Jury reaches verdict on 4 of 5 counts in Diddy trial but is told to keep deliberating
But the outcome of any of the charges was not yet clear. The judge told the jury to hold off announcing its partial verdict and instead to continue weighing the remaining charge. Like prosecutors and Combs' defense team, Judge Arun Subramanian reasoned that after just two days of deliberations, it was too soon to give up on reaching a verdict on all counts.
The development came late Tuesday afternoon, when the jury sent a note saying it was unable to reach a unanimous verdict on the racketeering conspiracy charge because there were jurors with 'unpersuadable views' on both sides.
Subramanian noted that juries have a right to deliver a partial verdict, but he said that given that deliberations started only Monday, he'd rather they continue for now. The jury was eventually dismissed for the day.
Combs' lawyers surrounded him at the defense table soon after the note was sent to the court. The hip-hop mogul appeared morose as they explained to him what was happening. At one point, lead defense lawyer Marc Agnifilo stepped away from the huddle, returned with a piece of paper and handed it to Combs, who read it solemnly.
Combs' mother and several of his children returned to the courtroom after the judge announced that the jury had reached a partial verdict.
Prosecutors, meanwhile, were at their table, glued to their phones and laptop computers.
Jurors are weighing charges that Combs used his fame, wealth and violence to force two girlfriends into drug-fueled sex marathons with male sex workers known as 'freak-offs' or 'hotel nights.'
He has pleaded not guilty, and his lawyers contend prosecutors are trying to criminalize Combs' swinger lifestyle and that, if anything, his conduct amounted to domestic violence, not federal felonies.
Combs, 55, could face 15 years in prison to life behind bars if he is convicted of all charges.
Racketeering conspiracy — Count 1 on the jury's verdict sheet — is the most complicated of the charges against Combs because it requires the jury to decide not only whether he ran a 'racketeering enterprise,' but also whether he was involved in committing some or all of various types of offenses, such as kidnapping and arson.
The charge falls under RICO — the Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act — which is best known for being used in organized crime and drug cartel cases.
Earlier Tuesday, the jury asked to review critical testimony from one of the prosecution's most important witnesses: the hip-hop mogul's former longtime girlfriend Cassie.
The panel of eight men and four women asked for Cassie's account of Combs beating, kicking and dragging her at a Los Angeles hotel in 2016 — an assault captured on now-infamous security camera footage.
They also asked to see Cassie's testimony about an incident in which she said Combs accused her of taking drugs from him and kicked her off of their yacht at the Cannes Film Festival in France in 2013. On their way back to the U.S., she said, he threatened to release explicit videos of her having sex.
In addition, the jury asked for Cassie and stripper Daniel Phillip's testimony about her jumping into his lap at a New York City hotel after, as Phillip testified, he suspected Combs had been slapping and slamming her around an adjacent room.
'Her whole entire body was shaking, like she was terrified,' said Phillip, who was at the hotel for a sexual encounter with Cassie sometime between 2012 and 2014.
Phillip testified that he asked Cassie, the R&B singer whose real name is Casandra Ventura, why she was with Combs if he was hitting her and beating her. He said he told her she was in real danger. Cassie, he said, 'basically tried to convince me that it was OK: 'It's OK. I'm fine, I'll be OK.''
Phillip and Cassie were among the first witnesses who testified when the trial began last month.
The jury's testimony request came soon after Combs' lawyers and prosecutors began the day haggling with Subramanian over a jury question left over from the end of the first day of deliberations on Monday.
Jurors wanted clarification about what qualifies as drug distribution, an aspect of the racketeering conspiracy charge that will help determine whether Combs can be convicted or exonerated on the count.
Subramanian said he would remind jurors of the instructions he gave them on that part of the case before they started deliberating on Monday. Combs' lawyers had pushed for a more expansive response, but prosecutors argued — and Subramanian agreed — that doing so could end up confusing jurors more.
On Monday, the panel deliberated over five hours without reaching a verdict. Barely an hour into deliberations, the jury foreperson sent a note to the judge, complaining that there was one juror 'who we are concerned cannot follow your Honor's instructions. May I please speak with your Honor or may you please interview him?'
The judge sent jurors a note reminding them of their duties to deliberate and obligation to follow his instructions on the law.
After pleading not guilty, Combs chose not to testify as his lawyers built their arguments for acquittal mostly through lengthy cross examinations of dozens of witnesses called by prosecutors, including some of Combs' former employees who took the witness stand reluctantly only after being granted immunity.
When jurors first left the room to begin deliberating on Monday, Combs sat for a while slumped in his chair at the defense table before standing and turning toward three rows of spectators packed with his family and friends.
Sisak, Neumeister and Peltz write for the Associated Press.

