Al B. Sure! says his son Quincy has Stockholm syndrome because of Diddy

Al B. Sure Celebrates His 40th Birthday at R&B Live Hollywood
Al B. Sure Celebrates His 40th Birthday at R&B Live Hollywood / Amy Tierney/GettyImages
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Al B. Sure! and his son Quincy Brown don't have the best relationship. In fact, earlier this month, Brown said Sure is more like a friend than a father while speaking on Angela’s Yee’s podcast, Lip Service. Diddy adopted Brown after he began dating his mother Kim Porter in the '90s, and Sure believes Diddy has a mental hold on him.

A few days ago, a video from 2020 resurfaced that shows Diddy saying he adopted a young girl named Ava Baroni, which turned out to be false. Brown is in the background of that clip, which Sure addressed. “Look at poor Stockholm victim Quincy in the background," he captioned the clip. Sure also shared a Wikipedia link to Stockholm syndrome and wrote, "Free Quincy," while using a couple of emojis to say that he loves him.

Merriam-Webster defines Stockholm syndrome as "The psychological tendency of a hostage to bond with, identify with, or sympathize with his or her captor." Clearly, Sure is calling Diddy a captor and Brown his hostage.

Plus, his message comes days after he expressed a desire to have Porter's 2018 death investigated, and suggested that she didn't die from pneumonia as reported, but was killed because she was going to expose Diddy's crimes. Sure wrote that message after Diddy was arrested on sex trafficking charges earlier this month.

"It is evident that her potential to expose the realities of her personal abuses, being drugged, the #SexTrafficking and #HumanTrafficking she was privy to, akin to the brave actions of Mrs. Cassie Ventura, posed a threat to those profiting from such heinous activities," Sure wrote on Instagram.

"In a nutshell, Kimberly was allegedly taken from us because she was set on course to accomplish what Mrs. Cassie Ventura did by ignited the Bon Fire which brings us here today with the avalanche that has brought Satin to their chambers," he continued, probably meaning to write "Satan" instead of "Satin."

As of this writing, Brown hasn't responded to Sure saying he has Stockholm syndrome.