Aubrey O'Day shares her feelings about an alleged sexual assault in Netflix's four-part docuseries "Sean Combs: The Reckoning."
Capricorn Clark began working for Sean Combs in 2004.

The emotional bombshells from "Sean Combs: The Reckoning" continue until the very end.

In the conclusion of Curtis "50 Cent" Jackson's four-part docuseries, which debuted on Netflix Tuesday, Dec. 2, Combs' alleged victims recall the abuse and trauma they say they endured at the hands of the Bad Boy founder.

Producer Rodney "Lil Rod" Jones recounts being drugged and sexually assaulted while working on Combs' 2023 album, "The Love Album: Off the Grid." Kirk Burrowes, Bad Boy's cofounder, also recalls being tortured. "Not only was he abusive to me from an employer/employee standpoint," Burrowes says, "he was also abusive to me in other ways … sexually deviant ways." Here are the other disturbing claims from Episode 4 of the docuseries.

Aubrey O'Day questions alleged assault: 'Does this mean I was raped?'

Aubrey O'Day, a member of the female singing group Danity Kane formed during Combs' reality show "Making the Band 3," has no memory of an alleged assault. But a witness claims to have stumbled upon a horrifying scene in 2005.

According to the affidavit, which O'Day read for the first time in front of filmmakers, the unidentified person witnessed Combs "and another individual … sexually assaulting" the singer. The witness claims to have opened the wrong door, while looking for a bathroom.

"What I saw as soon as I opened the door was Aubrey sprawled out on a leather couch, looking very inebriated," O'Day reads, adding in her own defense, "I didn't drink like that at all at this time."

Per the affidavit, O'Day, now 41, was naked from the waist down. "Puff Daddy was penetrating in her," while another man entered her orally. "Aubrey looked out of it and was just lying there," O'Day reads.

With no memory of the alleged assault, O'Day wonders, "Does this mean I was raped? Is that what this means?

"I don't even know if I was raped, and I don't want to know," O'Day continues. "I don't want to find out anymore (what) that woman has to say."

An alleged plan to murder Kid Cudi: 'Go get dressed. We’re going to go kill him.'

Capricorn Clark, who began working with Combs in 2004 as his assistant, recounts to filmmakers the day her boss allegedly planned to kill rapper Kid Cudi, born Scott Mescudi.

Clark says in 2011 she and Combs had moved to Los Angeles, and Combs' girlfriend at the time Casandra "Cassie" Ventura Fine came for a visit while Combs was on a trip. Clark says Ventura hung out with Kid Cudi and invited him to join Clark and Ventura Fine for a hike.

"About a week after we went hiking, about 6/6:30 in the morning, I hear a banging at my door," Clark says. "It's Puff. His pants are split open, like a maniac, froth on the side of his mouth. He has a gun, and he's mad as hell."

Clark says Combs expressed his anger about Kid Cudi. "He's like, 'Yeah, f--- all this. Go get dressed. We're going to go kill him,'" Clark says. When she objected, she claims Combs kidnapped her, and the two went Kid Cudi's home. Cassie informed Clark over the phone that Kid Cudi was with her and not at home.

"Then I see Puff coming back down the walkway, and he was like, 'Tell her I have you, and I'm not going to let you go,'" Clark says. So Ventura Fine relented and told Clark to come get her. Combs "immediately begins kicking the s--- out of her," Clark recalls. "She was just crouching, and he was just kicking her."

Clark says Combs then threated that if the authorities found out about the events of the day, he'd kill everyone.

Combs' spokesperson Juda Engelmayer declined to comment on specific allegations in the docuseries. "Many of the people featured have longstanding personal grievances, financial motives, or credibility issues that have been documented for years," Engelmayer said in a statement emailed to USA TODAY.

"Several of these stories have already been addressed in court filings, and others were never raised in any legal forum because they’re simply not true. The project was built around a one-sided narrative led by a publicly admitted adversary, and it repeats allegations without context, evidence, or verification," Engelmayer said. "Sean Combs will continue to address legitimate matters through the legal process, not through a biased Netflix production."

Combs, 56, is serving out a 50-month sentence at the Federal Correctional Institution Fort Dix in New Jersey for a conviction on prostitution charges.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Diddy documentary concludes with Aubrey O'Day's heartbreaking reveal

Reporting by Erin Jensen, USA TODAY / USA TODAY

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