
Sean 'Diddy' Combs not guilty of sex trafficking and racketeering, convicted of two other counts
The verdict comes after jurors on Tuesday told the court that they had reached a decision on the sex trafficking and transportation to engage in prostitution charges against Combs, but they were unable to reach a verdict on the racketeering count. The jurors said they had had "unpersuadable" opinions on both sides about the charge, which is the most complicated of any of the counts Combs was facing and also the most severe. Prosecutors called more than 30 witnesses over the course of the seven-week trial, including Combs ex-girlfriend, musician Casandra Ventura, rapper Kid Cudi, several ex-employees and hotel security workers. They alleged Combs relied on a "loyal" inner circle of employees to coerce his partners into so-called "freak-offs", in which his girlfriends would have sex with a male escort while he watched and filmed. The government relied on testimony from Ms Ventura, taking the stand at eight-months pregnant, who told the court Combs pressured her into the sex acts and threatened to release tapes of the freak-offs if she disobeyed him. At the centre of their case was a video of the rapper beating and dragging Ms Ventura in a Los Angeles hotel hallway in 2016, surveillance footage that security employees testified that Combs tried to pay them to delete. Combs' attorneys conceded that their client was violent toward women, but argued that his behaviour was motivated by drugs and jealousy, not evidence of a larger sex trafficking and racketeering scheme. Sex trafficking and racketeering both carry a maximum sentence of life in prison. Combs is also facing dozens of civil lawsuits alleging sexual assault and violence. The Harlem-born rapper founded Bad Boy Records in 1993, a label that represented some of the biggest names in hip hop - including Notorious B.I.G. and Usher. He went on to establish a clothing line called Sean John and a variety of other businesses including fragrances, alcohol and even a media company.
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Daily Mail
an hour ago
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