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The Latest: Class action lawsuit challenges Trump’s crackdown on student visas

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The Latest: Class action lawsuit challenges Trump’s crackdown on student visas
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News

The Latest: Class action lawsuit challenges Trump’s crackdown on student visas

2025-04-19 07:08 Last Updated At:07:10

Maryland Sen. Chris Van Hollen spoke about his meeting with Kilmar Abrego Garcia, a man who was mistakenly deported to El Salvador.

He read from a U.S. Supreme Court opinion issued this week, ordering the Trump administration to facilitate Abrego Garcia's return, and about protecting the constitutional rights of everyone in the U.S.

More than a thousand students have been stripped of their visas and many are now involved in a class action lawsuit filed Friday. In the case of Rumeysa Ozturk, a Tufts University student detained in Louisiana, a judge ordered she be released immediately or brought to Vermont.

Here's the latest:

Trump heralds tariffs as a way of bringing in revenue, striking back at countries he sees as taking advantage of the U.S. in trade and as a cudgel to push countries to do what he wants.

On April 2 he announced far-reaching new tariffs on nearly all trading partners, only to roll most of them back April 9 after the stock market tanked.

Still, he claims that tariffs, taxes on imported goods, are bringing in billions of dollars a day.

CLAIM: The U.S. is earning $2 billion per day from tariffs.

THE FACTS: That’s false. Trump began raising tariffs in February. That month, about $7.247 billion in customs duties were collected, or $258.82 million per day. In March, the most recent monthly figure available, a total of about $8.168 billion in customs duties was collected, or approximately $263.48 million per day. A customs duty is a type of tariff.

▶ Read more about the facts on tariffs

Centers that closed this week in Washington state due to a lag in federal funding will reopen preschools serving low-income children Monday.

An unexplained delay in funding forced Head Start classrooms serving more than 400 children at Inspire Development Centers in Sunnyside to close Wednesday through Friday, Inspire CEO Jorge Castillo said. More than 70 workers were laid off because the centers could not make payroll.

Castillo said there was no explanation for the disruption, something that had never happened during 42 years of operation. An email arrived Friday from the Department of Health and Human Services saying that funding through the fiscal year ending in November was restored.

Planning for the future remains uncertain, according to Castillo.

The Trump administration has proposed eliminating Head Start, a federally funded early-education program serving more than half a million of the nation’s neediest children. Head Start centers nationwide have received nearly $1 billion less in federal money compared with this time last year.

A federal judge on Friday blocked the Trump administration from enacting a policy that bans the use of “X” markers by many nonbinary people on passports as well as the changing of gender markers.

In an executive order signed in January, the president used a narrow definition of the sexes and rejected the idea that someone can transition from the sex assigned at birth to another gender. The framing is in line with many conservatives’ views but at odds with major medical groups and policies under former President Joe Biden.

U.S. District Judge Julia Kobick sided with the American Civil Liberties Union’s motion for a preliminary injunction, which stays the action while the lawsuit plays out.

She wrote that the government failed to demonstrate that its actions are substantially related to an important governmental interest.

A federal judge on Friday ordered that a Turkish Tufts University student detained by immigration authorities in Louisiana be brought to Vermont by May 1 for a hearing over what her lawyers say was apparent retaliation for an op-ed piece she co-wrote in the student newspaper.

U.S. District Judge William Sessions said he would hear Rumeysa Ozturk’s request to be released from detention. Her lawyers had requested that she be released immediately, or at least brought back to Vermont.

The 30-year-old doctoral student was taken by immigration officials as she walked along a street in the Boston suburb of Somerville on March 25. After being taken to New Hampshire and then Vermont, she was put on a plane the next day and moved to an Immigration and Customs Enforcement detention center in Louisiana.

▶ Read more about the judge’s order

The suit asks a federal court to reinstate the legal status of international students who have been stripped of their visas in a Trump administration crackdown that has left more than a thousand fearful of deportation.

The suit was filed in New Hampshire by several American Civil Liberties Union affiliates.

At schools around the country, students have seen their visas revoked or their legal status terminated, typically with little notice.

At least 1,075 students at 170 colleges, universities and university systems have been affected since late March, according to an Associated Press review of university statements, correspondence with school officials and court records.

▶ Read more about the lawsuit

“The Prime Minister reiterated his commitment to free and open trade and the importance of protecting the national interest,” according to a Downing Street statement following the leaders’ Friday call. “The leaders also discussed the situation in Ukraine, Iran and recent action taken against the Houthis in Yemen.”

