
“I have so much money now that I could hire someone to kill you, and nobody would know. No-one would miss you. No-one would know anything.”
Former music executive Daniel Evans says he can still remember the threat from his old boss, Sean “Diddy” Combs – then known as Puff Daddy – to a colleague. It was 1997, he says, in the New York office of Combs’s Grammy Award-winning music label Bad Boy Records.
“It was like, this is what money does to you,” he says.
