Sarah Ferguson Warned a Possible Diddy Tape Could Leak, Palace Unable to Intervene
A recent claim involving Sarah Ferguson, Sean “Diddy” Combs, and alleged taped material has drawn renewed attention after Hollywood insider Rob Shuter discussed the matter on the May 27 episode of Maureen Callahan’s The Nerve podcast. During the appearance, Shuter suggested Ferguson should be “very, very careful” if any tape from decades ago still exists, saying that in the past, the palace may have had the power to suppress such material, but no longer does. He also said that if a tape exists, it could eventually surface when Combs is released from prison.
The comments come as Combs is serving a 50-month federal prison sentence after being convicted in July 2025 on two prostitution-related charges tied to alleged sex- and drug-fueled parties. He is currently scheduled for release in April 2028. The allegations have continued to generate media coverage and speculation, particularly around what material may still be in circulation or stored privately.
The report also follows a claim published by the National Enquirer, which alleged that Ferguson “lives in fear” that Combs may have retained explicit tapes involving the two of them in what the outlet described as a private video library. According to the article, an unnamed insider claimed that “everybody got filmed,” and suggested there is a near certainty that Ferguson appears on tape.
The story has not been independently verified, and the allegations remain based on media reports and unnamed sources. Still, the discussion has fueled attention because it connects a longtime member of the British royal family with a case already surrounded by controversy, criminal conviction, and speculation about recorded evidence.
Ferguson, the former wife of Prince Andrew, has faced periodic public scrutiny over the years, but the new claims place her back into headlines for reasons tied to Combs’ legal troubles and the possibility that private recordings may exist. Shuter’s remarks were presented as opinion and speculation, not as confirmed fact, though he argued that any such footage would be far harder to bury today than it would have been years ago.
Combs’ incarceration and the possibility of future leaks continue to be a focus of media attention. The combination of criminal proceedings, celebrity interest, and alleged archived material has made the story especially combustible for tabloids and gossip outlets. For now, however, the claims about Ferguson remain unconfirmed, and no tape has been publicly produced.
The broader issue underscores how allegations involving powerful public figures can resurface years later when old recordings, private archives, or confidential accounts are brought back into discussion. In this case, the speculation centers on whether any material exists, who may have seen it, and whether it could eventually become public after Combs completes his prison term.