Trump, according to the White House, told Starmer that he’s looking forward to his state visit to the United Kingdom later this year.

Starmer delivered the invitation from King Charles III during his White House visit in February.

Van Hollen has recounted the chronology of Abrego Garcia’s deportation to El Salvador, saying he told him he was initially taken to Baltimore, then Texas, then put on a plane with “no idea where he was going.”

Upon arriving, Abrego Garcia said he was “traumatized” by being at the CECOT prison but said that “nine days ago” he was moved to a different facility.”

Abrego Garcia’s wife Jennifer wiped away tears as Van Hollen spoke of the man’s comments about wanting to speak with his wife.

Emotion filled Van Hollen’s voice as he began by saying “it’s good to be home,” noting that Abrego Garcia’s wife, brother and mother were all standing with him.

“Now we need to end the illegal abduction of Abrego Garcia and bring him home, too,” he said.

Van Hollen then gave remarks he said he had written on the plane ride home. Reading from a U.S. Supreme Court opinion issued this week, Van Hollen argued that the Trump administration “wants to flat out lie about what this case is about.”

“This case is not just about one man,” he said. “It’s about protecting the constitutional rights of everyone who resides in the United States.”

Van Hollen said that all Americans “must be prepared to take risks because of the current risk to the constitution itself.”

He read from the court ruling ordering the Trump administration to return Abrego Garcia to the U.S., then paraphrasing the argument: “In other words, put up in court, or shut up.”

Van Hollen also called the El Salvadoran government “complicit” in keeping Abrego Garcia from returning to his family.

Trump is preparing to advance another part of the conservative Project 2025 blueprint: to reclassify 50,000 federal employees so they’ll have less civil service protection.

The proposal under what’s known as Schedule F follows an executive order signed at the beginning of his term. It’s expected Friday afternoon, though Trump announced the move before the rule was made official.

“If these government workers refuse to advance the policy interests of the President, or are engaging in corrupt behavior, they should no longer have a job,” he wrote on his Truth Social platform. “This is common sense, and will allow the federal government to finally be ‘run like a business.’”

▶ Read more on the changes to the federal workforce

More than five dozen judges handling lawsuits against the Trump administration are receiving “enhanced online security screening” that typically includes scrubbing their personal information from the internet, two federal judges appointed by Republican presidents wrote on behalf of the judiciary in a letter to congressional appropriators.

Trump, senior aide Stephen Miller and billionaire Elon Musk have railed at judges who’ve blocked parts of Trump’s agenda, threatening impeachment and launching personal attacks. Trump’s call to impeach the judge who temporarily halted deportations using an 18th century wartime law prompted a rare quick response from Supreme Court Chief Justice John Roberts.

▶ Read more about security for judges

The federal appeals court in San Francisco on Friday left in place a lower court’s order blocking the Trump administration from ending temporary legal protections for hundreds of thousands of Venezuelans.

The 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals denied the Department of Homeland Security’s request for an emergency stay as they appeal the order.

The court wrote that the government has “not demonstrated that they will suffer irreparable harm absent a stay.”

U.S. District Judge Edward Chen in March found that Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem had unlawfully reversed protections granted by the Biden administration that allow an estimated 350,000 Venezuelans to live and work in the U.S. Their temporary protections were set to expire earlier this month.

DOJ attorneys for the government contend that Congress gave the secretary clear and broad authority over the TPS program and that the decisions aren’t subject to judicial review.

Secretary of State Marco Rubio relayed to NATO the Trump administration’s warning about walking away from peace efforts in Russia’s war on Ukraine if there’s not a deal soon.

The State Department says Rubio spoke to NATO Secretary-General Mark Rutte in a phone call Friday. The State Department quoted Rubio as saying “if a clear path to peace does not emerge soon, the United States will step back from efforts to broker peace.”

The covid.gov website shows a photo of President Trump walking between the words “lab” and “leak” under a White House heading. It mentions that Wuhan, China, where the coronavirus first began spreading, is home to a research lab with a history of conducting virus research with “inadequate biosafety levels.”

The web page also accuses Dr. Anthony Fauci, the former director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, of pushing a “preferred narrative” that COVID-19 originated in nature.

The origins of COVID have never been proven. Scientists are unsure whether the virus jumped from an animal, as many other viruses have, or came from a laboratory accident. A U.S. intelligence analysis released in 2023 said there’s insufficient evidence to prove either theory.

