Sheila E., Prince’s legendary percussionist, delivered explosive testimony in the federal trial of Sean “Diddy” Combs, as reported by Inner City Press. Her words, carrying Prince’s final warnings before his 2016 death, implicated Diddy in a music industry network of coercion, surveillance, and blackmail. Supported by NDAs, financial records, and Prince’s haunting statements, Sheila E.’s account amplified Cassie Ventura’s allegations, transforming the trial into a reckoning for an industry’s darkest secrets.

 

Diddy Loses It i After Prince's Final Recording Is Presented On Day 7 of  the Trial! - YouTube

 

 

Sheila E. took the stand with calm resolve, recounting Prince’s growing paranoia before his death. “There’s more going on in this industry than anyone knows,” she quoted him saying. Prince believed Diddy was a “gatekeeper,” curating events—not just parties but “rituals”—where artists were filmed and blackmailed. Sheila described a 2006 Diddy-hosted event at Prince’s Paisley Park, reluctantly allowed under industry pressure. What began as a red-carpet affair turned unsettling, with phones banned, substances distributed, and a private section Prince called “the real party.” “Something dark came in with him,” Prince told her, vowing never to host Diddy again.

Sheila testified that Prince saw Diddy as an “enforcer” in a system where NDAs and footage ensured silence. “They don’t just want your hits, they want your silence,” he told her, warning that non-compliant artists like Mase or Day26 faced career sabotage. Prince linked this to Warner Brothers, claiming their backing of Diddy’s Bad Boy label funded a “machine” he’d escaped but others couldn’t. Sheila recounted a chilling 2 a.m. call days before Prince’s death, where he said, “They’re watching me. They want me quiet.” He planned to testify about “parties, artists, tapes,” but died before meeting investigators.

 

Sheila E. Reveals She Wants to Collab With Bruno Mars at the 2024 Grammys:  "The Ball's in His Court"

 

 

Prosecutors bolstered Sheila’s testimony with evidence Prince intended to share. A sealed envelope from his attorney contained three NDAs: one for a coerced 2010 Hamptons performance tied to Diddy’s team, another referencing compromising Miami footage, and an unsigned draft for hush money. An audio from Paisley Park captured Prince saying, “They call it networking, but it’s harvesting. Young artists leave owing a debt measured in silence.” Financial records traced payments through shell companies to security firms linked to Cassie’s “freakoff” dates. Hotel key card metadata showed Prince’s passcode reissued at 3 a.m. before his emergency plane landing, suggesting tampering.

The defense attacked Sheila’s credibility, citing a five-year estrangement with Prince and implying financial motives tied to his estate. Sheila countered with phone logs and notes proving their 2015 reconciliation, stating, “I’m here because he asked.” They questioned her lack of direct evidence, but Sheila pointed to label archives, prompting prosecutors to promise subpoenas. A 27-second voicemail of Prince saying, “We aren’t safe. Watch the tapes,” was played, with the defense suggesting it referenced prescription issues. Sheila retorted, “You can’t spin the pattern—artists broken, footage hidden, silence sold.”

 

Prince's ex Sheila E. fights to control his £200 million fortune as judge  confirms he died without will - The Mirror

 

 

The courtroom atmosphere thickened as jurors scribbled and one requested a tissue. Diddy, once defiant, stared at the table, avoiding the gallery where his mother and daughters sat behind tinted umbrellas. The prosecution’s evidence—NDAs, Prince’s words, coded payments, and metadata—formed a lattice supporting Cassie’s claims of orchestrated abuse. Legal analysts called Prince a “posthumous whistleblower,” noting the case’s potential to spark civil suits against labels.

Sheila’s testimony ignited a firestorm. Social media erupted with #TrustPaisleyProphecy, and Warner Music ordered document preservation, hinting at looming subpoenas. Bad Boy executives took leave, and streaming platforms audited private performance footage. Sheila, under U.S. Marshal escort due to online threats, issued a statement: “I protected the truth.” Prince’s final public words—“Just when you thought you were safe”—resonated anew. As Judge Subramanian scheduled an evidentiary scope conference, Diddy’s trial transcended personal guilt, exposing an era of industry power built on silence. Prince’s prophecy, voiced through Sheila, ensures that silence is shattered, demanding accountability for Diddy and beyond.