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  1. #1
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    Default UPDATED: Latest updates in Sean ‘Diddy’ Combs’ trial (Fri 4 Jul 2025 US time)


    Jury members in Sean ‘Diddy’ Combs’ sex-trafficking trial have been ordered to deliberate further after failing to reach a decision on one count.

    On day two of deliberations following the music mogul’s six-week trial in New York, the 12-person panel had decided on four out of five counts, though they couldn’t agree on the charge of racketeering conspiracy. In a note sent to the judge at 4pm, local time, the judge was informed that members were deadlocked, with their opinions “unpersuadable.”
    Members had reached a partial verdict, agreeing on the charges of sex trafficking of Cassie Ventura, transportation for prostitution of Ms Ventura and others, sex trafficking of ‘Jane’, and finally, transportation for prostitution of ‘Jane’ and others.

    Lawyers for the defence and prosecution pushed the judge to instruct jury members to continue deliberating on the racketeering conspiracy charge. A jury in a criminal trial in most U.S. jurisdictions, including New York, must be unanimous.

    Combs’ lawyer Marc Agnifilo said the defence would like the judge to bring out the jury to instruct them to continue deliberating rather than communicating via notes.

    The prosecution asked the judge to enforce the ‘Allen’ charge, also known as the ‘dynamite’ charge, which is used when jurors are unable to reach a verdict. The ‘Allen’ charge is a method encouraging jurors to re-evaluate their positions in order to reach a decision.


  2. #2
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    Combs found guilty on two counts of sex trafficking and one count of racketeering conspiracy and denied bail
    Combs still found guilty on lesser charges.

    Sean ‘Diddy’ Combs has been acquitted on the most serious charges of racketeering and sex trafficking as his stunning verdict was handed down in New York.

    The music mogul, 55, has been spared life behind bars after the jury on Wednesday found him not guilty on two counts of sex trafficking and one count of racketeering conspiracy following a seven-week trial in Manhattan.

    Combs was found guilty on two counts of transportation to engage in prostitution, charges of which can carry a 10-year prison sentence each.

    Combs nodded his head repeatedly and said “thank you” to a juror as a verdict clearing him on the most serious charges was read out in court, New York Post reports. He then held his hands in a prayer gesture, waved them in the direction of the jury and mouthed “thanks”.


    Combs reacts after he was convicted of prostitution-related offences but acquitted of sex trafficking and racketeering charges.

    However, Combs will remain behind bars awaiting sentencing after his bail application was rejected by the judge.

    Judge Arun Subramanian said Combs had shown a “disregard for the rule of law and a propensity of violence” during the bail hearing. He proposed a sentencing date of October 3.

    Combs has been incarcerated in Brooklyn since his arrest in September.

    CNN anchor Laura Coates described the atmosphere outside court as a “circus”, with video showing Diddy supporters spraying baby oil in celebratory scenes.

    “Spectacle, circus, show, all words that come to mind,” Coates said on-air.

    “There are shouting matches at times. This is a scene.”

    Combs’ lawyers had pushed hard for bail, suggesting a $1 million bond and that he be permitted to travel between Miami, Los Angeles, and New York while he awaits sentencing.

    After releasing the jury, Judge Subramanian asked Combs if he wanted to go back to the notorious Brooklyn lock up.

    “Mr Combs, you don’t want to go back to the MDC?” Mr Subramanian asked.

    Combs shook his head several times and held up his hands in a prayer gesture toward the judge.

    The question came after Combs’ lawyer argued that he should be released to home confinement since he was acquitted on the most serious charges in the case.

    They said they would hand over his passport to court officials.


    Sean ‘Diddy’ Combs made a praying gesture as the verdict was read out in court.

    “He would be nothing short of a fool, which he is not, to violate any conditions the court set,” defence lawyer Marc Agnifilo said, adding that Combs “treasures” the “opportunity he has been given.”

    Cassie Ventura Fine’s lawyer, Douglas Wigdor, had earlier urged the judge to reject his bail application.

    “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,” Wigdor wrote in a letter.

    Combs faces a maximum of 20 years behind bars on the two prostitution charges.

    Each count he was convicted of has a maximum sentence of 10 years and could be combined into a 20-year sentence.

    There is no minimum sentence for those charges of transportation to engage in prostitution – or Mann Act Transportation.