The emergency request for a stay, filed by Deputy Assistant Attorney General Drew Ensign late Thursday, says U.S. District Judge James E. Boasberg’s order finding probable cause to hold the Trump administration in criminal contempt pits two government branches against each other and “escalates the constitutional stakes” by infringing on executive branch powers.

Boasberg issued the contempt finding Thursday, accusing administration officials of rushing deportees out of the country under the Alien Enemies Act last month before they could challenge their removal in court, and then willfully disregarding his order that planes already in the air should and traveling to El Salvador return to the United States.

The judge said he could potentially refer the matter for prosecution if the administration doesnt’ remedy the violation. If Justice Department leadership won’t prosecute the matter, Boasberg said, he’ll appoint another attorney to do so.

The federal judge has denied a request by The Associated Press that he take further steps to enforce his order last week that the White House stop blocking AP’s access to cover events because the outlet won’t rename the Gulf of Mexico in its reports.

U.S. District Judge Trevor N. McFadden, who handed the AP a victory last week in its efforts to end the ban, said it’s too soon to say the Trump administration is violating his order — as the AP suggests.

“We are not at the point where we can make much of a determination one way or another,” said McFadden, ruling from the bench.

For two months, the White House has essentially banned AP reporters and photographers from their traditional spot covering events in smaller spaces like the Oval Office and Air Force One. The AP says it’s a violation of its free-speech rights to punish a news outlet for an editorial decision — an argument McFadden has endorsed.

After days of denying that he knew much about Abrego Garcia, Trump on Friday said he knew Abrego Garcia's record was “unbelievably bad” and called him an “illegal alien” and “foreign terrorist.”

Trump, while speaking to reporters, had an aide fetch a piece of paper he said had information about Abrego Garcia. He said it came from the State Department and “very legitimate sources.”

“I’m just giving you what they handed to me but this is supposed to be certified stuff,” he said.

He said Abrego Garcia is a member of MS-13, though Abrego Garcia has never been criminally charged in the U.S. with gang involvement. He also highlighted how the man’s wife admitted she once filed a protective order against him despite now advocating for his return.

“This is the man that the Democrats are wanting us to fly back from El Salvador to be a happily ensconced member of the USA family,” Trump said.

President Trump on Friday said negotiations between Ukraine and Russia are “coming to a head” and insisted that neither side is “playing” him in his push to end the grinding war.

The comments from Trump came after Secretary of State Marco Rubio warned earlier Friday that the U.S. may “move on” from trying to secure a Russia-Ukraine peace deal if there’s no progress in the coming days, after months of efforts have failed to bring an end to the fighting.

“If for some reason one of the two parties makes it very difficult, we’re going to say you’re fools, you’re foolish, and we’re just going to take a pass,” Trump told reporters at the White House.

▶ Read more about the Russia-Ukraine war

Trump was answering questions about Iran’s nuclear program when reporters were suddenly told it was time to leave.

A young girl and member of Oz’s family had collapsed and appeared to faint in the Oval Office. Oz rushed over. The girl was able to stand but appeared unsteady as she was helped out of the office.

A ceremony had been held in the Oval Office to swear in Oz as head of the agency that oversees Medicare and Medicaid, and Trump was answering reporters’ questions on various subjects when the girl fainted.

The White House did not identify her but later said she was doing OK.

“I have no specific number of days but quickly. We want to get it done,” Trump told reporters at the White House on Friday.

He called the war a “vicious battle” but said he thinks he has a “good chance of solving the problem.”

“If for some reason one of the two parties makes it very difficult, we’re just going to say, ‘You’re foolish. You’re fools. You’re horrible people and we’re going to just take a pass,’” he said. “But hopefully we won’t have to do that.”

He did not offer specifics about what progress he would need to see to keep from dropping the effort to broker a peace deal.

The president was asked if he thinks Russian President Vladimir Putin is stalling and said, “I hope not.”

As head of the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, the 64-year-old former heart surgeon and TV talk-show host will manage health insurance programs for roughly half the country, with oversight of Medicare, Medicaid and Affordable Care Act coverage.

Dr. Mehmet Oz steps into the role as Congress debates cuts to Medicaid, which aids millions of poor and disabled people.

Trump looked on as Oz was sworn in Friday by Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. during a ceremony in the Oval Office.

The president repeated his promise of “no cuts” to Medicare and Medicaid and thanked Oz for the “big commitment” he’s making.

The first lady lauded her team’s “tireless effort” in preparing for Monday’s event, which is attended by thousands of people.

