent out.
So I love it y'all.
And so another thing BrendanPaul the drug mule.
Remember Brendan Paul, theyoung man who used to play

(29:49):
basketball at Syracuse, went towork for Diddy.
Thought he was just going to bea videographer.
Next thing he know Diddy ishaving him go around with drugs
and turn him into an adult boy,drug boy, drug lord.
Well, he officially flipped andhe will be testifying, probably

(30:15):
monday.
I'm sure he's gonna testify,probably monday.
So check this out, let's get to.
Uh, brendan paul.
He is taking the stand.
This comes from soap central,diddy's alleged drug mule,

(30:37):
brendan paul, to reportedly takethe stand.
And ongoing diddy sextrafficking trial.
Yeah, big, big, big letters.
I mean big letters to overovercompensate for the itty
bitties.
Let's see what it says.
As John Diddy Combs high profilesex trafficking trial enters

(30:57):
its fifth week, the prosecutionplans to bring in new witnesses.
These include Brandon Paul, whoused to work as Combs assistant
and has been called a drug mule, and has been called a drug

(31:18):
mule.
The next court date is June16th, which that is today, ain't
it guys?
Today, people close to the casesay federal prosecutors might
present summary witnesses toback up the written evidence.
They also plan to have Paultestify about his past work with
Diddy.
Have Paul testify about hispast work with Diddy.

(31:39):
This testimony is expected tobe part of the government's
final push to make its case tothe jury.
Brendan Paul once played men'sbasketball for Syracuse
University, served as SeanCombs' personal assistant as
well.
His name hit the news in March2024 when federal agents raided
Combs' home in Los Angeles andMiami.

(32:01):
At the same time that month,police arrested Paul at the
Miami airport.
They charged him with felonycocaine possession.
After they said I got a pop-up.
After they said they found Cokeand Mary Jane in his bags.
But Paul Case took a turn later.

(32:22):
In May 2024, he took a pleadeal through a program that
helps first-time offenders whodidn't commit violent crimes.
His attorney, brian Bieber,later confirmed in December 2024
that the case against Paul hadbeen fully dismissed after he

(32:46):
successfully completed thepre-child program.
Court records indicate thatPaul was released on a $2,500
bond on march 26 2024.
They gave paul a happy meal Ibet you paul.
Before he could get, before hecould get into the actual

(33:07):
precinct, was singing likejustin timberlake Gone Baby,
you're gone.
Remember that old NSYNC song?
He was like I'm gone, diddy,you're gone, you're gone.
Oh, diddy, you're gone, but thetruth remains, you're gone.

(33:34):
So anyway, he flipped and Diddyis panicking.
He literally got caught runningdrugs for Diddy with the drugs
on him, with the drugs on him.

(33:58):
This is why Diddy and hissupporters are in utter shambles
.
How do you talk yourself out ofthis one?
How do you talk yourself out ofthis one?
You are caught red-handed.
You are a business enterprise.

(34:19):
You are not supposed to haveyour employees getting on planes
with drugs.
That can get you caught up in arecall.
That's why everybody inshambles remember when it was
going good man them Diddysupporters were happy and

(34:41):
confidently talking about Diddycoming home.
You don't see that Diddy cominghome, no more.
You see a bunch of arguing anda bunch of capital letters and a
bunch of four-letter words youknow those Diddy supporters
can't really.
And a bunch of four-letterwords Because you know those
Diddy supporters can't really.
You know they get outside of afour-letter word.
When they start to get to likefive and six-letter words.

(35:02):
It gets shaky for them so theytry to keep it real simple.
But they crying, just likeDiddy's lawyers are crying.
The supporters are crying,everything is crumbling.
You literally have avideographer who everybody's

(35:24):
been saying got drugs for Diddy,ran drugs for Diddy,
transported drugs for Diddy.
He literally was caught redhanded making a run for Diddy.
He literally was caught redhanded making a run for Diddy
and he started singing before hecould even get to the precinct.
They hadn't even got his happymeal yet and he said y'all know

(35:50):
he come from a, you know it'sfamily.
He stay in a million dollarhouse Like Brandon come from
money.
He is from where I'm fromShaker Heights Ohio, same place.
Kid Cudi is from Shaker HeightsOhio.
Them guys at Shaker HeightsOhio.
I was a little rough around theedges Shaker Heights Ohio.

