In a bombshell revelation, a guest who attended one of Sean “Diddy” Combs’ infamous “freak off” parties is speaking out about the debauchery she witnessed at the rapper’s Miami mansion. A Saudi prince allegedly invited Tanea Wallace, an aspiring singer-songwriter, and a friend from Los Angeles to the 2018 bash. What she saw there has left her deeply disturbed.
According to Wallace, the late night/early morning gathering was “pretty crazy,” with men and women in various states of undress engaging in sexual activity all around the property. Many attendees appeared to be “intoxicated,” she alleges. “It was so strange,” Wallace tells TMZ chief Harvey Levin in the new documentary “TMZ Presents The Downfall of Diddy: Inside the Freak Offs.” “People [were] just free.”
But perhaps the most alarming detail in Wallace’s account involves the presence of what she describes as “littlepeople”—possibly minors—who were “dressed up like Harajuku Barbies” and being closely monitored by adults.
“I looked to the right of me and in the corner, and I was like, ‘Are those midgets?'” she recalls. “People were avoiding them, as if they were trying to conceal their actions.” Wallace stresses that she couldn’t see exactly what was happening with the smaller guests, but she was deeply unsettled by the sight, saying they “weren’t supposed to be there.”
“It’s a shame,” she responds when pressed on whether the “little people” were underage. The disturbing allegations come on the heels of a federal indictment against Combs that paints a picture of his parties as hubs for sex trafficking, racketeering, and prostitution.
Currently, authorities are holding the 55-year-old music mogul without bail, awaiting his May 2025 trial. Combs’ lawyers have vehemently denied Wallace’s claims, telling The Post that they are “completely and categorically false.”
“Ms. Tanea Wallace has no credibility, and her claims about ‘freakoffs’ and minors are completely and categorically false,” the statement reads. “Mr. Combs has full confidence in the facts and the integrity of the judicial process. The truth will prevail in court: the accusations against Mr. Combs are pure fiction.
Beyond the disturbing allegations about minors, Wallace’s account provides a lurid glimpse into the debauchery allegedly taking place at Combs’ parties. She describes seeing clusters of people having sex, many of whom seemed to be under the influence of drugs or alcohol. “It was so strange. People were just free,” she says, recalling that the party was still raging at 7 a.m.
This isn’t the first time Combs has faced allegations of misconduct related to his “freak-off” parties. The federal indictment against Combs detailed troubling claims that he manipulated alleged victims, plied them with drugs, and sometimes recorded these “violent sex sessions” without their consent.
Following Combs’ arrest, numerous civil lawsuits have surfaced against the rapper, accusing him of decades-long abuse. This includes claims that he raped a 10-year-old boy who was trying to make it as an actor or rapper in 2005, as well as accusations that he drugged and raped a 13-year-old girl at a VMAs afterparty in 2000. Combs’ lawyers have dismissed these legal actions as “clear attempts to garner publicity,” but the growing list of allegations has cast a dark shadow over the music mogul’s legacy.
As Combs awaits his high stakes trial next year, the troubling claims made by Wallace and others have only amplified the need for reckoning. Whether the “truth will prevail,” as Combs’ team insists, remains to be seen. But Diddy’s downfall appears to be ongoing.