logo
Lockdowns and fights: Sean 'Diddy' Combs back in Brooklyn jail ahead of sentencing

Lockdowns and fights: Sean 'Diddy' Combs back in Brooklyn jail ahead of sentencing

Straits Times2 days ago
Sign up now: Get ST's newsletters delivered to your inbox
Sean \"Diddy\" Combs, next to his lawyer Teny Geragos, reacts after learning he will not be released on bail, during his sex trafficking and racketeering conspiracy trial in New York City, New York, U.S., July 2, 2025, in this courtroom sketch. REUTERS/Jane Rosenberg
NEW YORK - Despite being found not guilty on the most serious counts at his sex trafficking trial, Sean "Diddy" Combs will spend months awaiting sentencing at a notoriously understaffed and violent Brooklyn jail where the music mogul has lived through nearly ten months of lockdowns and fights.
Combs, 55, has been held at the Metropolitan Detention Center since his September 2024 arrest. The facility, which has also held convicted sex traffickers like British socialite Ghislaine Maxwell and rhythm and blues singer R. Kelly, is a far cry from the luxurious Los Angeles and Miami mansions Combs called home until last year.
After the verdict was read on Wednesday, Combs' lawyers asked U.S. District Judge Arun Subramanian to release him on $1 million bond ahead of his sentencing, expected to take place by October.
"I understand that you don't, that Mr. Combs does not want to go back to the MDC," the judge said. Combs shook his head.
His hopes of returning to one of those homes and the embrace of his family after being cleared of the more serious charges were soon dashed. The judge denied Combs' request for bail, citing evidence of his violent behavior presented during the trial.
In recent years, MDC has been plagued by persistent staffing shortages, power outages and maggots in inmates' food. Two weeks after Combs' arrest, prosecutors announced criminal charges against nine MDC inmates for crimes including assault, attempted murder and murder at the facility in the months before Combs arrived.
In January of last year, a federal judge in Manhattan declined to order a man charged with drug crimes detained pending trial at the MDC, calling the conditions there an "ongoing tragedy."
Top stories
Swipe. Select. Stay informed.
Singapore 193ha of land off Changi to be reclaimed for aviation park; area reduced to save seagrass meadow
Business More Singapore residents met CPF Required Retirement Sum when they turned 55 in 2024
Singapore PAP questions Pritam's interview with Malaysian podcast, WP says PAP opposing for the sake of opposing
Singapore 1 in 4 appeals to waive HDB wait-out period for private home owners approved since Sept 2022
Sport A true fans' player – Liverpool supporters in Singapore pay tribute to late Diogo Jota
Singapore Healthcare facility planned for site of Ang Mo Kio Public Library after it moves to AMK Hub
Singapore $500 in Child LifeSG credits, Edusave, Post-Sec Education Account top-ups to be disbursed in July
Business 60 S'pore firms to get AI boost from Tata Consultancy as it launches new innovation centre here
Last August, another judge said he would convert an older defendant's nine-month jail term to home incarceration if he were sent to MDC, citing the jail's "dangerous, barbaric conditions."
The U.S. Bureau of Prisons, which operates MDC, did not immediately respond to a request for comment. The bureau has said it takes its duty to protect inmates seriously.
During the eight-week trial, U.S. Marshals transported Combs to and from the courthouse in Lower Manhattan each day from the facility in Brooklyn's Sunset Park neighborhood, which has also housed former cryptocurrency entrepreneur Sam Bankman-Fried and Luigi Mangione, accused of killing a health insurance executive.
Bankman-Fried has since been moved to a low-security prison in California and is appealing his fraud conviction and 25-year sentence. Mangione has pleaded not guilty to murder charges.
A jury found Combs not guilty on Wednesday on sex trafficking and racketeering charges, sparing him a potential life sentence, but convicted him on two counts of transportation to engage in prostitution that could land him in prison for several years. He had pleaded not guilty to all charges.
Combs' defense lawyer Marc Agnifilo said in court on Wednesday that Combs had been housed in "a very difficult part of the MDC" where there have been fights. His lawyer Alexandra Shapiro said in a November 2024 court filing that frequent lockdowns at the facility had impaired Combs' ability to prepare for trial.
On Wednesday, Combs' lawyers praised MDC staff, who they said had facilitated their access to him during the trial.
"Despite the terrible conditions at the MDC, I want to thank the good people who work there," defense lawyer Teny Geragos told reporters after the verdict. REUTERS
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

