A woman claims she once saw minors dressed up like “sexy” Harajuku Barbies at one of Sean “Diddy” Combs’ alleged sex-fueled “Freak Off” parties.
Tanea Wallace, an aspiring singer, told a new TMZ documentary that she allegedly saw the minors — who she initially described as “little people” — surrounded by a wall of adults at the fallen music mogul’s Miami mansion back in 2018.
“I looked to the right of me and in the corner and I was like ‘Are those midgets?’ Because people were over them, like people trying to hide what they’re doing,” Wallace alleged in “TMZ Presents The Downfall of Diddy: Inside the Freak Offs.”
“They’re all huddled up. But no, they were little people. Dressed up like Harajuku Barbies, red lipstick, looking like real sexy.”
Wallace, who said she was invited to the party by a Saudi Prince who flew her from Los Angeles, admitted she couldn’t see exactly what the minors and adults were doing but she was alarmed because it was a “grown party.”
Asked repeatedly to clarify what she meant by “little people,” Wallace stressed she didn’t want to get into trouble and said they “weren’t supposed to be there.”
“It’s a shame,” she responded when asked if they were underage.
Elsewhere, Wallace also recalled seeing clusters of people having sex at the party — which she alleges was still raging at 7 a.m.
Many of them appeared to be high on drugs or drunk, she added.
Wallace’s recollection of the party emerged after the Bad Boy Records founder was slapped with federal sex trafficking charges in September.
The federal indictment against him detailed troubling allegations that Combs manipulated alleged victims and plied them with drugs to participate in “Freak Offs” — violent sex sessions that were sometimes recorded against their will.
Since his arrest, a flurry of civil lawsuits have also been filed against the rapper alleging abuse dating back decades — including that he raped a 10-year-old boy who was trying to make it as an actor or rapper in 2005.
Meanwhile, another accused Combs of drugging and raping a 13-year-old girl in 2000 as two celebrities joined in at a VMAs afterparty in New York.
Combs’ lawyers have repeatedly derided the legal action as “clear attempts to garner publicity.”
“Mr Combs and his legal team have full confidence in the facts, their legal defenses, and the integrity of the judicial process,” a prior statement from his team said.
Combs, who has pleaded not guilty to the sex trafficking charges and is set to face trial next May, is currently being held without bail in federal custody in Brooklyn.
The Post has reached out to Combs’ team about Wallace’s claims.