The tradition dates to 1878 and “brings joy, storytelling, and laughter to America’s children,” she wrote in a Good Friday social media post.

“I look forward to watching all of the smiles light up this memorable day, on Monday. May this Good Friday inspire hope and faith for all Americans and our friends around the world,” the first lady said.

Their death sentences were commuted by former President Joe Biden.

The group filed the lawsuit earlier this week. They say President Trump was angry about Biden’s commutation, and in retaliation issued an executive order directing the U.S. Attorney General to punish them by housing them “in conditions consistent with the monstrosity of their crimes.”

The plaintiffs say they were reassigned from housing in high-security prisons or federal medical centers to the Administrative Maximum prison in Florence, Colorado, which is generally reserved for the nation’s most violent offenders. They say prison is the most restrictive in the country and that the transfer plans violate their due process rights and pose mental and physical health risks.

But Christopher Edelman, the attorney for the U.S. Department of Justice, says the men’s housing assignments haven’t yet been finalized. A preliminary injunction hearing is expected in May.

A federal judge who blocked the Trump administration from dismantling the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau has ruled the agency can’t go forward immediately with plans to fire hundreds of employees.

During a hearing Friday, U.S. District Judge Amy Berman Jackson expressed concern that administration officials aren’t complying with her earlier order that maintains the agency’s existence until she rules on the merits of a lawsuit seeking to preserve the bureau.

Jackson said she’ll bar officials from carrying out any mass firings or cutting off employees’ access to agency computer systems Friday. She scheduled a hearing on April 28 to hear testimony from officials.

▶ Read more about the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau

The pair of Republican Congress members were in the Syrian capital Friday on an unofficial visit organized by a Syrian-American nonprofit, the first by U.S. legislators since the fall of former Syrian President Bashar Assad in December.

Also Friday, Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas met with Syrian President Ahmad al-Sharaa in his first visit since Assad’s fall and the beginning of the Syrian uprising-turned-civil-war in 2011.

Rep. Marlin Stutzman of Indiana and Rep. Cory Mills of Florida visited the Damascus suburb of Jobar, the site of a historic synagogue that was heavily damaged and looted in the civil war, and the Christian neighborhood of Bab Touma, where they met with Christian religious leader. They also were set to meet al-Sharaa and other government officials.

The Trump administration has yet to officially recognize the current Syrian government, led by al-Sharaa, an Islamist former insurgent who led a lightning offensive that toppled Assad. Washington hasn’t yet lifted harsh sanctions that were imposed during Assad’s rule.

▶ Read more about the U.S. relationship with Syria

In Vatican City, Vance, a Catholic convert, attended Good Friday services with his wife and three children in St. Peter’s Basilica on Friday afternoon and was scheduled to meet over the weekend with the Vatican secretary of state, Cardinal Pietro Parolin.

No meeting with Pope Francis was announced and the pontiff wasn’t on hand at the start of the solemn Good Friday service, which was presided over by a Vatican cardinal. The 88-year-old pope has sharply cut back his work schedule as he recovers from a near-fatal case of double pneumonia, and his participation in the weekend’s Easter services is uncertain.

Francis and Vance have tangled sharply over migration and the Trump administration’s plans to deport migrants en masse. Just days before he was hospitalized in February, Francis blasted the administration’s deportation plans, warning they would deprive migrants of their inherent dignity.

The Associated Press and the Trump administration returned to a courtroom Thursday — and will be in another on Friday — as part of the high-stakes battle over who can control which journalists are able to question the president.

Lawyers argued before a three-judge panel of the U.S. Court of Appeals about putting in place a lower court order last week that the administration stop excluding the AP from covering events in places like the Oval Office and Air Force One. It’s not clear when those judges will make their determination.

The two sides are going before the author of last week’s decision, U.S. District Court Judge Trevor N. McFadden. The AP has asked him to enforce his ruling.

AP reporters and photographers have been blocked since President Trump objected to the outlet’s decision not to rename the Gulf of Mexico. McFadden said last week the AP shouldn’t be excluded just because Trump disagrees with them. Since then, AP says the White House is ignoring the order and continuing to keep its journalists out; Trump’s team says it has put a new rotation system in place for these events, and it hasn’t been AP’s turn yet.

▶ Read more about the hearing

U.S. District Judge Beryl Howell declined Thursday to issue an temporary restraining order in a case about the takeover of the U.S. Institute of Peace, a nonprofit think tank established by Congress.