By appointment only in New York: Six hidden shops worth visiting
By appointment only in New York: Six hidden shops worth visiting

Straits Times

time24 minutes ago

  • Straits Times

By appointment only in New York: Six hidden shops worth visiting

Sign up now: Get ST's newsletters delivered to your inbox NEW YORK – You did not come to New York to wander fluorescent aisles hunting for someone to unlock the fitting room. You came for the locked-door city – where nothing is labelled, the lift grumbles and whoever buzzes you in has already decided how the afternoon should go. You might leave with a sterling silver carabiner, a fossilised dinosaur foot or a record that makes everything else on your shelf sound flat. Or maybe it was just a book you did not know you were missing until it looked back at you. But do not bother dropping by. These places do not do foot traffic. You e-mail. You call a landline. You wait. Maybe you DM. There is no signage, no small talk, no piped-in jazz. What there is: hand-forged armour, prehistoric bones with six-figure price tags, music that has never been digitised, a jewellery showroom with the logic of a toolbox and – if you are buzzed in – a private library (with all the books for sale) that reads like someone's inner filing system. This is not retail. It is an invitation-only obsession. And if you knock with purpose, that helps. Globus Washitsu, 889 Broadway, Union Square, Manhattan A kimono-styling class at Globus Washitsu near Union Square in New York. This Kyoto-style tatami room has been meticulously built by the investor and long-time Japanophile Stephen Globus. PHOTO: HIROKO MASUIKE/NYTIMES Up a nondescript lift near Union Square, through a quiet hallway and a final sliding door, is something few New Yorkers expect to find above Broadway: a Kyoto-style tatami room meticulously built by investor and long-time Japanophile Stephen Globus. Think shoji screens, hinoki beams, seasonal scrolls – nothing here is an approximation. It is the real deal. Globus Washitsu is not a commercial teahouse. It is a cultural space with two adjoining tatami rooms, carefully designed for a range of intimate, immersive experiences. One of the rooms, KeiSui-An, is a traditional teahouse used for lessons in Japanese tea ceremony ( US$50 or S$64 a person for members, US$60 for non-members) – but the entire space shifts as needed to host calligraphy workshops, rakugo storytelling nights, kimono exhibitions and other quiet arts of Japan: music, dance, ikebana. It also occasionally serves as a ryokan-style guesthouse for visiting artists and scholars. You e-mail for an appointment, remove your shoes at the door and enter a hushed, warm space where calm is not a marketing promise, but a policy. Whether you are there for tea or to simply sit and listen, you leave feeling quieter. And in this city, that is no small thing. Marla Aaron, ninth floor, 37 West 47th Street, Diamond District, Manhattan Marla Aaron's appointment-only showroom in New York. PHOTO: HIROKO MASUIKE/NYTIMES Most people come to the Diamond District for a ring. But here, you will find a sterling silver carabiner with a click so satisfying, it should be studied. Ms Marla Aaron is not your typical jeweller. She is a high-end designer with a locksmith's brain, a sculptor's eye and a deep love of things that open and shut. Her appointment-only showroom feels more like a jeweller's laboratory crossed with a toy chest. Drawers of chains. Trays of tools. Jewellery cases that double as sewing boxes. Her signature locks – platinum and brass, ranging from US$110 to over US$250,000 for one especially extravagant version, made from pink diamonds – are meant to be held, twisted and remixed. They have been sold from vending machines, smuggled into museum shows and handed out by the thousands to single mothers on Mother's Day. In 2024, Ms Aaron won the GEM Award for Jewelry Design given out by the Jewelers of America. She recently opened a mini-store inside Liberty – the iconic department store in London – but the original New York showroom is still where the story clicks into place. Appointments are booked online and virtual appointments are available for out-of-towners – her team walks clients through the collection over Zoom with the same care for detail and touch. 