New Claims About Biggie’s Funeral Put Diddy and King Combs Back Under the Microscope
The fallout from Netflix’s Sean Combs: The Reckoning is now reaching all the way back to The Notorious B.I.G.’s 1997 funeral, with fresh stories re-examining Sean “Diddy” Combs’ role and the impact on his son, Christian “King” Combs. A recent feature in Cosmopolitan UK revisits the iconic New York procession – the streets packed, Biggie’s music blaring from car windows – and frames it as a formative trauma for Diddy and his family, particularly as King Combs has grown into his own career while living under that legacy.
At the same time, claims circulating around the documentary that Diddy somehow profited from, or mishandled, funeral finances are being actively challenged. In a detailed rebuttal reported by ValidUpdates, Biggie’s long-time estate manager Wayne Barrow firmly denies suggestions that Combs used funds intended for funeral costs. Barrow insists that Diddy and Bad Boy Records paid “every part of the service,” adding that he personally helped plan and even officiated the funeral.
Barrow says he has reviewed royalty statements line by line with Biggie’s mother, Voletta Wallace, up until her death, and that no funeral charges ever appeared. In his view, the clean accounting records settle the matter. The dispute shows how the Netflix series has reopened old wounds and rival accounts, inviting younger fans—many of them discovering this history via streaming—to re-litigate 1990s events through a 2020s lens.
For Diddy’s son King Combs, who has spent the last few years carving out his own music career while his father faces prison and civil suits, the renewed focus on Biggie’s funeral underscores how tightly personal grief, hip-hop history and family branding remain intertwined.