In this case, USIP employees, a donor and grantees or contractors asked the court to prevent the firing of most employees, the cancellation of grants and contracts and the return of USIP’s building to the nonprofit’s possession. The newly installed USIP president, a DOGE staffer, transferred ownership of the building to the General Services Administration.

In her ruling, Howell said the fundamental nature of USIP, whether it’s an executive agency or an independent nonprofit, is still unclear. She also said there was a mismatch between the harm alleged by the employees and the relief they were requesting from the court.

In creating USIP, Congress mandated that it carry out certain functions but Howell said it wasn’t yet clear that USIP could not carry out its mission, even in its much reduced state.

The gray cat was wearing a collar and a name tag that said “Sophie.”

After the cat meandered through the North Lawn on Friday morning, news reporters scooped it up and brought it into the press area for safekeeping while the feline’s owner was called to come pick it up.

President Donald Trump speaks as he signs executive orders in the Oval Office of the White House, Thursday, April 17, 2025, in Washington. (AP Photo/Alex Brandon)

President Donald Trump speaks as he signs executive orders in the Oval Office of the White House, Thursday, April 17, 2025, in Washington. (AP Photo/Alex Brandon)

President Donald Trump speaks as he signs executive orders in the Oval Office of the White House, Thursday, April 17, 2025, in Washington. (AP Photo/Alex Brandon)

President Donald Trump speaks as he signs executive orders in the Oval Office of the White House, Thursday, April 17, 2025, in Washington. (AP Photo/Alex Brandon)

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The Latest: Singer Dawn Richard takes the stand

2025-05-17 05:59 Last Updated At:06:00

NEW YORK (AP) — Singer Dawn Richard took the witness stand late Friday afternoon after R&B singer Cassie testified for a fourth day in Sean “Diddy” Combs ’ sex trafficking trial.

Prosecutors allege that the hip hop mogul used his fame and fortune to orchestrate an empire of exploitation, coercing women into abusive sex parties. His lawyers argue that all the sexual acts were consensual, and although he could be violent, he never veered into sex trafficking and racketeering.

The Latest:

Assistant U.S. Attorney Maurene Comey said as lawyers spoke with the judge after the jury left for the day that the government is on a pace to finish presenting its case within six weeks.

The judge said at the trial’s start that it would be finished within two months. The defense has not said how long it will take to present its case.

Comey said the next witness after Richard will be Cassie’s longtime friend Kerry Morgan.

After the jury left for the day, Combs’ attorney Marc Agnifilo called Richard’s testimony a “drop dead moment” in the week-old trial, saying the defense had not been told prior to her testimony that she would be describing this alleged act of violence by Combs.

And he said “we know it didn’t happen” because Cassie didn’t testify about it during her four days on the stand. He also said the alleged frying pan attack was consistent with the defense’s argument in its opening statement that the jury would hear acts of domestic violence rather than evidence of racketeering and the other charges facing Combs.

A prosecutor, Maurene Comey, said prosecutors disclosed the incident to the defense in March. She also said it proved “consciousness of guilt” by Combs and also proved that he threatened witnesses with violence and used coercion and force to support the racketeering charge against him.

Richard said after witnessing the attack she was “scared what that might mean for myself. He was punching his girlfriend, beating her up.”

She said that Combs summoned her to his home the next day and gave her flowers, telling her and a colleague, putting a spin on what they had witnessed.

“He said that what we saw was passion and what lovers in relationships do.”

Richard also said that Diddy said Cassie “was Ok” and that it was in their best interests not to say anything. She said he used language that she took to mean people “could end up in death.”

That caused an objection and a discussion at sidebar that led the judge to send the jury home for the day.

Richard testified that Combs was angry and tried to hit Cassie in the head with a black skillet in the 2009 encounter at Combs’ home, but Cassie seemed to deflect a direct hit by the skillet and then curled up in the fetal position on the ground.

“He started to punch and kick her ... body and her head,” Richard said. She said Combs then put his arm around her neck and his hand on her head and dragged her up the stairs.

“I was scared for her and scared to do anything, Richard said. She said she didn’t try to intervene and didn’t call the police, in part because “I had never seen anything like that before.”

Singer Dawn Richard took the witness stand late Friday afternoon and said she witnessed Combs physically attack Cassie on multiple occasions. Asked to identify Combs in the courtroom, she pointed at him and noted that he had on a cream-colored sweater.

Richard said she witnessed one incident in 2009 at Combs’ home when “he came downstairs screaming” and “proceeded to hit her on the head and beat her on the ground in front of us.”

Richard said she was in Combs’ home at the time recording.

