Diddy, Oddi, and the Resort That Wasn’t Random
Jonathan Oddi, the adult performer arrested in 2018 for opening fire at the Trump National Doral Golf Club in Florida, had long claimed he was more than just a troubled gunman.
In now-leaked interrogation footage, Oddi accused Diddy of holding him as a “sex slave,” forcing him to perform sex acts with Diddy and ex-girlfriend Cassie Ventura, while Diddy allegedly watched and directed. He described being paid off—and silenced—via a $5 million non-disclosure agreement, now confirmed to exist by his former wife, Tonia Troutwine.
“I almost feel like he divorced me because he came to all this money,” Troutwine said in an interview. “He kept insisting that we sign the divorce paperwork… it was all rushed.”
But prosecutors now possess the original NDA—signed in Diddy’s own hand—and reportedly mention herpes transmission, hush money, and coercive control. If authentic, it could obliterate any remaining defense narrative for Diddy.
Is Diddy a High-Ranking Member of a Secretive Fraternity?
Oddi didn’t just drop claims of sexual abuse. During questioning, he allegedly told investigators that Diddy is a high-ranking member of Sigma Pi Phi (ΣΠΦ)—also known as “The Boulé.”
This 120-year-old African-American professional fraternity operates quietly but powerfully, boasting over 5,000 members across 139 chapters globally. Unlike collegiate Greek systems, Sigma Pi Phi is invitation-only and attracts Black men in elite professional roles—politicians, doctors, entertainers. Women are not allowed membership into Sigma Pi Phi (The Boulé).
While membership alone doesn’t imply wrongdoing, Oddi’s mention of the group has triggered deeper scrutiny. Could this fraternity have provided cover or protection for years of illicit activity? Or, more shockingly, could Oddi’s decision to open fire on a Trump resort be a coded message, retaliation, or signal linked to deeper conflicts between power networks?
With Kanye inserting himself into the mix, the theory of a covert campaign to shield Diddy from prosecution—possibly by leveraging powerful Black networks, celebrity allies, and political figures—gains traction.