  3. #3
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    50 Cent reacts immediately to Diddy verdict after long-standing feud

    50 Cent was quick to react to the Sean “Diddy” Combs verdict Wednesday – seemingly hailing the disgraced rapper for beating the feds before quickly dubbing him “the Gay John Gotti.”

    “Diddy beat the Feds that boy a bad man!” the rapper said in an Instagram post alongside a photo of himself grinning and applauding emojis.

    50 Cent, who has a longstanding feud with the disgraced music mogul, then compared him to the infamous Mafia boss who was nicknamed “The Teflon Don” after prosecutors couldn’t get charges to stick, The NY Post reports.

    “Beat the Rico, he the Gay John Gotti,” the rapper added.

    The “In Da Club” hip-hop artist was name-dropped during the trial back in May during shocking testimony that touched on the longstanding feud between the hip-hop legends.

    Diddy’s ex-assistant, Capricorn Clark, had told jurors her boss once implied he might pull a gun on Fitty.

    “I don’t like all the back and forth … I like guns,” Clark recalled Combs telling his manager after seeing 50 Cent at an MTV event.

    50 Cent – who famously took nine bullets during a 2000 shooting in Queens – reacted to the name-drop with mocking faux fear.

    “Wait a minute PUFFY’s got a gun, I can’t believe this I don’t feel safe,” the New York City native posted on Instagram after the testimony. “LOL.”

    The beef between the pair began nearly 20 years ago after 50 Cent, whose real name Curtis James Jackson III, released a diss track — “The Bomb” — in 2006 that accused Combs of knowing who killed The Notorious B.I.G.

    He spent much of the Combs’ sex-trafficking trial roasting him over the torrent of graphic evidence and accusations levelled against him.

    The Bad Boy Records founder was ultimately found guilty of two counts of transportation to engage in prostitution. He was acquitted on two sex-trafficking charges and one racketeering charge.

    The acquittals on the sex trafficking counts mean he will avoid a 15-year mandatory minimum sentence. He could have faced life in prison if he were convicted on sex trafficking or racketeering conspiracy. Combs now faces a maximum 10-year prison sentence on each of the two prostitution counts.

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    Can Diddy stage a career comeback after his bombshell verdict?

    Sean “Diddy” Combs’ supporters chanted “Free Puff!” — and poured baby oil over themselves — outside Manhattan federal court on Wednesday after the stunning verdict in his bombshell weekslong sex trafficking trial was revealed.

    But could he really make a comeback?

    A jury convicted the once-renowned music mogul, 55, of two counts of transportation to engage in prostitution, but acquitted him of the more serious sex trafficking and racketeering charges that could have landed him in prison for the rest of his life.

    Combs is now facing a maximum sentence of up to 20 years in prison on the two prostitution charges. His sentencing is scheduled for October 3.

    Before he was arrested in September, the three-time Grammy Award winner was riding high as one of the most powerful men in music.

    And while his career quickly came tumbling down, the jury’s shocking decision opens the door to the possibility that Combs will try to rejoin the industry and fix his battered reputation.

    “I do not think the court of public opinion will be forgiving,” Ann Olivarius, the founder of the McAllister Olivarius law firm and an lawyer focused on women’s rights, told The Post in a statement. “The damage to Diddy’s reputation is real, and demonstrates that the world is watching and survivors matter, even if their abusers are powerful.”

    David B. Allan, a professor of music marketing at Saint Joseph’s University, similarly believes Combs can’t make a comeback.

    “Once the wave of getting off on the more serious charges settles, the music business will pass judgment and his reputation will be done,” Allan exclusively told The Post. “Sean has always been great at p.r. and publicity, but there’s no coming back from this, as this is his legacy.

    “There will always be an asterisk by his name and his hits,” Allan stated.

    Ana Garcia, host of “True Crime News: The Podcast,” shared a similar sentiment about Combs’ future in the industry.

    “Combs may have been spared life in prison but I am not so sure his career can be saved,” Garcia exclusively told The Post. “How can you look at Diddy and not think this man is repulsive? The public cannot unsee Cassie’s beating or the vile things he made her do.”

    “I think Diddy’s image and endorsements are ruined,” Garcia continued. “This trial didn’t up Diddy’s gangsta cred. Instead, it revealed a pathetic and violent man who gets off on seeing his beautiful girlfriend urinated on. Who wants that guy endorsing your product?”

    Meanwhile, Tyrone Blackburn, a lawyer who is representing Rodney “Lil Rod” Jones and others in civil suits against Combs, believes the star could make a grand return.

