Allegations that Rapper Drugged, Raped Her on Diddy’s Yacht
Investigation Discovery’s Chris Brown: A History of Violence alleges multiple physical and sexual assaults by the pop star over a two-decade career.

An anonymous Chris Brown assault accuser identified as Jane Doe claims the rap star drugged and raped her on Sean “Diddy” Combs’ yacht in December 2020.
The allegation was made in Investigation Discovery’s Chris Brown: A History of Violence that premiered on the true-crime network. The documentary explored Brown’s years of alleged offstage aggression, including intimate-partner violence, assault charges and sexual assault allegations.
They first came to light in 2009 when the star rapper pled guilty to felony charge of physically assaulting former girlfriend Rihanna.
The ID true-crime feature also has a Jane Doe recounting being in Miami in 2020 and at a party on Star Island on Diddy’s yacht. Once on board, she says she noticed Brown and they started a conversation about her fledgling dancing career in Los Angeles.
Jane Doe recounted Brown handing her a drink, and then another. Before long, she felt sleepy and eventually found herself in a bedroom with Brown. “I remember I did lay back and I’m like, ‘Why can’t I get up?’ Next thing I know he was on top of me and I couldn’t move and I said ‘no’ and then I felt him… next thing I knew he was inside me,” she said, alleging a rape had taken place.
Jane Doe isn’t alone in recalling alleged assaults by the R&B singer. The doc recalled in 2017 another girlfriend, Karrueche Tran, being granted a restraining order after she claimed in a court filing that Brown “punched me twice in the stomach,” threatened friends and “pushed me downstairs.”
Brown denied wrongdoing at the time, including with incidents involving Tran in 2015. Another alleged victim, Liziane Gutierrez, told the ID doc in 2016 she was backstage at a Brown concert and was invited to a party the pop idol was hosting in a hotel.
But when Brown saw her snapping the pic, he came over and punched her in the face. “His security grabbed my phone and I got escorted out of the party. I’m not saying it was right what I did with my phone. But that doesn’t give you the right to punch me in the face. Just kick me out of the party,” Gutierrez said.
She filed a report with the Las Vegas Police Department, which decided against bringing charges. Brown’s attorney denied the allegations about Gutierrez and said “he never laid a hand” on her.
The View co-host Sunny Hostin, a former federal prosecutor, led after-show discussion on domestic violence that aired after the doc on Sunday night.
ID President Jason Sarlanis said the Brown docu aims to “normalize surviving,” and that it underscored barriers in the judicial system to curbing domestic violence.
“Our legal system is systematically and institutionally set up to make it very difficult for survivors to get their justice at the time they are prepared and ready to seek it,” the true-crime network head said. “The statute of limitations when it comes to domestic violence is painfully short and very often part of how abusers abuse their victims is by gaslighting, coercive control, to the point where many victims don’t even acknowledge the domestic violence until the statute of limitations has ceased.”





