FEATURED Diddy Sentenced To 4 Years In Prison!

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Diddy's Fate?

  • He's Cooked; 10 Years and Up

  • He'll Do A Couple Years

  • He Won't Do A Day


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I’m not mad, but I’m kind of surprised but also I didn’t keep up with every detail of this trial. I just kinda watched videos like most people.

I kind of thought they had him, but I also kept on seeing people say that they didn’t prove the Rico and I didn’t really understand what charges were exactly under the Rico

I figured they at least had him for flying prostitutes over state lines

I think they charged him with the wrong thing and they would’ve been better off having the state charge him with domestic violence and something else that’s not sex trafficking to the women because that’s not exactly what he was doing .
 
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Reactions: GNS
Diddy dont have to do another fucking record in the music business ever again. His music catalogue (hate it or love it) is cemented; nobody on earth can take that away from him. That goes for the entertainment business in general. He don't need it, but even if he does stick around, he will be fine, just won't be public-facing to your point.

But let's be real, with all that has come to light, he can potentially make so much more money elsewhere like the porn industry lol. Or just invest in his money.
Yes those are probably two of his best and only options at this point lol
 
A lawyer for Casandra Ventura, who testified Mr. Combs physically abused her and pressured her into sex, submitted a letter to the judge urging him to deny Mr. Combs’s request for release on bond. The lawyer, Douglas Wigdor, wrote that “Ms. Ventura believes that Mr. Combs is likely to pose a danger to the victims who testified in this case, including herself, as well as to the community.”
 
Deonte Nash, a stylist and friend of Casandra Ventura’s who testified during the trial, wrote a letter to the judge, urging him not to release Sean Combs in the wake of his mixed verdict. The prosecutors filed the letter along with their own asking the judge not to set bail.

Nash, who testified that he had seen Combs beating Ms. Ventura, cited ”a long, well-documented history of violent, coercive and retaliatory behavior,” arguing that Mr. Combs should stay in custody.

Combs, Mr. Nash wrote, has “repeatedly escaped meaningful accountability,” and, if released on Wednesday, “I have no doubt he will see it as yet another license to continue intimidating, threatening, and harming people who challenge or expose him.”

He added that a decision to release Mr. Combs would be “a profound mistake.”
 
The judge said that the limited exception to mandatory detention was not met. Sean Combs pointed to his duties as a father and a son, but that does not rise to the level of an appropriate exception, the judge said.
 
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The judge noted that at trial, “the defense conceded” Sean Combs’s violence in his personal relationships. “We own it,” Marc Agnifilo, Mr. Combs’s lead lawyer, said in his closing statemnet.

The judge is citing the defense’s own statements in closing arguments in making his decision to keep Sean Combs detained.
“If he was charged with domestic violence we wouldn’t all be here having a trial because he would have pled guilty — because he did that,” Marc Agnifilo, Sean Combs’s lead lawyer, had said.

One of the defense’s key strategies at trial has now come back to bite them during the bail hearing: admitting Sean Combs’s domestic violence.
 
The judge says that Sean Combs and his lawyers have not met their burden to show that the mogul poses “no danger to any person.”

The judge noted that one of the incidents of violence against a former girlfriend was in June 2024, after Sean Combs knew he was under investigation.


The judge proposed a sentencing for October, but he indicated that he would be open to other suggestions.
 
He noted that Sean Combs has already served nearly 10 months in jail, and that time will go toward his ultimate sentence.

The defense asked for a much more expedited schedule on sentencing.

The defense seems to be pushing for a sentencing as soon as possible. Judge Subramanian pumped the brakes a bit, noting that there is a wide divide between the government and defense regarding their views on sentencing.

Having just learned that he will have to remain in jail until his sentencing, Sean Combs’s demeanor has darkened a bit. He is holding his hands in his lap, his gaze lowered.
 
Marc Agnifilo, the mogul’s lead lawyer, said his team had been reviewing prior convictions on the Mann Act and that the cases typically involve someone who is making money through prostitution or underage victims. This case involves neither. Because of that, Mr. Agnifilo said, the defense believes Mr. Combs is entitled to a lesser sentence. “There’s nothing remotely similar to this,” he said of his client’s case.
 
In arguing for a lower sentence for Sean Combs, his lawyer Marc Agnifilo made a surprising comparison to Eliot Spitzer, the disgraced former governor of New York — like Mr. Combs, Mr. Agnifilo said, Mr. Spitzer made use of prostitution services, but did not face federal charges under the Mann Act for it.
 
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