Richard was a cast member on Combs’ MTV reality show “Making the Band,” which launched the group act Danity Kane. Later she was a member of the Combs band Diddy -- Dirty Money.

She sued Combs last year, accusing him of physical abuse, groping, and psychological abuse during the years they worked together.

Throughout Friday’s testimony, Combs kept lowering his head to write a steady stream of messages on small sheets of paper that he passed to Anna Estevao, who was questioning Cassie, and Marc Agnifilo, the attorney who has spoken frequently to the judge during breaks.

Special Agent Yasin Binda of Homeland Security Investigations is now testifying.

Binda participated in searches related to the Combs investigation and was involved in coordinating logistics for his arrest last September at a Manhattan hotel.

Speaking to reporters outside the courthouse, Cassie’s attorney, Douglas Wigdor, said it’s “too early to tell” whether Cassie would consider going back into the entertainment industry.

“I think right now she’s focused on her family, putting this behind her and giving birth to a healthy child,” he said.

Asked whether she might give birth any day now, Wigdor smiled, nodded and said “in the coming days, yeah.”

In a statement from Alex Fine, read by attorney Douglas Wigdor, Fine said “Over the past five days, the world has gotten to witness the strength and bravery of my wife freeing herself of her past.”

He continued: “I have felt so many things sitting there. I have felt tremendous pride and overwhelming love for Cass. I have felt profound anger that she has been subjected to sitting in front of a person who tried to break her. So to him and all of those who helped him along the way, please know this: You did not. You did not break her spirit, nor her smile, that lights up every room. You did not break the souls of a mother who gives the best hugs and plays the silliest games with our little girls. You did not break the woman who has made me a better man.”

He added that it is an insult to say he saved her: “Cassie saved Cassie. She alone broke free from abuse, coercion, violence and threats. She did the work of fighting the demons that only a demon himself could have done to her.”

“This week has been extremely challenging, but also remarkably empowering and healing for me. I hope that my testimony has given strength and a voice to other survivors, and can help others who have suffered to speak up and also heal from the abuse and fear.

For me, the more I heal, the more I can remember. And the more I can remember, the more I will never forget. I want to thank my family and my advocates for their unwavering support, and I’m grateful for all the kindness and encouragement that I have received.

I’m glad to put this chapter of my life to rest. As I turn to focus on the conclusion of my pregnancy, I ask for privacy for me and for my growing family.”

Her testimony ended with another bombshell disclosure: She said she expects to receive a $10 million settlement from the Intercontinental Hotel in Los Angeles, where she was assaulted by Combs in 2016. Security camera footage aired last year on CNN shows the hip-hop mogul hitting and kicking Cassie, knocking her to the floor as she attempted to leave a “freak-off” sexual encounter at the hotel.

Cassie revealed the figure during questioning by Combs’ lawyer in a phase of her testimony known as re-cross. She said the figure was an estimate and that the settlement was reached recently. She didn’t disclose the nature of her claim against the hotel. The defense attorney also asked Cassie to re-read to the jury text messages that she read earlier in her testimony, including an exchange with Combs prior to the 2016 encounter.

After her testimony was finished, Cassie stood in the witness box and the judge announced the court would be taking a short break. Cassie appeared unsure whether she should leave or wait for the jury to exit the courtroom first.

Judge Arun Subramanian, acknowledging her four days of testimony just before she’s due to give birth to her third child, told her: “Why don’t you go ahead. You’ve been here a long time.”

Cassie sobbed, dabbing her eyes with tissues, as a prosecutor asked her about Combs beating her during “freak-offs.”

She testified that the abuse made her feel “worthless, just like dirt... like I was nothing.”

Cassie said she was initially open to the idea of engaging in the drug-fueled sex marathons because she wanted to make Combs happy and spend time with him, but she grew weary of them as the years went on.

“I worried for my safety. I worried for my career,” she told jurors, and she worried Combs wouldn’t love her anymore.

In an attempt to show jurors that she was a willing participant in Combs’ “freak-off” lifestyle of drug-fueled sex marathons, Esteveo has her read another exchange.

In the exchange, in September 2012, Combs told Cassie he wanted to “FO one last time tonight,” using initials for “freak-off.”

“What?” Cassie said.

“You can’t read?” Combs replied.

“I don’t want to freak off for the last time. I want it to be the first time for the rest of our lives,” Cassie told him.

Estevao ended her questioning there, but prosecutor Emily Johnson — questioning Cassie in a phase of testimony known as re-direct — had Cassie read more of the messages to provide additional context.