'The showroom is my pride,' she said. Book ahead – and prepare to leave with something you will not want to stop clicking open and closed. WassonArtistry, Ridgewood, Queens A suit of armour at WassonArtistry, an appointment-only shop in Ridgewood, Queens. PHOTO: HIROKO MASUIKE/NYTIMES In Ridgewood, inside a factory building with no signage, Mr Jeffrey Wasson is doing something very few people alive can do: forging mediaeval armour by hand, exactly the way it was done 600 years ago. He studied at the School of Visual Arts, fell in with the Society for Creative Anachronism and got hooked on hammering metal. More than two decades on, he builds custom suits for jousters, re-enactors, museums and films, including Men In Black 3 (2012). His work is also permanently displayed at Discovery Park of America in Tennessee. This is not a shop. It is a working forge, and appointments are required. It smells like scorched steel and something more elemental: a lived-in focus that does not pause for small talk. Clients are measured in person and return for fittings as pieces are roughed, shaped and refined. Mr Jeffrey Wasson works on a breastplate at WassonArtistry. PHOTO: HIROKO MASUIKE/NYTIMES Mr Wasson's Italian-style helms and battle-ready gauntlets are researched down to the rivet spacing. One finished suit rests in the corner, heavy and ready. You can commission a full suit of armour (US$15,000 to US$50,000), take a private dagger-forging class (US$650) or join an occasional New York Adventure Club visit (US$32). No themed music, no cosplay – just iron, fire and a guy who has spent 20 years turning a childhood obsession into serious plate armour. Archivio Records, Unit 401, 247 Water Street, Dumbo, Brooklyn Inside Archivio Records in New York. PHOTO: HIROKO MASUIKE/NYTIMES Archivio is more vinyl bunker than retail space. It is a Dumbo concept store: part record shop, DJ hub, barbershop, tattoo parlour and creative hangout. Co-founded by sound engineer and DJ Pablo Romero (a Queens native who asked for a shout-out to his Colombian background) and DJ Daniel Corral-Webb, this upstairs loft draws an international mix: visiting DJs, stylists, design-world regulars and the curious who have heard whispers. There is an obsessively curated selection of electronic vinyl, from 1980s house to obscure techno subgenres (from US$5 to US$200). Romero is known for matching people to records with eerie precision. A barber and a tattoo artist work on clients at Archivio Records. PHOTO: HIROKO MASUIKE/NYTIMES There is a n appointment-only tattoo set-up and barbershop at the back, where Mr Camo Contreras tattoos in one chair and Mr Christian Restrepo cuts hair in the next. During my visit, a young and hip London DJ was crate-digging up front while someone in the back debated tattoo placement between fades. It is by appointment, not attitude. Archivio does not advertise; it does not need to. People who need it tend to find it, including a few celebrities who either show up on their Instagram – or make sure they do not. High Valley Books, 882 Lorimer Street, Greenpoint, Brooklyn The basement of High Valley Books in New York. PHOTO: SCOTT ROSSI/NYTIMES There is no sign. Just a buzzer and a plain Greenpoint doorway that leads, improbably, to one of New York's most extraordinary private bookstores. Founded in 1999, High Valley Books is run out of Mr Bill Hall's living room and basement, and it is where fashion archivists, interior designers and set decorators go when they need the perfect print reference from 1963 or a magazine no one remembers. Appointments are made via landline – +1-347-889-6346 – or Instagram DM. First-timers get a quiet tour. Regulars know to leave time for the basement, where the discoveries get stranger and better. It is part archive dig, part conversation. Mr Hall might pull something you did not know to ask for. Or he might introduce you to someone across the room hunting something adjacent. Some books cost US$40. Some cost as much as a Vespa. Mr Hall knows which is which, and he will explain why – if you ask. Astro Gallery of Gems, 417 Fifth Avenue, Midtown, Manhattan A display case on the appointment-only floor of Astro Gallery of Gems. PHOTO: HIROKO MASUIKE/NYTIMES Astro Gallery of Gems bills itself as the world's largest gem and mineral shop. Upstairs, you can browse the vault-size geodes and sapphires. But the basement – by appointment only – is where things take a turn for the Jurassic. This is where president and chief executive Dennis Tanjeloff stores his backroom full of prehistoric flex: a US$125,000 Odontopteryx tilapia skeleton (since sold), trilobites as big as house cats, meteorite slices and the kind of dino bones that end up in Gulf State palaces or private Colorado libraries. It is a celebrity obsession too – he calls his buyers 'grown-up boys' who never got over the idea that dinosaurs were real. Among the best-known fossil collectors: American actors Brad Pitt, Nicolas Cage and Leonardo DiCaprio. Mr Tanjeloff is part dealer, part historian and wholly unbothered by those who disapprove of his trade – not everyone loves the idea of rare fossils going to private collectors instead of museums. His current selection, which ranges from US$24 for small ammonites to US$95,000 for a Tyrannosaurus rex tibia, comes from old collections, private digs and other dealers. 'You're not hurting a thing,' he says with a shrug. 'They're already extinct.' Book ahead, ask for the fossil room and expect numbers that make you blink. If you do not leave with an ancient jawbone, you will at least understand why some people feel compelled to try. NYTIMES

