In an escalating war of words over the new Netflix docuseries examining her son’s controversial life and career, Janice Combs has issued a forceful rebuttal to what she characterizes as deliberate distortions and outright fabrications about Sean Combs and his upbringing.
The mother of the disgraced music executive delivered her statement exclusively to Deadline on Friday, taking direct aim at *Sean Combs: The Reckoning*, the four-part series that premiered on the streaming platform December 2nd. Executive produced by rapper Curtis “50 Cent” Jackson, the documentary chronicles the meteoric rise and dramatic fall of the Bad Boy Records founder, who is currently serving a four-year prison sentence after his conviction in October on transportation for prostitution charges.
“I am writing this statement to correct some of the lies presented in the Netflix *Sean Combs: The Reckoning*,” Janice Combs declared. “These inaccuracies regarding my son Sean’s upbringing and family life [are] intentionally done to mislead viewers and further harm our reputation.”
Central to Janice Combs’ objections is a claim made in the series by Kirk Burrowes, a former Bad Boy Records executive, who alleges that Sean Combs physically struck his mother following the tragic 1991 incident at City College that left nine people dead during a celebrity basketball game and promotional event. That disaster, which occurred when crowds stampeded in an overcrowded gymnasium, remains one of the darkest moments in New York City entertainment history.
Janice Combs categorically denies the allegation, calling it “patently false” and “outrageous”
“That was a very sad day for all of us,” she said, referring to the City College tragedy. “For [Burrowes] to use this tragedy and incorporate fake narratives to further his prior failed and current attempt to gain what was never his — Bad Boy Records — is wrong.”
The statement appears to suggest underlying business disputes between Burrowes and the Combs family, implying financial motivations behind the executive’s participation in the documentary.
Beyond the specific incident, Janice Combs also took issue with the broader portrayal of her as a parent, rejecting characterizations that she was abusive toward her son during his formative years.
“In the documentary, I am portrayed as an abusive parent. This is untrue,” she wrote. “I raised Sean with love and hard work, not abuse… Sean has always been an industrious, goal-oriented, overachiever.”
The defense of her parenting comes as the series examines the factors that may have shaped Sean Combs’ personality and behavior—a portrait that has become increasingly unflattering as the music mogul faces mounting legal troubles.
Netflix, for its part, has defended the documentary’s integrity. In a statement to Deadline earlier this week, the streaming giant emphasized the editorial independence of the project despite Jackson’s involvement as executive producer.
“This is not a hit piece or an act of retribution. Curtis Jackson is an executive producer but does not have creative control. No one was paid to participate,” the statement read.
The clarification appears designed to address potential concerns about conflicts of interest, given the well-documented feud between 50 Cent and Sean Combs that has played out publicly over the years.
Janice Combs’ statement reflects the mounting pressure on a family already reeling from Sean Combs’ criminal conviction and incarceration. The 56-year-old music mogul is currently held at Fort Dix Federal Correctional Institution in New Jersey, a medium-security facility approximately 80 miles from New York City.
Her concluding demand was unequivocal: “I am requesting that these distortions, falsehoods, and misleading statements be publicly retracted.”
As of this writing, neither Netflix nor Kirk Burrowes has responded to Janice Combs’ allegations, and it remains unclear whether the streaming service will issue any corrections or modifications to the documentary.
The controversy underscores the increasingly fraught terrain of true-crime and biographical documentaries, where competing narratives and the absence of subjects who can—or will—defend themselves often collide with the stories told by those willing to speak on camera. For the Combs family, already navigating the fallout from Sean’s legal troubles, this latest battle suggests the reckoning may be far from over.
WHAT YOU SHOULD KNOW
Janice Combs is demanding a public retraction from Netflix, vehemently denying two central claims in the docuseries about her son Sean Combs: that he slapped her after the tragic 1991 City College incident, and that she was an abusive parent.
She accuses the documentary of spreading deliberate lies to damage their reputation, suggesting that at least one participant may have financial motives. Netflix stands by the series, stating it’s not a “hit piece” and that no one was paid to participate.
The dispute highlights the tension between documentary storytelling and family members’ right to challenge what they see as false narratives—especially when the subject is imprisoned and unable to respond directly.























