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In 2003, Sean Combs was confronted with allegations that he had sexually harassed and drugged a model; just days after the incriminating video was released, the sixth accuser filed a lawsuit

Just days after 2016 hotel surveillance footage was released showing Sean “Diddy” Combs beating his then-girlfriend Cassie Ventura, a model is now claiming that the Bad Boy Entertainment founder drugged and sexually assaulted her in his New York recording studio 21 years ago.

“The attack on Combs altered the course of Crystal McKinney’s career and denied her a successful and lucrative career in the modeling and film industries,” Crystal McKinney said in the lawsuit filed today in federal court.

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The winner of MTV’s model mission At a 1998 competition, McKinney, then 22, met the “Missing You” singer at a Men’s Fashion Week dinner in 2003 and was invited to his nearby studio, the suit says. The plaintiff says she was encouraged by Diddy to take “very strong” weed after she had already had quite a bit to drink – something several other accusers have described as the Bad Boy Entertainment founder’s modus operandi.

“When Combs saw that Plaintiff was very drunk, he ordered Plaintiff to follow him and physically led him to the restroom,” the lawsuit states. After McKinney initially refused, fellatio According to Combs, the rapper “pushed her head into his crotch” and forced her to give him oral sex.

McKinney claims she fainted shortly afterward and later regained consciousness in the back seat of a taxi.

Representatives for the widely accused and sued Combs did not respond to a Deadline request for comment on McKinney’s lawsuit. If and when they do, this post will be updated.

McKinney describes herself as a “woman of faith” and explains in the filing that she felt “morally obligated” to make her encounter with Combs public after so many other women claimed the mogul had assaulted them over the years.

As TMZ first reported, McKinney is seeking a wide range of unspecified damages. While the claims, which are more than 20 years old, would normally be time-barred, the earlier model is moving forward due to the Big Apple’s Victims of Gender Motivated Violence Act, which allows civil suits to be filed within an extended time period.

To date, Combs has not been charged by any jurisdiction, not even with irrefutable video evidence of his beating of Venura eight years ago in the City of Angels.

“We are aware of the video circulating on the Internet that purports to show Sean Combs attacking a young woman in Los Angeles,” Los Angeles District Attorney George Gascón said on the evening of May 17, hours after CNN’s exclusive report was published on Combs’ gruesome attack on Ventura in the hallway of the now-closed InterContinental Hotel in Century City.

However, the prosecutor acknowledged that there was nothing he could do at this time due to the statute of limitations for assault and domestic violence in California.

“To date, law enforcement has not presented a case related to the attack on Mr. Combs depicted in the video, but we encourage anyone who has been a victim or witness to a crime to report it to law enforcement or contact our office for assistance from our Bureau of Victims Services,” Gascón’s office added, setting the stage.

Since Ventura filed her suit on Nov. 16, which was quickly settled, half a dozen other lawsuits have been filed accusing Combs of sexual harassment and other misconduct. At least one of those lawsuits accuses her of sex trafficking minors, and another comes from a producer of Combs’ most recent album.

Combs has denied all allegations – although he later corrected himself with an apology when the video of Ventura’s beating in 2016 was released to the media. Ventura’s lawyer, Doug Wignor, rejected the apology within hours. “The fact that he felt compelled to ‘apologize’ only after his repeated denials were proven false shows his pathetic desperation, and no one will be swayed by his insincere words,” the lawyer told Deadline on May 19.

Of course, despite all these lawsuits and now the lawsuit from McKinney, Diddy could face even greater consequences.

On March 25 of this year, FBI and Homeland Security agents raided his homes in Los Angeles and Miami. A government spokesman described the raids as part of an “ongoing investigation.”

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