Sean “Diddy” Combs allegedly paid Instagram model Jade Ramey a “monthly stipend” for sex work, Rodney “Lil Rod” Jones’ amended $30 million lawsuit claims.
The lawsuit, obtained by Page Six, claims the Bad Boy Records founder also employed City Girls rapper Yung Miami and Daphne Joy as sex workers and alleges that a female accountant named Robin Greenhill issued the payments.
“Upon information and belief, Defendants Lucian Charles Grainge, in his capacity as CEO of UMG, authorized Motown Records and Universal Music Group to provide financial resources to Defendants Sean Combs and Love Records through wire transfers to Defendants Sean Combs and Love Records accountant Robin Greenhill,” the lawsuit reads.
Want more celebrity and pop culture news?
Start your day with Page Six Daily.
Thanks for signing up!
“Upon information and belief, Ms. Greenhill ensured the wiring, funds transfer, or cash payments to sex workers were completed.”
Reps for Ramey, Yung Miami didn’t immediately return Page Six’s request for comment. Greenhill also did not return our request for comment.
While she hasn’t directly address Jones’ claims, Ramey has continued to post regularly to her Instagram Stories. Yung Miami, meanwhile, posted a cryptic video Wednesday dancing while singing lyrics, “these hoes can’t f–k with me.”
Ramey first made headlines with Combs, 54, when the pair were spotted kissing in December 2022 just days after the father of seven announced the birth of his daughter Love, whom he shares with Dana Tran.
Joy, meanwhile, faced mockery from her ex 50 Cent who reacted on Instagram to her name being included in the lawsuit.
“I didn’t know you was a sex worker, you little sex worker.LOL,” 50 Cent, 48, wrote on Instagram Wednesday alongside two photos of himself smoking a cigar in the rain. “Yo this s–t is a movie.”
Explore More
The onlyFans model, 37, and the “21 Questions” rapper dated for one year in 2011 and went on to welcome son Sire together.
Although Joy hasn’t directly addressed the allegations, she did share a message to social media suggesting she was turning to her faith to get her through this difficult time.
“Thank you God for your love,” she wrote above scenic footage of lush mountains.
Combs’ former attorney Shawn Holley vehemently denied the allegations in Jones’ lawsuit, calling the producer “nothing more than a liar.”
“His reckless name-dropping about events that are pure fiction and simply did not happen is nothing more than a transparent attempt to garner headlines,” she added.
Amid Combs’ numerous lawsuits that allege sex trafficking, gang rape and more, the Department of Homeland Security raided the former Ciroc owner’s mansions in Los Angeles and Miami.
Armed agents were photographed leaving the homes in disarray carrying bags full of laptops and other electronic devices.
Combs’ current attorney, Aaron Dyer, called the raid a “witch hunt” in which the feds put on an “excessive show of force.”