
Amy Robach & T.J. Holmes present: Aubrey O’Day, Covering the Diddy Trial
Capricorn Clark...It's Complicated
Thu, 29 May 2025
Capricorn Clark corroborated much of Cassie's testimony, and then some! From an alleged kidnapping, to being threatened with murder, Capricorn told the jury what it was like to work for Diddy. But did his former assistant hold back? Aubrey offers her take on the power player who went from being Diddy's gatekeeper to calling him 'The Devil.'See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Chapter 1: What insights did Capricorn Clark provide during the Diddy Trial?
Her story and what she went through is horrific. Her desire to please Diddy and to be great at her job is exactly as she stated it. From morning until the next morning at 4 a.m., she would work nonstop. Food, water, and your overall mental health was not really ever considered over in that area.
And so it's not like there was any professional setting or professional graces given to the employees there. And she established many things from kidnapping that's going to be playing into the Rico charge. There's violence, weapons, break in, kidnapping, even the rituals of her day one coming from death row. coming from Suge, moving over there. Day one was like Central Park.
And if you ever, you know, play with me, you'll end up dead. Threats of violence, threats of death. And one thing I will say in the music industry, especially in hip hop, a lot of people will threaten death. There's death talking about, you know, talked about a lot in music. And
Not many people take that seriously enough to fall in line and do what's needed to be done for the person that's threatening them. A lot of people will challenge back or will, you know, either make a spectacle of it in order to sell records or they will, you know, whatever they choose to do. It's more of a artistic challenge. presentation than it is a fear.
In these situations that are being testified to, this is direct fear. This is nobody understanding. This is a knowledge from a lot of people now that truly believed that he'd do exactly as he said he would, which tells me that even prior to me being there, that in the 90s,
There has to have been a lot of information that a lot of people were aware of in regards to how dangerous this human could be potentially. Because the threats of being taken out seem to have been very serious to all of these people. They didn't bat an eye and they didn't think it was false bravado.
Capricorn was very interesting because there was always this dynamic of, you know, she there felt like there was a competitive dynamic, like as if there were if there were certain people that she liked. felt were in her way or whatever they're, they're felt in my opinion, this like, uh, you know, just the dislike. So I didn't, I was never on the winning side of that.
Unfortunately, maybe she thought that there was something with me and Diddy or whatever, but I didn't ever get to see the winning sides. There were some times where I got to see like good, good aspects of her personality, but I did notice even in the testimony that She was saying how there were moments where she felt like pushed out by Cassie and even had moments where she disliked her.
Then there's moments where she brought her back in. But on an overall understanding of Capricorn, I was thinking that way more was going to be told. She definitely, in my opinion, kept some things in possibly because they don't pertain or possibly because of other situations legally involved.
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Chapter 2: How did Capricorn's testimony corroborate Cassie's?
He stated that Diddy beat the shit out of that bitch is what the title of the article is. Suge on his podcast, Collect Call with Suge Knight, that he does from prison, talks about why Puffy done what Puffy did or what Puffy do is not a surprise. Everyone knows what it is. I mean, you got to be able... to that type of shit to a woman and to other women, but it's not like it's news.
So basically kind of establishing that everyone knows he was doing this to people all the way back then. Same time he beat the shit out of motherfucking Cassie. This is a quote, not my language. He had an assistant by the name of Capricorn, he continued. He felt Cap was keeping this shit on the low about if she was messing with Cudi or not. Puff beat the shit out of that bitch.
Not only did he beat the shit out of her, it was an Interscope person, an Interscope check that paid her to settle so he wouldn't go to jail.
Does it seem like he's referring to the Central Park incident she discussed? Maybe she just didn't go into as much detail about what at least Suge Knight says happened?
It seems like there came a point where... She couldn't take it anymore. I'm not exactly sure what incident that was, but it sounds like it was so bad that not even Bad Boy or Diddy could put their name anywhere near the check that paid her off, allegedly.
And when I say to you guys that we need a systematic change in the music industry and one man's trial and potential convictions or not is not going to change anything is because I don't know what you guys feel about if what Suge Knight said is true and there is a money trail or other people that are aware of this and can confirm it.
What do you guys feel about a music label, allegedly, picking up the responsibility of... Someone being so beaten that it got to a point where jail time was potentially being considered and the person allegedly involved could not even... pay the person off.
And we know that there's been a whole lot of payments to a whole lot of people, according to a whole lot of civil lawsuits, 80, over 80 or around 80 to be exact so far, allegedly.
For me, what it feels like is like, I don't know, you could potentially, I'm not saying that this was what was done, but I know when we had platinum albums and we're making people millions of dollars, that we were always told we weren't seeing any money because it was being recouped. That's a word that they love to use. Recoup, recoup, recoup. I'll never forget the word.
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Chapter 3: What were the key elements of Capricorn's experiences with Diddy?
And then when it stopped, everyone sunk back and was like, I guess we are just going to still be living in the lie. And then when the investigators came, there was hope. Then people thought that, you know, everybody in the streets had word and talks to whoever they talked to. And it was rumored that the indictment would happen at a certain time and it wasn't happening.
And then all of a sudden it happens. And then, you know, the raid happens, the indictment happens. During that, and then the Cassie video drops, the Cassie video drop allowed a lot of people to feel safer to come forward. But when I tell you that people were very scared, it was a real thing.
If you knew anything about his behavior, if you had any proof of his behavior, if you were there or witnessed or was on the other end of any of his behavior from smaller to very, very large, we're learning. you were scared. I had people literally saying, oh, what is this? What was this bitch scared of? Blah, blah, blah.
Well, watch the Netflix documentary and you'll be able to hear what I was scared of. But the periods of scared, TJ, I mean, I don't know how many pictures of license plates I have on my phone of cars outside my home that I had never seen for months.
At one point, I literally got a knife out of my kitchen and walked outside my gate and just waved it in the air and went to every single car like, listen, you do not live on the street. You have been parked here with your phone up for the past two hours. Who the fuck are you and what is it that you want? Like the paranoia was seeping in.
I would ask my boyfriend at the time, am I being a Karen or is this real? And then there was something that occurred that he called me about Praz from the Fugees. Praz called me at one point and he was like, you might be right to feel like you're in danger. I would go to a hotel for a second. He had inside, he had some type of information that I didn't know about.
And that was the first time that I realized like, oh, okay, so, you know, Maybe I'm not doing the most. It was hard to tell. It was very scary. So when you asked me that, if I see a small thing, like I was trying to protect him, that could be at a state where you don't know what's really going to happen with this man. And then when he gets fully taken out, you now know, okay, I'm safe.
Even when I spoke with Homeland Security, they told me, anything that you say in this interview, you'd have to say on the stand. And there's no we don't get a like edit. What you say is what it is. So if there's something you don't want to say, don't say it because there's no editing and there's no go backs. This is a one time thing. They don't give you any information. They give nobody.
I mean, I asked them, was the story that happened with me true? They could not tell me anything. They made it clear they would never be able to tell me any of that. So when you're talking to them, there's still, even I still had a fear of naming certain people that were around during certain things.
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