“I want to see you, but I’m emotional right now,” Cassie told Combs. “I don’t want to do one last time. I’d rather not do it at all.”

Near the end of her cross-examination, Combs' lawyer Estevao highlighted a post Cassie made on Instagram in May 2024 after CNN broadcast previously unaired security footage of the hip-hop mogul attacking at a Los Angeles hotel in 2016.

“Domestic violence is the issue,” Cassie wrote in the post.

Estevao was underscoring the defense’s contention that while Combs was abusive, his behavior didn’t warrant sex trafficking and racketeering charges.

Cassie denied a defense suggestion that she was having financial trouble before suing Combs in November 2023 and securing a $20 million settlement.

Combs’ lawyer, Anna Estevao, noted that Cassie, her husband and children had moved in with her parents in Connecticut prior to the lawsuit.

But Cassie said they were relocating to the East Coast and that the move had nothing to do with money.

Cassie, an R&B singer, was also planning to go on a concert tour to Australia and New Zealand in 2024, but ended up canceling after Combs settled her lawsuit within 24 hours of it being filed.

“That wasn’t the reason why,” Cassie testified.

Cassie and Combs kept exchanging warm messages after their breakup, even after she married her husband, Alex Fine, in 2019.

In one message, Combs described Cassie as his “ride or die always,” and one of the “greatest women in the world.” She told Combs that the messages “blew my mind a bit” and told him “I don’t hate you. I never have.”

In another message, she told him: “I wouldn’t be at this beautiful point in my life if I hadn’t been with you.”

She noted that Cassie’s trial testimony differs in some ways from what she told investigators in 2023. Cassie contends Combs raped her in her Los Angeles home after they had dinner in Malibu to discuss the end of their decade-long relationship, either in August or September 2018.

— Her testimony: Combs “was just being really nice” at the dinner — playful, laughing and giving off “kind of romantic vibes.”

— To investigators: Combs had been “acting very strangely” that night — he was anxious, not “in his right mind,” and possibly experiencing signs of bipolar disorder.

— On cross-examination: “Nice but strangely, yea,” Cassie clarified.

— Her testimony: At the dinner, Combs was trying to get her to go to the Burning Man festival in Nevada.

— To investigators: The dinner and rape happened after Combs got back from that year’s festival.

— On cross-examination: Cassie reaffirms that Combs was trying to get her to go to Burning Man, while acknowledging that she told investigators he raped her after the festival.

Cassie acknowledged their consensual sex as Estevao had her read the texts they exchanged in the aftermath of their breakup.

Cassie told Combs: “I do love you. I would just prefer not being one of your girlfriends anymore.”

Then, a few weeks after the alleged rape, Cassie said she was moving on to respect her own sanity. Combs replied: “I respect your sanity. It’s best we keep it moving. I’m not a stalker.”

Cassie also acknowledged that these messages made no mention of the alleged rape.

Estevao asked Cassie if she still had feelings for Combs after he allegedly raped her in August 2018.

“You didn’t hate him then. And you don’t still hate him now,” Estevao said.

“I don’t hate him,” Cassie responded.

“You still have love for him?”

“I have love for the past, what it was.”

Cassie testified that she broke up with Combs for good in August 2018 after she saw a photo of him with another woman he’d been dating for the last few years of their decade-long relationship.

“I just don’t trust anymore. That last shot put the nail in the coffin,” Casse texted Combs, referring to the photo of Combs with a woman identified in court as Gina.

“I promised myself I wouldn’t be with you anymore if you did that to me again,” Cassie wrote, telling Combs “you lied to me” and “she never went away.”

Soon after, Cassie said, she started dating her now husband, Alex Fine.

Estevao noted that the women’s center offered treatment for sex addiction, sexual compulsion and love addiction — and she asked Cassie if she was treated for any of these things during her weeks-long stay.

Cassie said she was not — but that she did undergo neurofeedback therapy: “They hook your brain up to a machine and you watch something and it regulates your brain waves.”

She said she underwent it five or six times, or about once a week during her stay, and that she believed it was to help her process trauma.

Cassie said she also underwent “EMDR” therapy to process trauma — and gave an example of recalling a traumatic moment when you couldn’t escape a room, but through therapy are able to experience what it’s like to escape the room.

Jurors heard a recording of a distressed Cassie screaming at a friend who said he had seen a video of performing sex acts.

In the recording, made by Cassie in 2013, the man claimed to have the video on his phone. Cassie is heard pleading to see the video and then threatening to kill him if it became public.