(36:12):
They not going no prison.
I was a little rough around theedges Shaker Heights Ohio they
not going no prison If they toldhim he had to do one week he
telling on Diddy.
Let me tell you a little bitabout Shaker Heights Ohio,
especially the back in the dayShaker Heights Ohio.
Shaker Heights Ohio is one ofthe top school districts.
At one point it was one of thetop school districts in the

(36:33):
nation.
Million dollar homes, schooldistricts.
At one point it was one of thetop school districts in the
nation Million-dollar homes,privileged kids, spoiled kids.
You see kids driving to ShakerSchool with Benz's Porsches at
16 years old, at 16 years oldShaker.

(36:56):
That's why Cuddy took the stand.
He didn't care.
People was like man, snitchesget stitches.
I said y'all don't know aboutShaker Heights Ohio.
Shaker Heights students don'tgive a damn about no snitches
getting stitches.
These kids come from good homes.
They not trying to go to prison.
He may have got influence, butdon't get it twisted.

(37:18):
Brendan Paul is not yourtypical drug dealer.
He got caught up with Diddythinking he was on a real job
and next thing you know Diddyhad him running around with
drugs.
But if you know about ShakerHeights Ohio, it's not a
criminal environment.
It was damn near like BeverlyHills of Cleveland, what Beverly

(37:44):
Hills is to LA.
That's kind of like what ShakerHeights was to Cleveland,
especially back in the day.
It didn't change a little bitto Cleveland, especially back in
the day.
It didn't change a little bit.
Now a little bit.
It's still a great school,diverse, but million-dollar
homes and everything at ShakerHeights.
So you just look at Kid Cudiand Brendan Paul and they're

(38:08):
telling you about Shaker Heights.
I knew Brendan Paul was goingto tell immediately he's a
Shaker kid, he stay right.
They say stay in the articleright now.
He stay at home with his mom.
They stay at home with his mom.
I like that.
The chat.
They are blowing up the numbers.
Man, hey, chat, keep going backand forth with uh benny because

(38:29):
he is shooting.
In a minute we're gonna have acouple hundred people in here
just based off Benny.
Benny is see, that's the thingabout Diddy supporters.
They have no strategy.
They have no, they have thebrain of a goldfish.
They have the brain of agoldfish.
They will put a thousandcomments that nobody cares about

(38:52):
.
You're not going to changeanybody's mind in this chat.
All you are doing is blowing upthe numbers and pushing this
content, which we all say thatDiddy is guilty than a
motherfucker.
Diddy should rot and I'm goingto keep saying that.
As long as Benny want to help uspush this message out, we
appreciate them.
They have no smarts.

(39:13):
Matter of fact, if Diddyhimself could tell y'all himself
, he would say quit leaving allthese stupid ass comments in
here, pushing their content outmore.
If Diddy could tell y'all that,he would tell y'all himself.
He would say go build your ownplatform so y'all can push your

(39:34):
message out, idiots, but y'allwant to come here and blow up
everybody's numbers and pushthis out more to say stuff that
you think anybody in here goingto change their mind.
The message here is Diddy isguilty as hell and we all want

(39:57):
him to go to jail.
And we all appreciate all theDiddy apologists and supporters
who want to come in here andleave their comments, which fall
on deaf ears.
But we appreciate theengagement and chat.
Please keep talking to Bennyand, because y'all are really
doing good with the numbers,keep it up.

(40:22):
But let me give you a littlebackground on Brendan so you can
get an idea on how he is aboutto tell it all.
Brendan Paul, he's going gonnatell more information than he
even gotta tell.
Brendan Paul.
Let's the New York Post.

(40:45):
You know we like to havereceipts.
Listen to Brendan Paul.
Brendan Paul is gonna tell shitthat he ain't even gotta tell.
They don't push got to tell heylook, they don't push lies for
views, they just push views forpeople who lie.
So if I'm lying, why push theseviews out more so, new York

(41:07):
Post, thank you for pushing thiscontent out.
Benny aka Dickie I mean notDickie, dickie, benny, we're
gonna go with his new name,benny, who is brendan paul,
diddy's alleged drug mule whowas arrested at the miami

(41:27):
airport.
Brendan paul is an amateurmusic producer and graduated
from fairmount state Universityin West Virginia.
He, paul, is originally fromShaker Heights, ohio, one of the

(41:48):
bougiest cities you would everknow.
Why did he would have?
This guy running around withdrugs makes no sense.
It makes no sense at all.
He still resides in that state.
His current address is listedas Chagrin Falls.

(42:09):
Some of the biggest, mostexpensive houses you've ever
known in your whole life comefrom, uh, chagrin falls.
We up to 170 people in herethanks to benny brand.
Y'all shout out to benny brandgoldfish, mr goldfish brand.

