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Sean 'Diddy' Combs convicted on prostitution counts, but cleared of more serious charges

Sean 'Diddy' Combs convicted on prostitution counts, but cleared of more serious charges

CNBC3 days ago
Sean "Diddy" Combs was found guilty on Wednesday of prostitution-related offenses, but cleared of more serious charges after a criminal trial in which two of the music mogul's former girlfriends testified that he physically and sexually abused them.
Combs was convicted of transportation to engage in prostitution but acquitted of racketeering conspiracy and two counts of sex trafficking, a partial win for the former billionaire known for elevating hip-hop in American culture.
Prosecutors say Combs for two decades used his business empire to force two of his romantic partners to take part in drug-fueled, days-long sexual performances sometimes known as "Freak Offs" with male sex workers in hotel rooms while Combs watched, masturbated and occasionally filmed.
During raids of Combs' homes, authorities found drugs and 1,000 bottles of baby oil and lubricant that he would use in the performances, prosecutors said.
Combs, 55, had pleaded not guilty to all five counts. His lawyers acknowledged that the Bad Boy Records founder, once famed for hosting lavish parties for the cultural elite in luxurious locales like the Hamptons and Saint-Tropez, was at times violent in his domestic relationships. But they said the sexual activity described by prosecutors was consensual.
The seven-week trial in Manhattan federal court exposed the inner workings of Combs' business empire and gave the 12-member jury an intimate look into his volatile romantic relationships with the rhythm and blues singer Casandra "Cassie" Ventura and a woman known in court by the pseudonym Jane.
Ventura sued Combs in November 2023 for sex trafficking, the first of dozens of civil lawsuits accusing him of abuse. Combs, also known throughout his career as Puff Daddy and P. Diddy and once feted for turning artists like Notorious B.I.G. and Usher into stars, settled with Ventura for $20 million. He has denied all wrongdoing.
At the trial, jurors saw surveillance footage from 2016 showing Combs kicking and dragging Ventura in the hallway of an InterContinental hotel in Los Angeles, where she said she was trying to leave a "Freak Off."
Jane later testified that Combs in June 2024 attacked her and directed her to perform oral sex on a male entertainer, even though she told him she did not want to. That alleged attack took place a month after Combs apologized on social media for his 2016 attack of Ventura, footage of which had been broadcast on CNN.
According to prosecutors, physical violence was just one way Combs compelled Ventura and Jane to take part in the performances - an act of coercion they say amounts to sex trafficking because the male escorts were paid.
Both women testified that he threatened to withhold financial support and to leak sexually explicit images of them if they refused to comply.
"The defendant used power, violence and fear to get what he wanted," prosecutor Christy Slavik said in her closing argument on June 26. "He doesn't take no for an answer."
Combs' defense lawyers argued that while Combs may have committed domestic violence in the context of volatile romantic partnerships, his conduct did not amount to sex trafficking.
They argued that Ventura and Jane were strong, independent women who voluntarily took part in the sexual performances because they wanted to please Combs.
Both women testified they spent time with Combs and took part in sexual performances after he beat them. Defense lawyers argued that Ventura and Jane were retrospectively accusing Combs of forcing their participation in the performances because they were jealous he was seeing other women.
"If he was charged with domestic violence, we wouldn't all be here," Combs' defense lawyer Marc Agnifilo said in his closing argument on June 27. "He did not do the things he's charged with."
Besides Ventura and Jane, jurors also heard testimony from Combs' former personal assistants who said their jobs included setting up hotel rooms for "Freak Offs" and buying their boss drugs.
An InterContinental security guard testified that Combs, in the presence of his chief of staff, paid him $100,000 to hand over what he thought was the only copy of the surveillance tape of his attack on Ventura.
And Scott Mescudi, the rapper known as Kid Cudi, told jurors Combs was likely involved in an arson on his car after Combs found out he was romantically involved with Ventura.
According to prosecutors, those were all acts Combs and his associates undertook in furtherance of a racketeering conspiracy whose aim was, in part, to facilitate his abuse and keep evidence of his wrongdoing under wraps.
The defense argued Combs was a successful entrepreneur who used drugs recreationally, but kept his professional and personal lives separate.
Combs has been held in federal lockup in Brooklyn since his September 2024 arrest.
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Headed for sentencing, Sean ‘Diddy' Combs' lawyers aim to show he's no longer a ‘Bad Boy for life'
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CNN

time14 minutes ago

  • CNN

Headed for sentencing, Sean ‘Diddy' Combs' lawyers aim to show he's no longer a ‘Bad Boy for life'

