
Pro-abortion groups admit women can experience post-abortion trauma
Carole Novielli
·We are urgently seeking 500 new Life Defenders (monthly supporters) before the end of October to help save babies from abortion 365 days a year. Your first gift as a Life Defender today will be 3X MATCHED. Click here to TRIPLE your monthly commitment.

Rapper P. Diddy hit with another lawsuit alleging abuse and coerced abortion
An explosive lawsuit was filed against rapper Sean “P. Diddy” Combs last year, which may have led to his arrest last month. Combs has been charged with racketeering conspiracy, sex trafficking by force, fraud or coercion, and transportation to engage in prostitution. He faces a minimum of 15 years in prison, and a maximum sentence of life in prison if found guilty. Yet his legal troubles are evidently just starting; he’s just been hit with another lawsuit.
USA Today reported that another woman, who is identified only as “Jane Doe,” filed a lawsuit, claiming that she was drugged and raped by Combs for four years — from 2020 until July of this year. She said she was forced to “have vaginal intercourse without her consent,” and was regularly drugged and forced into meeting with Combs, due to “coercive and harassing language” from both Combs and his staff. Her rapes were allegedly recorded without her permission.
In one instance, Doe said she was “compelled to ingest an unknown substance,” which she later discovered “was or contained the drug ketamine and/or other substances,” which caused her to “black out” and “lose consciousness intermittently.” Afterwards, she found out she was pregnant. Rapper Caresha Brownlee (who goes by the stage name “Yung Miami”), an ex-girlfriend of Combs’, allegedly began harassing Doe, pressuring her to undergo an abortion.
READ: Trafficking survivor says her trafficker ‘took all his girls to Planned Parenthood’
It appears from the lawsuit that Doe was able to resist the pressure to have an abortion, but tragically, she suffered a miscarriage. She did not speak to Combs for several months, until he and his entourage began harassing her again. She said Combs monitored her location when she wasn’t with him, and would “refer to statements” she had made when Combs “was not present.”
Other women have similarly accused Combs of assault and coerced abortion. Virginia V., an ex-girlfriend of Combs’, said she became pregnant several times; once, he paid her $50,000 to have an abortion. When she got pregnant again, he again pressured her to have an abortion. “I have this period app, and it tells me when I’m ovulating and stuff, and so I told him. I told him that I’m ovulating,” she said. “So don’t do it. But he just did it anyway, and then I got pregnant. And he, like — okay, just get an abortion. Like, no hesitation. But this time was harder for me because I had been with him for so long and I was, like, really in love with him.”
Through tears, she added, “Part of me wanted to keep it. But he didn’t want it. … I only agreed to [the abortion] because he told me to.”
In many of the accusations made against Combs, he used his large entourage to help control and intimidate his victims, keeping them compliant. Women were allegedly threatened, abused, and forced to participate in orgies, and were drugged to keep them compliant. The indictment also claimed that Diddy was running a wide-ranging criminal enterprise; his employees — including assistants, security staff, and more — participated. They were also allegedly aware of the horrific physical abuse that the women suffered, which the indictment said often resulted in injuries that took days or even weeks to heal.
Editor’s Note: Any individual who attempts to use force or coercion to convince someone to have an abortion could be subject to criminal or civil liability including child abuse, fetal homicide, domestic partner violence, etc. If you or someone you know is facing this situation and would like more information, call (210) 614-7157 or email info@txjf.org.
Live Action News is pro-life news and commentary from a pro-life perspective.
Contact editor@liveaction.org for questions, corrections, or if you are seeking permission to reprint any Live Action News content.
Guest Articles: To submit a guest article to Live Action News, email editor@liveaction.org with an attached Word document of 800-1000 words. Please also attach any photos relevant to your submission if applicable. If your submission is accepted for publication, you will be notified within three weeks. Guest articles are not compensated (see our Open License Agreement). Thank you for your interest in Live Action News!
Dear Reader,
Every day in America, more than 2,800 preborn babies lose their lives to abortion.
That number should break our hearts and move us to action.
Ending this tragedy requires daily commitment from people like you who refuse to stay silent.
Millions read Live Action News each month — imagine the impact if each of us took a stand for life 365 days a year.
Right now, we’re urgently seeking 500 new Life Defenders (monthly donors) to join us before the end of October. And thanks to a generous $250,000 matching grant, your first monthly gift will be 3X MATCHED to help save lives and build a culture that protects the preborn.
Will you become one of the 500 today? Click here now to become a Live Action Life Defender and have your first gift TRIPLED.
Together, we can end abortion and create a future where every child is cherished and every mother is supported.

Carole Novielli
·
International
Cassy Cooke
·
Politics
Sheena Rodriguez
·
Pop Culture
Cassy Cooke
·
Analysis
Nancy Flanders
·
Issues
Angeline Tan
·
International
Cassy Cooke
·
Pop Culture
Cassy Cooke
·
Analysis
Cassy Cooke
·
Issues
Cassy Cooke
·
Analysis
Cassy Cooke
·