Jurors in Sean "Diddy" Combs' sex trafficking trial have viewed a 2016 video in which the hip-hop mogul assaulted his then-girlfriend, Casandra Ventura, throws her to the ground in the hallway of a Los Angeles area hotel and kicks her as she tries to enter a lift.
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Prosecutors introduced the video on the first day of evidence in the high-profile trial.
Combs, wearing only a towel, is then seen grabbing Ventura's belongings and dragging her into the hallway.
He leaves Ventura behind.
She lies motionless on the ground for a moment before getting up and walking to a hotel phone mounted on the wall.
Combs returns to the scene shortly thereafter and appears to grab at the phone.
He then sits in a chair opposite Ventura and throws a vase in her direction, shattering it.
Combs apologised after the video first aired on CNN last year.
After opening statements, the 12 jurors and six alternates heard from the prosecution's first witness, Israel Florez, a former security guard, who testified he received a call for help after the incident in 2016.
"Scared," Florez replied when asked by a prosecutor to describe Ventura's demeanour.
"She was in the corner and had a hoodie on. I couldn't see her face."
Florez said Combs offered him a stack of cash, which he understood to be a bribe to keep the incident quiet.
Florez declined the offer, he told the jury.
Combs has pleaded not guilty to five felony counts of racketeering conspiracy, sex trafficking and transportation to engage in prostitution.
If convicted on all counts, he faces a mandatory minimum sentence of 15 years and could face life in prison.
Prosecutors say Combs lured women into romantic relationships, forced them to take part in days of drug-fuelled sex parties and then blackmailed them with videos he recorded of the encounters.
Over the course of a two-month trial, jurors are expected to hear testimony from three and possibly four of the rapper's female accusers as well as his former employees who prosecutors say helped arrange and cover up his actions.
Combs "viciously attacked" women when they resisted taking part in the parties, known as "Freak Offs" or otherwise upset him, prosecutor Emily Johnson said during her opening statement on Monday in Manhattan federal court.
She told jurors they would hear testimony from victims who said Combs, 55, routinely beat them and exploded with rage at the smallest slights.
The case has drawn intense media coverage because of Combs' fame.
"They will tell you about some of the most painful experiences of their lives. The days they spent in hotel rooms, high on drugs, dressed in costumes to perform the defendant's sexual fantasies," Johnson said.
Defence lawyer Teny Geragos said on Monday that prosecutors were trying to twist Combs' romantic relationships into a racketeering and sex trafficking case.
"Sean Combs is a complicated man but this is not a complicated case. This case is about voluntary choices made by capable adults in consensual relationships," Geragos said in her opening statement.
Marc Agnifilo, Combs' lead lawyer, has said the 2016 hotel incident depicted the aftermath of a dispute over infidelity.
In a court hearing on Friday, Agnifilo said Ventura had a history of domestic violence, seeking to undercut prosecutors' argument that she was a victim.
Ventura's lawyer declined to comment.
Combs' mother, Janice Combs, sat in the front row of the courtroom along with six of her son's children.
Combs smiled at his family and blew them a kiss before taking his seat with his lawyers.
Combs left the courtroom in good spirits for an afternoon lunch break, pumping his fist and smiling at his children, one of whom flashed him a heart symbol with her hands.
Outside the courthouse, throngs of Combs supporters and curious onlookers recorded videos on their smartphones as they jockeyed with reporters for a glimpse of Combs' family, who were whisked away in a black van for lunch.
Combs is known for turning rap and rhythm and blues artists like Notorious BIG and Mary J Blige into stars, and in the process elevating the mainstream appeal of hip-hop in US culture in the 1990s and early 2000s.
Born in Manhattan's Harlem neighbourhood and raised by a single mother, Combs went on to live in mansions in Miami and Los Angeles and host lavish parties for the cultural elite in destinations like the Hamptons and Saint-Tropez.
Combs' defence strategy at trial will hinge on undermining the credibility of the women who testify against Combs.
His lawyers will argue the women were motivated by money to accuse him of wrongdoing and have unreliable memories.
Combs also has faced at least 50 civil lawsuits accusing him of sexual abuse, including one from Ventura whose lawsuit was settled for undisclosed terms.
"Ask yourself why are they making this allegation now? What is their motive? For many of them the answer is simple: money," defence lawyer Geragos said during her opening statement.
Australian Associated Press