“I’ve never killed anyone in my life, but I will kill you,” Cassie told the man, punctuating her threats with profanity.

Cassie acknowledged in her testimony that Combs subsequently made efforts to keep the video private.

Defense attorney Anna Estevao resumed her cross examination Friday with questions related to the March 2016 recording of Combs attacking Cassie at the elevator bank of a Los Angeles hotel. In it, Combs can be seen slinging Cassie to the floor, kicking her and dragging her into a hotel hallway.

Estevao had Cassie read aloud a text message in which she complained that Combs was out of control from drugs and alcohol that day. In the message, Cassie told Combs: “I’m not a rag doll. I’m somebody’s child.”

Through text messages read aloud to the jury, Estevao then showed that Combs and Cassie were expressing love to one another again just days later as they tried to recover from the hotel attack. Cassie told Combs in one text: “We need a different vibe from Friday.”

Cassie said Combs was wary of her dating or giving attention to other men, even during breaks in their decade-long relationship. The hip-hop star took her phone from her on numerous occasions, including when he found out she was dating a football player and when she suspected her of dancing with the singer Chris Brown. Cassie didn’t name the player and denied dancing with Brown.

The judge has tried to clear the way for jurors to be brought in on time for what was hoped to be Cassie’s last day on the witness stand.

One item in dispute: A recording Combs made when he went to rehabilitation after a March 2016 attack on Cassie at the elevator bank of a Los Angeles hotel.

Prosecutor Emily Johnson said the video showed Combs “wandering through nature” as he spoke of “religion and God.” She described it as an effort by Combs’ lawyers to seek sympathy from the jury.

On the video, Combs says he has “God in my heart.” The judge watched it and then decided the argument was moot because the defense agreed not to show the video to the jury.

Their complaints include:

A day after an attorney for Combs claimed that prosecutors purposely delayed calling Cassie to testify so that the defense would have less time to cross examine her, prosecutors shot back in a letter to the judge overnight.

Prosecutors said it seemed defense lawyers were intent on forcing Cassie to return to the witness stand on Monday so that Combs could review transcripts over the weekend and help them prepare additional questions for her.

They also raised the risk of a mistrial if Cassie is required to return Monday but instead goes into labor with her third child over the weekend.

Messages between Combs and Cassie — both romantic and lurid — were the focus of the fourth day of testimony in a Manhattan courtroom. Defense attorney Anna Estevao read what Combs wrote, while Cassie recited her own messages about her participation in marathon encounters with sex workers, called “freak-offs.”

▶ Read more about Cassie’s testimony Thursday

Cassie Ventura wipes tears from her eye while testifying in Manhattan federal court, Tuesday, May 13, 2025, in New York. (Elizabeth Williams via AP)

Cassie Ventura wipes tears from her eye while testifying in Manhattan federal court, Tuesday, May 13, 2025, in New York. (Elizabeth Williams via AP)

Quincy Combs, second from left, and Chance Combs center, arrive at Manhattan federal court, Tuesday, May 13, 2025, in New York. (AP Photo/Seth Wenig)

Quincy Combs, second from left, and Chance Combs center, arrive at Manhattan federal court, Tuesday, May 13, 2025, in New York. (AP Photo/Seth Wenig)

Janice Combs arrives at Federal Court after the lunch break in the Sean "Diddy" Combs trial, in New York, Tuesday, May 13, 2025. (AP Photo/Richard Drew)

Janice Combs arrives at Federal Court after the lunch break in the Sean "Diddy" Combs trial, in New York, Tuesday, May 13, 2025. (AP Photo/Richard Drew)

Cassie Ventura, right, walks out of the courtroom past Sean Diddy Combs after testifying in Manhattan federal court, Tuesday, May 13, 2025, in New York. (Elizabeth Williams via AP)

Cassie Ventura, right, walks out of the courtroom past Sean Diddy Combs after testifying in Manhattan federal court, Tuesday, May 13, 2025, in New York. (Elizabeth Williams via AP)

Sean Diddy Combs, left, stands as his defense attorney, Teny Geragos, gives her opening statement to the jury on the first day of trial in Manhattan federal court, Monday, May 12, 2025, in New York. (Elizabeth Williams via AP)

Sean Diddy Combs, left, stands as his defense attorney, Teny Geragos, gives her opening statement to the jury on the first day of trial in Manhattan federal court, Monday, May 12, 2025, in New York. (Elizabeth Williams via AP)

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