Chris Todd, the author of Kim Porter’s alleged memoir, has claimed that he has access to “tapes” of Sean “Diddy” Combs that have the potential to “shut down” the world. He claimed this during his October 2 sit-down with The Art of Dialogue, nearly a month after he released the alleged tell-all-memoir titled KIM'S LOST WORDS: A Journey for Justice, from the Other Side...
“Yes, there are tapes that exist… If I was to release those tapes, the world will shut down, okay? If I showed one of these tapes, to you right now, the whole music industry and Hollywood, it would just grind down like this. They are all gonna start pointing at each other…” Chris Todd claimed.
When asked why he didn’t reveal everything from the alleged tapes in Kim Porter’s alleged memoir, the author claimed that he couldn’t “reveal everything at once” as they were “too shocking.” Todd even claimed that if anybody had the alleged tapes, they might “go to jail.”
Exploring more on what the author of Kim Porter’s alleged memoir said about Diddy
Recently, Chris Todd, whose real name is Todd Christopher Guzze, appeared for an interview with The Art of Dialogue’s Delray Richardson to talk about Kim Porter's alleged memoir, which he released on Amazon on September 6 under the pseudonym Jamal T. Millwood.
When asked whether the rumor that Kim Porter kept tapes of Diddy from his s*x and drug parties was true, Chris Todd confirmed that they “exist” and if the contents are made public, it’s going to be “bad” for too many people in the entertainment industry. Todd Guzze also mentioned that he was already in touch with multiple attorneys and had set up meetings with the federal authorities to hand them over the alleged tapes.
“I know how to do it, or going to do it. But just gonna come in pieces and there are also ways we can… not censor it, but kinda soften it. Like the whole tape doesn’t have to come out… I don’t have all the tapes, there are other people who have the tapes, I can’t control them,” Todd claimed.
He added that since Diddy’s case is traced back 30 years, he is not the only one with access to the alleged tapes or knows people who have them.
“I think I have specific ones that no one has… it has to come out one step at a time,” Guzze claimed.
The author of Porter’s alleged memoir shared that it was not his “first rodeo.” He claimed to have singlehandedly “solved the greatest murder case in history” and three similar cases, indicating that he knew how to handle the Diddy scandal.
Elsewhere during the chat, Porter mentioned how the plotlines in the alleged memoir surrounding Diddy and others like Tupac, Jay-Z, and Al B. Sure do not tally with real-world timelines. He also admitted that the book had certain inconsistencies and exaggerated anecdotes.
Notably, Amazon pulled KIM'S LOST WORDS: A Journey for Justice from the Other Side earlier this week after it faced backlash for alleged made-up stories.
“We were made aware of a dispute regarding this title and have notified the publisher. The book is not currently available for sale in our store,” an Amazon spokesperson told ABC News.
Earlier, in the wake of Diddy’s arrest on September 16, the 58-page book became the number 1 on the site’s Literature & Fiction list. It contained accounts of Kim Porter’s relationship with Combs and alleged explicit details of abuse, assault, and more.
Diddy’s attorney, Erica Wolf, told People Magazine that the memoir is “fake,” “offensive,” and “a shameless attempt to profit from tragedy.”
"Chris Todd (the publisher) has no respect for Ms. Porter or her family, who deserve better. Unlike the fabrications in his sickening 'memoir,' it is an established fact that Ms. Porter died of natural causes. May she rest in peace,” the lawyer added.
Kim Porter and Diddy’s four children, including Quincy Brown, Christian “King” Combs, and twins Jessie and D’Lila, also took to Instagram and refuted that their mother ever wrote a book and called it “simply untrue.”
“Anyone claiming to have a manuscript is misrepresenting themselves,” they said.
Meanwhile, Chris Todd told Rolling Stone that he intended to “just put it out there.” He admitted that even though the whole book might not be true, 80 percent of it is, which is “real enough” for him.
Notably, in July, RadarOnline released a never-seen-before 40-page alleged memoir alleging that an anonymous source close to Kim Porter handed them over the contents. Back then, Porter’s close friend Ebony Elektra dismissed the book.