In the midst of his hourslong spree of hate-filled, antisemitic, homophobic and ableist tweets on Friday morning (Feb. 7), Ye reached out to his friend President Donald Trump with a plea for the commander in chief to free disgraced hip-hop mogul Sean “Diddy” Combs.
“Free Puff,” Ye wrote in all caps on X in the first missive of the barrage of tweets, later adding, “@realDonaldTrump please free my brother Puff.” Combs (variously known as Puffy, Puff Daddy and Puff over the course of his career) was arrested in September and is currently in jail without bail awaiting federal trial in New York on racketeering, sex trafficking and transportation to engage in prostitution charges tied to what prosecutors say was an intricate scheme in which he “abused, threatened and coerced women and others around him to fulfill sexual desires.”
Combs is also facing dozens of civil lawsuits from women and men who claim that the once unstoppable Bad Boy Records boss sexually and physically assaulted them, forced or coerce them into sexual activity during hedonistic “freak off” parties and threatened them over the course of incidents dating back almost 30 years; Combs, who has denied all the allegations, is slated to go on trial in May in the case that could land him in prison for the rest of his life.
West visited the White House during Trump’s first term and has proudly worn the MAGA hat over the years. Amid the offensive tweets he also announced the launch of a collaboration between his Yeezy fashion brand and Comb’s Sean John fashion line. As of Friday morning, a number of basic-form white, grey and black “Sean John” t-shirts were available on the Yeezy site alongside a black sweatshirt with the white supremacist phrase “White Lives Matter.”
According to West, profits from the $20 shirts will be split evenly with Combs. “I just found out that Puff is not allowed to make or collect money while he’s locked up so I’ma send his half of the money to Justin,” he wrote, not identifying which Justin he was referring to.
The profanity-filled tweet string also featured a call-out of fellow celebrities — whom he referred to as “celebrity ni–as and b–ches [who] is p–sy” — who “watch our brother rot and never say s–t.” Trump, who pardoned more than 1,500 January 6 rioters on his first day in office in January — and who in the waning days of his first term pardoned or commuted the sentences of rappers Lil Wayne and Kodak Black — has not mentioned Combs’ case in the first few weeks of his second term.
In addition to advocating for the release of Combs, Ye also praised singer Chris Brown, writing, “we all watched them try to cancel Chris Brown and aint nobody do nothing,” adding, “I was p–sy then too Chris Brown its til the wheels fall off,” a seeming reference to West’s new song with Ty Dolla $ign, “Wheels Fall Off.”
Brown plead guilty to felony assault on then-girlfriend Rihanna after brutally beating the singer in 2009, for which he was sentence to five years probation, domestic violence counseling and six months of community service. In the years since, as Brown has continued to release charting songs as his list of physical altercations and allegations of battery have grown.
He was involved in a scuffle with Drake’s entourage at a New York nightclub in 2012, got into an altercation with singer Frank Ocean in 2013, was arrested for felony assault later that year in D.C. and was identified as the person who allegedly assaulted another adult male during a 2015 basketball game in Las Vegas; two months later a woman told police that Brown battered her in a Vegas hotel room during a spat over a cell phone. In August of 2016 Brown was arrested at his home in Los Angeles for suspicion of assault with a deadly weapon.
Since then, former girlfriend Karrueche Tran was granted a five-year restraining order against Brown in 2017 after sharing threatening texts he’d allegedly sent her and last year he was the subject of a lawsuit in which four men said Brown and his associates “brutally and severely” beat them backstage at Dickies Arena.
Ye’s advocacy for Combs and Brown came during a seven-plus-hour X rant in which he repeatedly used homophobic (“fag–t a– n–gas”) and ableist slurs (“f–k ret-rds,” “dumb a– ret-rds”) and praised Nazi leader Adolf Hitler (“I love Hitler,” “I’m a Nazi”) while repeatedly denigrating the Jewish people (“you can get money with Jewish people but they always gonna steal.”)
In a statement on X, Anti-Defamation League CEO Jonathan A. Greenblatt responded by calling the comments, “Another egregious display of antisemitism, racism and misogyny from Ye on his X account this morning… We condemn this dangerous behavior and need to call it what it is: a flagrant and unequivocal display of hate.” Some of West’s antisemitic post were amplified and re-shared by white supremacist Nick Fuentes, who joined Ye at the White House in 2018 for the meeting with Trump, who the rapper said at the time was like a “father” to him.