(42:29):
Um, he lives with his parents,kurt and and Mary Jo, inside
their $829,000 four-bedroom,six-bathroom home.
Do you think the jury is goingto believe this guy who comes

(42:53):
from a million-dollar home withparents and chagrin falls?
He don't fit the the stereotypeof your average drug dealer.
He ain't from the mean streetsof nowhere.
He privileged, he thought hehad got a real job dealing with
Diddy and Diddy used his starpower and manipulation.

(43:14):
Next thing, you know, this kidfrom the suburbs with the silver
spoon in his mouth is runningaround with cocaine and all
kinds of pills.
Now I'm going to read yousomething else.
You tell me.
Did this sound like somebodywho?
Who going to snitch on Diddy?

(43:35):
Paul attended a private boardingschool in New England, brewster
Academy, for the first threeyears of his high school before
transferring to Hawking High, aprivate school in Ohio.
This guy, this guy, went toschools that cost more.

(43:55):
His high schools and hiselementary schools cost more
than most people's college.
This is who Diddy had runningaround with party, party, party
pills.
Paul went on to play basketballat Syracuse University in New

(44:18):
York.
He played Division I and oncehis basketball career was over,
he became an amateur musicproducer.
During the pandemic he startedmaking beats on his laptop.
He eventually began to producefor Diddy on the Love album,
which was produced in September.

(44:39):
He even posted photos withDiddy in the studio while
working on the album Receipts.
Oh, we, up to 170 something.
Come on, benny, keep bringingit.
Hey, look, c-tuck.
Y'all know C-Tuck is one of myfaithful Clevelanders.
He just told y'all look at this.

(45:00):
Hawken, where Brendan Paul wentto high school.
I mean went to high school.
Hawken looks like a collegecampus.
This guy is rich.
He comes from a rich, wealthyfamily.
He is going to be up therespeaking like a road scholar.

(45:22):
He is going to be up therespeaking like a Rhodes Scholar.
I so appreciate Benny forpushing this content out.
I don't know, but anyway, paullooks so stressed out, y'all

(45:52):
Paul looks so stressed out atthe airport when he was arrested
.
This guy ain't the type of guywho want to be arrested.
He don't want to do fiveminutes in jail.
He don't want to do fiveminutes in jail.
He is going to spill every beanin the pantry, every bean in

(46:16):
the pantry.
He is about to spill every beanin the pantry.
That's why Benny's in shambles,y'all Benny's in shambles.
Brian Steele is in shambles.
Diddy's in shambles.

(46:38):
Diddy's in shambles.
Diddy's whole legal team is inshambles.
The sticky notes are runningout.
Everything is falling.
Sticky note Diddy Is having ameltdown.
Sticky Note Diddy is having ameltdown.
Sticky Note Diddy aka MohawkDiddy aka Itty Bitty, mohawk

(47:02):
Diddy aka Itty Bitty, mohawk.
Sticky Note Diddy Smalls.
By the time this trial is over,diddy's name is going to be
five minutes long.
Right now.
We got him as itty bitty stickynote Mohawk, diddy Smalls.

(47:27):
It's all falling down, benny,and I know it's crushing and I
know you want to see one ofthose freak off tapes and they
just won't allow you.
And I know it hurts to seeDiddy in this position when
y'all thought it was no case afew weeks ago.

(47:50):
It's okay, flo is here for you,because Flo, mr, told you so,
told you so, but everybodydidn't want to listen.
And then Dickie I mean Benny, Iknow this ain't Dickie, this is

(48:10):
Benny.
I got to keep remembering thathe is so unclever.
When he came up with his newnickname, y'all he was so stuck
he still made it rhyme with hisold name.
This ain't Dickie, this isBenny.
Like, try to come with a namethat ain't any, or Benny, or

(48:32):
Licky, or Dickie, slicky, diddy.
I know you want to rhyme itwith Diddy, but it makes it kind
of obvious when your new namerhymes with your old name, dicky
.
And one thing about Dicky orBenny, whatever he's want to
call himself today, he's justlike Diddy, he's delusional.
Whatever he's want to callhimself today, he just like

(48:53):
Diddy, he's delusional.
He thinks he's the smartest guyin the room when it's really
actually the opposite, y'all.
He rhymed his new name with hisold name and if you think it