    “Because these are not viewed as the really serious claims, or serious charges, I think he may be able to come back,” Blackburn exclusively told The Post.

    “I think if he shows some sort of remorse, I think if he submits an apology, I think if he falls on his sword and takes ownership for what he has done, thanks the jury for their thoroughness and says he will get some help, he possibly can,” Blackburn added.

    Lawyer Joel Denaro told The Post: “Like always, people’s memories will fade, and given Diddy’s considerable talent, I’m sure he will flourish musically going forward.”

    Tony Dofat, for example, is up to collaborate with the embattled mogul again. He composed and produced hit tracks for Diddy and Bad Boy Entertainment in the ’90s.

    “I would definitely work together with him again. We made a lot of great records together,” he told The Post. “Maybe going through these things will put them in a different perspective. It’ll probably create a different type of art.”

    Jeff Apruzzese, who runs the music industry program at Drexel University, believes Combs will “certainly try” to wiggle his way back.

    “Diddy has always positioned himself as both a creator and a CEO. That said, a public-facing comeback, whether through performance or media appearances, would likely face steep resistance,” Apruzzese noted. “If he returns at all, it’s more likely to be behind the scenes in a production or mentorship role, though that still depends on whether business partners are willing to re-engage.”

    Combs wouldn’t be the first once-disgraced celebrity to recover from a major scandal.

    Chris Brown was all but cancelled for getting into a domestic violence incident with then-girlfriend Rihanna in 2009. The Forever singer, 36, has also faced other assault allegations over the years.

    But Brown experienced a career resurgence with the release of his albums Breezy in 2022 and 11:11 in 2023, the latter of which won him the Grammy Award for Best R & B Album. He’s also about to embark on the US leg of his Breezy Bowl XX tour from July 30 to September 20.

    Apruzzese doesn’t think Combs can replicate what Brown has done.

    “Chris Brown’s return unfolded gradually and under very different cultural conditions,” the professor said. “The nature of the allegations against Diddy and the current climate in Hollywood means people are far more cautious about public associations that could create long-term reputational risk.”

    Apruzzese also speculated that other famous names “will likely keep their distance, at least publicly,” from Combs for now.

    “Collaborators now have to think about brand alignment, audience expectations and potential backlash,” he noted. “So even if relationships still exist behind the scenes, we may not see them out in the open.”

    Along with the current lack of public support, Combs’ finances have taken a hit since he became a pariah.

    Forbes last year estimated the rapper’s net worth at around $400 million, down from the $740 million he was worth in 2019.

    Before his arrest, he reportedly stepped down and later fully divested from his cable television network, Revolt. He also settled a legal dispute with spirits company Diageo, which involved him relinquishing control of his alcohol brands Cîroc and DeLeón.

    Combs’ record label, Bad Boy Entertainment, has also been affected by his legal troubles. In 2023, he returned the music-publishing rights to the artists and songwriters who helped build the company.

    At the time, Combs told Variety: “It’s just doing the right thing. I think that we as an industry, and as a people, have to look in the mirror and make a shift forward. It’s about evolving, leading by example and reforming an industry that needs it, in a world that needs reform.”

    Bad Boy has not announced any major releases since Combs’ arrest. The last album Combs put out was 2023’s The Love Album: Off the Grid.

    However, Combs was recently featured on Kanye West’s new song, which also included West’s 12-year-old daughter, North.

    West, who has also been shunned for his own controversies, has voiced support for Combs and even made a brief appearance at the trial.

    Combs’ legal costs have certainly added up over the past year, which could also endanger his potential resurgence.

    Before his trial began in May, an expert told Fox News that Combs’ legal defence could cost him $15 million.

    After the verdict, legal expert Neama Rahmani told The Post that Combs’ sex-trafficking case was the “most expensive prostitution trial in American history.”

    In addition, Combs’ ex Cassie Ventura claimed she received a $20 million settlement in her 2023 lawsuit against the hip-hop mogul. Video evidence of Combs physically assaulting Ventura, 38, from 2016 was released last year, before she testified against Combs during the trial in May.

    Ventura reacted to Wednesday’s verdict in a statement via her lawyer, Doug Wigdor, who said she “paved the way” for the jury to convict Combs on the prostitution charges.

    “By coming forward with her experience, Cassie has left an indelible mark on both the entertainment industry and the fight for justice,” Ventura’s lawyer said.

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