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New York Post
2 hours ago
- New York Post
Sean ‘Diddy' Combs jury deadlocked after rapper's defense played ‘high stakes poker': legal expert
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He added, 'Gotta give the jury a reason for doubt and if you don't put up a very significant defense, all you do is cross-examine government witnesses, then you're going to be an inmate.' Diddy told the court last week that it was his decision not to testify in his sex crimes case. The judge asked if Diddy understood he had the right to testify or not testify, and if he had discussed his rights with his attorney. Advertisement Diddy responded, 'Yes, thoroughly,' before admitting it was 'solely my decision' to not testify in his sex crimes trial. 4 Sean 'Diddy' Combs passes a note to his attorney Marc Agnifilo as U.S. District Judge Arun Subramanian gives legal instructions to the jury, during Combs' sex trafficking trial in New York City, New York, on June 30, 2025 in this courtroom sketch. REUTERS Jurors began deliberating on Monday, June 30, and of the five counts, could not agree on a verdict for the racketeering charge, one of the most serious counts against the disgraced music mogul. A federal RICO violation can result in a 20-year sentence. The transportation to engage in prostitution charge could carry a sentence of up to 10 years, while sex trafficking by force, fraud or coercion may carry a 20-year sentence. Advertisement 'It's very complicated — most lawyers cannot explain RICO, so to expect 12 people, average citizen jurors to understand a criminal enterprise, predicate acts … it's just a lot to ask,' Gowdy said. 'There's a reason to charge it even if you don't win. It opens evidentiary doors that might be closed, so lots of times prosecutors will charge something because it enables you to get extra evidence before a jury even though you don't really expect to get a guilty verdict on that count.' Criminal defense attorney John W. Day, owner of the Santa Fe, New Mexico-based law practice John Day Law, told Fox News Digital that jurors may have had a difficult time comprehending the RICO charge. 'Was Diddy's high-flying and maybe disturbing lifestyle just that, or can you really pick out a criminal enterprise that is the equivalent of an organized crime family?' Day said. 'But tomorrow morning the judge will be hoping that after a night of thinking about it, the jurors will have second thoughts about a split verdict on RICO — one way or the other — and come back with a unanimous verdict on that most serious charge.' Advertisement 4 Evidence Photos from the March 2024 raid at Diddy's Los Angeles mansion. Department of Justice Criminal defense attorney Nicole Blank Becker, who represented R. Kelly, explained that the predicate acts against Diddy were the 'building blocks' to establish a RICO charge. Whether a jury can agree on a verdict or not remains to be seen. 'So what happens is now they're forced to go back in there, and there's probably going to be a lot of frustration back there, more fighting back and forth,' Becker said. 'My understanding is that the jurors' verbiage was something to the effect of that they're at a point where there's unpersuadable opinions on both sides. So clearly some of the jurors thinking, 'Well, obviously he's guilty.'' The judge instructed the jury to continue deliberating for now. A second option would be to give supplemental jury instructions. Lastly, the jury could return a partial verdict. However, Judge Subramanian said he is not considering the third option at this point, and chose to have a portion of the jury charge re-read. Criminal defense attorney Eric Faddis, founding partner of Colorado-based Varner Faddis, agreed that the RICO charge was the most complicated of all the charges. 4 Sean 'Diddy' Combs attends Day 1 of 2023 Invest Fest at Georgia World Congress Center on August 26, 2023 in Atlanta, Georgia. Getty Images 'The jury could be hung up on the different requirements of the charge, including the criminal enterprise element,' Faddis said. 'I suspect that may be a sticking point because the government didn't charge any co-conspirators and never called any other alleged members of this criminal enterprise.' Advertisement He added, 'At this point, it's unclear whether the partial verdict could give rise to any grounds for appeal.' The government emphasized in their argument that Diddy ran an alleged criminal enterprise with full control. The prosecution pointed out that the jury heard testimony, saw texts, viewed bank records and heard audio allegedly showing the 'Last Night' rapper committing crime after crime for decades. According to the prosecution, the government showed Diddy didn't take no for an answer. 'Up until today, Diddy was able to get away with crime because of money and power,' Assistant U.S. Attorney Christine Slavik said. 'That stops now.' The verdict for the four counts reached came 'fairly quickly,' according to Austin-based criminal defense attorney Sam Bassett. Advertisement 4 Video surveillance grabs show Cassie Ventura trying to sneak out of the hotel, but Diddy catching up to her in a towel and dragging her down the hallway. U.S. Attorneys SDNY 'It seems the jury has struggled and spent most of their time debating the more serious and complex racketeering count,' Bassett noted. 'If I was the defense, I'd be concerned, but you never know what a jury will do. For this lengthy of a trial, a 13-hour deliberation is on the short side of expectations.' When the jury was brought back into the courtroom, the judge asked them to keep deliberating, saying it is their duty to discuss among themselves and form opinions. Judge Subramanian said the jurors must reach a unanimous verdict, but must not give up their convictions merely to return a verdict or satisfy the rest of the jurors. The jury was then dismissed back to the jury room. Court concluded after 5 p.m., and the jury was asked to return on Wednesday before 9 a.m. Advertisement 'Both sides stated that they do not want to accept a partial verdict,' attorney David S. Seltzer told Fox News Digital. 'This forces the jury to render a complete verdict, which ultimately could lead to a hung jury on the count at issue if they cannot render a verdict on all counts, and thus lead to a possible retrial on the hung count. 'As for appellate issues, there will be many, and depending on how the case resolves, this may be another issue for appeal.'


USA Today
9 hours ago
- USA Today
Danity Kane's D. Woods fears Diddy's 'retaliation' as his trial nears end
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Yahoo
10 hours ago
- Yahoo
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