Ukraine says it hit Russian military airfield
Ukraine says it hit Russian military airfield

Straits Times

time29 minutes ago

  • Straits Times

Ukraine says it hit Russian military airfield

Sign up now: Get ST's newsletters delivered to your inbox KYIV - Ukraine's special forces struck Russia's Borisoglebsk military airfield in the Voronezh region on Saturday, hitting a glide bomb store and a trainer aircraft, the Ukrainian military said in a statement on social media. The military said that other aircraft were also likely hit, without giving details. "This airfield is the home base of enemy Su-34, Su-35S and Su-30SM aircraft," the statement said. The governor of Voronezh, Alexander Gusev, wrote on Telegram that more than 25 drones were destroyed over the region overnight. He said a power line was temporarily damaged, but made no mention of a military airfield. REUTERS

Canada's Penny Oleksiak withdraws from worlds over whereabouts issue
Canada's Penny Oleksiak withdraws from worlds over whereabouts issue

Straits Times

time44 minutes ago

  • Straits Times

Canada's Penny Oleksiak withdraws from worlds over whereabouts issue

Sign up now: Get ST's newsletters delivered to your inbox Canada's Penny Oleksiak will not be competing at the upcoming World Championships in Singapore. TORONTO – Penny Oleksiak, Canada's most decorated female Olympian, has pulled out of the upcoming swimming World Championships in Singapore because of a probe into an alleged breach of the anti-doping code under the whereabouts rule. Elite athletes are obliged to keep doping authorities informed of their whereabouts at all times so random testing can take place. Former Olympic 100 metres freestyle champion Oleksiak announced her withdrawal from the world championships on social media on July 4, stressing that the issue did not involve any banned substances. "I wanted to confirm I am involved in a whereabouts case with World Aquatics that's still in the preliminary stages," she wrote in a statement. "I want to emphasise that this whereabouts case does not involve any banned substance; it's about whether I updated my information correctly. "Out of respect for Swimming Canada, my fellow racers and clean sport, I have decided not to compete at the world championships. I am and always have been a clean athlete and will be making no further comment at this time." There was no immediate response to a request for comment from World Aquatics. Swimming Canada also released a statement supporting Oleksiak's move, saying they believed she was a clean athlete who had made an "administrative mistake". "We understand that Penny has been notified that she did not keep her whereabouts information fully up-to-date," said Swimming Canada chief executive Suzanne Paulins. "She has explained to us that it was inadvertent and that in no way is she involved in the use of banned substances. "This is a team-first decision, as while she has not been sanctioned at this time, participating at world championships could potentially affect team results if an anti-doping rule violation is determined." As well as taking the blue riband sprint gold at Rio as a 16-year-old in 2016, Oleksiak has won six other Olympic medals and nine at three World Championships. The 2025 championships take place in Singapore from July 27 to Aug 3. In other swimming news, the River Seine reopened to swimmers on July 5 in Paris, allowing people to take a dip in the French capital's iconic waterway for the first time since 1923. Parisians and visitors looking to cool off this summer can dive in – weather permitting – at three bathing sites, including one a stone's throw from the Eiffel Tower. The seasonal opening of the Seine for swimming is seen as a key legacy of the Paris 2024 Olympics, when open water swimmers and triathletes competed in its waters which were specially cleaned for the event. REUTERS, AFP

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store