(49:14):
can't get any worse, jonathanPerez basically laid out Rico on
a silver platter.
Who is Jonathan Perez?
Jonathan Perez is anotherex-assistant of Diddy and guess
what he has in common with allthe other assistants, he had to

(49:38):
quit because it was too much,because it was too much crime
going on.
These people came to Diddy for aregular job and ended up

(50:00):
involved in a recall.
Let me explain this to you.
He testified that Diddy usedhis corporate card business
funds to purchase supplies forthis illegal trifling, horrific

(50:29):
freak-offs.
Ladies and gentlemen, usingyour business enterprise, a
structured organization, usingthat to commit crimes, is the
foundation for RICO, and that'swhat we're dealing with here,

(50:51):
jonathan Perez.
They even asked well, did youdo this on vacation or did you
purchase all these sex toysduring vacation, or was this on
your real, regular time, on theclock, business hours?
And y'all, jonathan Perez, saidyeah, I did this.

(51:14):
This wasn't on vacation, thiswas during business hours.
Like Laura said, listen, bennyBenny's in shambles, dickie
Benny's in shambles, and it'sokay, I expect him to.
I actually would be a littlemore.

(51:38):
He actually would be under myskin if he still showed
confidence.
But what I see is a broken man,a broken Dickie, a broken Benny
, a broken Benny Dickie, a DickyBenny, who, in a rush to

(52:00):
hastily come up with a newnickname, he fucked around and
rhymed it with his old name bymistake.
Ladies and gentlemen, we are onour way to a guilty verdict.
And remember, I told you on ourway to a guilty verdict, and

(52:23):
remember I told you theprosecution had lost a little
momentum for a day or two, butdamn it did.
They come back swinging andthey got Benny all in his itty
bitty feelings.

(52:45):
Jonathan Perez, the ex-assistant, said that they asked him why
he didn't work for Diddy.
He said he wanted to stop along time ago for fear of
something like this happening,of something like this happening
.
Now he's on a federal trialbecause he messed with the wrong
Diddy Diddy Smalls.

(53:06):
Hey, look at Anthony.
Give it to him anthony.
Give it to him anthony.
See, I told you one thing aboutit we got to educate it.

(53:28):
See, these these guys, theseguys.
Um man, look how he spelledanswer y, y'all.
Look at these Diddy supportersy'all.
Let me get it up here before hetry to fix it.
The way he spelled answer justscared me.
Now, you just scared me withthat one, benny.

(53:54):
You spelled answer like aserial killer, like a serial
killer who wrote a note.
I need an answer.
No W.
When you write answer with no W, that's diabolical, you

(54:15):
diabolical, you diabolical.
Hey Benny, hey, y'all, benny isdiabolical.
Hey, I ain't never seen answersspelled without a W, but I
never met a Benny before, or aDickie or whatever.
I never met a Benny before, ora Dickie or whatever.

(54:38):
Anyway, until you know that noW answer threw me off, I was a
little scared.
Somebody said so.
Did R Kelly have financial gainwhen he was just convicted of
his 30-year?
Recall?
R Kelly made all his money offR&B, music and touring.

(55:02):
He didn't make a red cent fromhis RICO.
He profited none from his RICO.
Yet he got 30 years and hisRICO was based on bribery and
forced labor.
Forced labor was merely becausehe threatened to show these

(55:23):
freaky tapes if his women didn'tcomply.
That's forced labor.
Does that sound familiar?
He was convicted of bribery,which these two gave him RICO.
Bribery was because he paidmoney to keep his crimes

(55:44):
concealed, much like Diddy didwhen he paid money for that
hotel video.
See, the problem is people don'tunderstand, once you're in a
Rico, how simple it is.
They don't need to see peoplechained up and duct taped in
mouth and, in a white van, 30people carried off somewhere.

(56:07):
That's not Rico.
They don't have to have 100,000kilos coming over the ocean.
That's not it coming over theocean.
That's not it.
R Kelly, you can look it up.
His Rico was based on forcedlabor and bribery.
The forced labor was simplybecause he threatened to show

(56:30):
freaky tapes.
That was the forced labor.
Bribery was because he paidmoney to keep all the stuff he
was doing with his women to keepit all on the hush hush.
They put those two together andthat equaled 30 years.
Nobody in this chat is going totell me or tell anybody that r

(56:51):
kelly made money off his RICO.
See, I'm going to give youreceipts.
I'm not just going to be onhere blabbing with capital
letters.
I'm going to point to specificcourt rulings in New York in a

(57:13):
federal RICO trial.
These are facts.
R Kelly didn't gain anythingfinancial.
Only thing he gained was 30years in prison, which he is

(57:33):
serving right now.
His forced labor and briberyliterally mirrors Diddy and
Diddy has more than that.
That has been alleged andactually proven in this court
case.
Diddy has a lot that has beenproven, more than just bribery

(57:56):
and forced labor.
And he has a lot that has beenproven, more than just bribery
and forced labor.
And he has way more forcedlabor acts, way more bribery
acts.
R Kelly didn't have anythingremotely close to a violent
gunpoint kidnapping like what'sbeing alleged in this one.

