Diddy was at the center of a gripping day in federal court Friday (June 13) as a Homeland Security agent detailed the discovery of hundreds of bottles of lubricant, firearms and armor-piercing ammunition during a March 2024 raid on his Los Angeles mansion.
Special Agent Andre LeMon, a member of the human trafficking unit at Homeland Security Investigations in Los Angeles, testified that agents recovered approximately 900 bottles of Astroglide and 200 bottles of baby oil from Diddy’s Holmby Hills estate at 200 South Mapleton Drive.
The lubricant was found in various locations, including a garage, bathroom and inside drawers, according to LeMon.
Photos shown in court depicted shelves stacked with bottles and boxes labeled “Astroglide,” which LeMon confirmed were seized from the garage. He also testified that lingerie was found in bags alongside the lubricant.
Inside a closet safe, agents located a passport belonging to Diddy and a plastic bag containing a substance that later tested positive for MDMA, also known as ecstasy.
The testimony came during day 22 of the federal racketeering and sex trafficking trial against Diddy, who is accused of running his business empire as a criminal enterprise that exploited women through coercion and financial manipulation.
He faces five federal charges, including racketeering conspiracy and two counts of sex trafficking by force, fraud or coercion.
LeMon also described a cache of firearms discovered in a room identified as the security office. Among the weapons were a Ruger, a Glock pistol, rifles including a Smith & Wesson, and a Mossberg shotgun.
Three 30-round magazines were found along with a 60-round drum magazine loaded with 59 rounds of green-tip ammunition, designed to pierce body armor. One of the rifles had its serial number removed, which LeMon said appeared to have been sanded off using machinery, not hand tools.
During cross-examination, Diddy’s attorney, Marc Agnifilo, emphasized that all firearms and ammunition were recovered from the estate’s security office.
LeMon confirmed that none of the weapons were found in the children’s bedrooms and acknowledged that the security office door was unlocked when agents arrived, though he could not confirm if it had a functioning lock.
Agnifilo also questioned LeMon about the volume of lubricant found, asking if he had ever encountered Astroglide in any other human trafficking case.
LeMon replied, “Only in this case.”
The trial continues.