Druski Wants Sanctions Against Accuser, Argues Evidence Shows Innocence 'Beyond Reasonable Dispute'

The comedian's team says that on the day the plaintiff says she was assaulted by him, she had previously claimed she was attacked by two white men.

Druski with a beard and short hair wearing a yellow Versace robe is smiling and holding a microphone on stage.
Image via Getty/Paras Griffin

Druski's legal team is claiming in a new filing that he could not have been involved in a sexual assault against a woman who named him in a recent lawsuit, because she was, according to her own statements, being assaulted by other people.

Druski, alongside Diddy, Odell Beckham Jr., and others, was named a March lawsuit by Ashley Parham and two other anonymous defendants, accusing them of sexual assault. Parham had originally filed the suit without Druski's name attached in October of 2024.

On Friday (May 9), the comedian filed a motion against Parham and the John and Jane Doe. In it, he says that the day Parham alleged the incident with Druski occurred — March 23, 2018 — was the same day she told police she was assaulted by two men. One of those men was Shane Pearce, who is mentioned in her current suit against Druski, Diddy, and OBJ; the other was a man described as Pearce's "twin."

Pearce is described in court documents as "a white male adult approximately 35 to 40 years old, 6 feet tall with a thin build. Brown hair with brown eyes and a short beard."

A document from 2019 where Parham recounts the alleged attack from Pearce and his "twin," along with other supporting paperwork, is included in the filing. Among the documents is an email from Parham, dated August 23, 2018, in which she accuses Pearce of "raping me with your friend exactly five months ago from today at this exact time."

“There is no evidence in these pre-existing court records indicating that anyone other than Mr. Pearce and his ‘twin’ friend were at his home on the night in question,” Druski’s legal team wrote in Friday’s filing. “There is no claim that Sean Combs (Diddy) was present at this suburban home, or that other celebrities and athletes attacked her.”

Druski's filing cites other issues with Parham's allegation.

As previously reported, phone records obtained by Complex in April appear to show that Druski was not in California on the date of the alleged 2018 assault. Instead, as elaborated on in Friday's filing, the 30-year-old is said to have been working at an Outback Steakhouse in Georgia at the time and living with his mother. The filing includes phone and employment records that appear to back this up.

Druski, Diddy, and OBJ have all previously released statements denying the claims in the suit.

“This allegation is a fabricated lie,” Druski said in an update to X in March. “I wasn't a public figure in 2018. I was broke living with my mom without any connections to the entertainment industry at the time of this allegation, so the inclusion of my name is truly outlandish. My heart breaks for actual victims of abuse, but l'm fully confident that the evidence will expose this falsehood and the individuals who are maliciously trying to game the legal system to peddle false narratives.”

Druski is seeking sanctions — essentially money equivalent to attorney fees and court costs — against Parham and her counsel, arguing that it has been established “beyond reasonable dispute” that the comedian and social media personality was in Georgia when the alleged assault occurred, not in California.

Furthermore, per the latest filing, the inconsistencies in the woman’s prior police report and sworn statement when compared with the amended complaint’s allegations should “make clear” that her lawyers “failed to conduct even a minimal investigation” before formally naming Druski, his counsel said.