(58:20):
And so, as we ride off into thisguilty verdict, y'all know we
always got to show love and oneof our people.
If you want to subscribe thelink is in the notes, buzzsprout
I'll shout you out.
If you want to be the Diddy, ifyou want to be in the diddy vip

(58:40):
, I'm going to new york.
You know I don't never see anyof the bennies or the dickies in
new york.
I get so much love.
I'll be there covering thiscase, uh, next week sometime,
trying to time it, um.
But one of our faithfullisteners has somebody they want
to shout out.
They say hey, flo, this is ahardworking guy.
Hey, flo, can you maybe give aguy a shout out?

(59:03):
His name is Ronnie.
He's a stalker at Publix Ifrequent.
Super Nice Guy.
I introduced myself to him awhile ago because he's always
went out his way to speak whenhe passed.
We shoot the shit all the time.
Now I just found out that hemakes music.
You know we got love for allthe aspiring musicians.
I was an aspiring rapper at onetime.

(59:24):
Anyway, thought it'd be cool tohelp him Still loving the
content from Mr Told you.
So never change and I'm out.
And his name, ronnie's stagename, is no Genre, so if you see
somebody by the name of noJamra, that's our guy, ronnie
and Bo.
Thank you for that.
We want to shout him out.
We show love to everybodyworking hard and I appreciate

(59:49):
all the listeners on the show.
Diddy done, diddy, done.
Diddy cooked, crock potted,sizzled.
Did he done?
Did he done?
Did he cook Crock-potted,sizzled, flame-broiled,
air-fried?
All of the above.
Thank you for everybody whoreached out to Buzzsprout and

(01:00:10):
let them know that they shouldhave never held the money and
don't do it again, that theyshould have never held the money
and don't do it again.
I hate that some peopleresponded, talking about.
They said I didn't respond andit's like you missed the whole
point.
The point is it should havenever happened.
But I appreciate everybody whoreached out and, like just seen

(01:00:30):
in the comments, we got forcedlabor.
We got forced labor.
Hey, look, angie said.
Flo, don't worry about helpingBenny and Dickie, the remedial
students, we can school them inthe comments.
Yeah, go ahead and school them,angie.
Thank you to everybody.

(01:00:52):
Thank you to Benny for pushingthis out, for getting school,
school.
It's so much schooling going onin these comments I don't know
where to start, but I can sayBenny definitely got his behind
handed to him in the comments.
Much love to everybody.
This is going to be a wild one.

(01:01:14):
I'm going to have to get towork and see what the hell goes
on.
Look out for my update.
Y'all know I'm the king of theditty updates and I will have an
update today as soon assomething needs to be said.
Thank you and much love toeverybody out there.
This has been another great theFlow Show, no Filter podcast.

(01:01:35):
Love y'all.
Everybody in the comments,laura, love you.
Angie, portia, amarie, melissa,trisha, punk Rock Girl
everybody, melody, sybil,everybody who's been to building

(01:02:01):
and thank you for all the superchats.
Shout out to C-Tuck.
Shout out to Kobe1, shinobi,nicole, what's up, how you doing
?
Miss Sunshine, what's up girlLily, what's up, girl Lily,
what's up Lily, orchid and thewhole gang.

(01:02:21):
I appreciate y'all much love.
I will see y'all tomorrow, sametime, same place.
I love y'all, but I'm out.
Lord says I'm out.
Everybody, let's get to mymouth.
Where are my mouths?
Melissa say I'm out, let me getanother.

(01:02:44):
I'm out before we get out ofhere.
Hey look.
Hey look, dickie said this caseFizzes me off.
That's what I like to hear.
Hold on, let me slide this up.
That's what I like to hear.
Hold on, hold on, let me slidethis up, cause that's what I
like to hear.
Hey look, let's leave on thisnote.
Uh, dickie said this casepisses me off.
That's what we like to hear atthe flow show no filter, I'm out

(01:03:06):
.
Love y'all.
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