A book allegedly written by Sean Combs’ late ex-girlfriend Kim Porter has been removed from Amazon.com.
Porter’s family and friends insisted the 58-page book, titled “Kim Porter’s Lost Words,” was fake.
Porter’s ex Al B. Sure! sent a cease & desist to Amazon to halt the sales of the fraudulent memoir.
The book claimed the “Nite and Day” singer slept with Porter and her other ex, Sean “Puffy” Combs, who is locked up at a federal detention center in Brooklyn.
In a statement to Complex, an Amazon spokesperson confirmed the book is no longer available. The spokesperson wrote in an email on Wednesday: “We were made aware of a dispute regarding this title and have notified the publisher. This book is not currently available for sale in our store.”
The book was self-published under the pseudonym “Jamal T. Millwood” on Amazon last month. The publisher’s real name is Todd Christopher Guzze.
Porter (pictured with her bestie Eboni Elektra) died unexpectedly from double pneumonia in 2018 at age 47.
Despite being fake, the book “Kim Porter’s Lost Words” made the best-seller’s list on Amazon.
RELATED: Reminder: Eboni Elektra Slams Kim Porter Book as ‘Blatant Lies’
Guzze has claimed he’s not sure if the diary is real. He claims he received Porter’s writings on a flash drive from a close friend of hers.
Porter is pictured with her late mom, Sarah L. Porter, and her son Quincy in 2004.
In his cease & desist, Sure! said the book falsely portrays him having sexual relations with Combs.
Sure! sent a cease & desist to former Amazon CEO Jeff Bezos and current CEO Andy Jassy.
Sure!’s attorney Robert J. Hantman said his client has been “defamed by false and malicious statements published” in the book.
The letter also stated, “Should you fail to comply with these demands within ten days, we will have no alternative but to pursue all legal remedies available, including filing a lawsuit for defamation.”
The letter further claims the book, “falsely portrays Mr. Brown as engaging in fabricated sexual conduct, particularly with Sean Combs and the mother of his son, Quincy.”
The letter adds: “By misrepresenting his personal life and fabricating serious, false accusations of inappropriate sexual behavior, these defamatory claims have caused significant damage to Mr. Brown’s reputation.”
Sure! tells Page Six, “The part with me, I have nothing to do with any activity of that nature. It’s the most disgusting, heinous lie I have ever heard of in my life.”
The letter demanded that the author stop selling the book, and issue a public apology that, “must be clear, unequivocal, and widely circulated.”