There was a time when summer for Sean 'Diddy' Combs meant throwing lavish parties and getting captured in paparazzi photos on yachts. This summer, the only images the public saw of him were courtroom sketches. The man whose rise from intern to mogul looked like a hip-hop fairytale has been on trial for charges related to some nightmarish allegations with salacious details about his private life discussed in detail during the proceedings. Combs was acquitted of the more serious charges of which he was accused – racketeering conspiracy and sex trafficking. He was found guilty of two counts of transportation to engage in prostitution. Next, comes sentencing with a hearing set for July 8 to discuss a request to expedite that process. For now, Combs remains in custody. He faces up to 10 years in prison for each count on which he was found guilty, although legal analysts predict he will get much less. (He also still faces dozens of civil lawsuits, for which he has denied all wrongdoing.) After Combs was denied bail ahead of sentencing on Wednesday, his attorney Marc Agnifilo, acknowledging that he didn't see 'a glimmer of light coming from the Court' that the judge would reverse his decision, tried one more time. In explaining why he denied bail, the judge cited instances of 'violence and illegal conduct' discussed during the trial, including a June 2024 incident between Combs and a former girlfriend who testified under the pseudonym 'Jane.' Agnifilo returned to a point that had previously been discussed in a sidebar during Jane's testimony – that Combs made an effort to get himself into 'a batterer's program.' 'He has these flaws in his personality, which are significant, and which have held him back, which have brought him into this courtroom,' Agnifilo said. 'He is a man who's in the process of working on himself.' Names and labels can be tricky. In closing arguments, Assistant US Attorney Maureen Comey had to rather amusingly remind the jury that when she referenced 'enterprise' while speaking, she was referring to the alleged criminal enterprise for which Combs was ultimately acquitted of running, not his company, which is called Combs Enterprises. Ahead of his sentencing, Combs' attorneys are up against a label and an image nearly 25 years in the making – one in which Combs declared himself to be a 'bad boy for life.' In 2001, Diddy released the song 'Bad Boy For Life,' featuring fellow rappers Black Rob and Mark Curry, in which he rapped, 'Don't think, 'cause I'm iced out, Imma cool off.' Bad Boy was also the name of the record label he founded in 1993. 'Bad Boy was kind of modeled after (record label) Death Row because Death Row had become a movement. We wanted to model ourselves behind the record companies that were movements, like Motown, Def-Jam, Death Row,' Combs told Rolling Stone in 1997. 'These were record companies that were the sound of the culture, and we wanted to become another sound of the culture.' The 'bad boy' culture Combs cultivated, according to prosecutors, was one of excess and bursts of violence. 'He's an extremely violent man with an extraordinarily dangerous temper who has shown no remorse and no regret for his multiple victims,' prosecutor Maurene Comey said after Combs was denied bail following the verdict. As Combs awaits sentencing, his attorneys are telling a different story. 'I think that if the trial showcases one thing, he's done remarkable things in his life,' Agnifilo said. 'He came here, he faced the court, he's been decent with the court each and every day, and he just deserves the chance.' Following the reading of his split verdict, Combs dropped to his knees and appeared to be in prayer. Such a display was not entirely surprising from a man who in the past has shared his thoughts about contradictions between public personas and private conduct. Here's some of what he has said: The federal criminal case was preceded by a civil suit from Combs' former girlfriend, singer Cassie Ventura, who made disturbing abuse allegations against Combs. He denied the allegations and the suit was settled within one day. Combs later posted an apology video after CNN last year exclusively aired footage of him physically attacking Ventura in 2016. During a 2015 interview on the syndicated radio show 'The Breakfast Club,' Combs reflected on his romantic relationships. 'I could promise you that… If I'm in a relationship with you, like 25 percent of your time you're gon' feel like, 'Oh man, I hate being here, oh man I hate this guy. Oh man, he cheated on me, he lied on me!'' Combs said. 'That's 25 percent, know what I'm saying? But then there's 75 percent of, 'Imma make you the happiest woman in the whole wide world,'' he continued. 'I'm going to be there to support your dreams, I'm going to be there to hold you, listen to you. I'm going to be there to be your best friend and I promise you'll smile the most. You know who I am, this is what it is: 25 percent, 75 percent, which deal would you choose?' Combs was asked by Ellen DeGeneres during her daytime talk show in 2009 about loaning his Miami home to Chris Brown and Rihanna for a reunion after Brown was accused of brutally beating Rihanna over Grammys weekend earlier that year. DeGeneres expressed surprise as to why Combs would aid Brown in light of the allegation, and the mogul said, 'I'm the type of person who doesn't cast judgment on somebody.' 'If friends ask me for a favor, then I'm gonna be there for a favor,' Combs said. 'As long as I know the energy of the favor is positive.' He appeared less than comfortable with the conversation even as he told DeGeneres he 'doesn't feel it's right for anybody to hit anybody at the end of the day.' 'People who've been in relationships, we know sometimes these relationships get ugly and sometimes it doesn't come out into the forefront the way this one has come out,' Combs said at the time. 'It's a lot of stones being thrown and we don't know exactly what's going on.' Brown and Rihanna ultimately split, and in June 2009 he pleaded guilty to assaulting her. Fuse's 'On the Record' featured an interview in 2012 in which Combs discussed topics ranging from his career to his late father. A portion of the conversation centered on his Sean John fashion line. The interviewer, journalist Touré, asked Combs about his style advice for men. That led Combs to discussing being a proponent of 'the love movement,' and offering men 'anti-ashiness' grooming advice which stressed the importance of using lotion to battle dry, ashy skin. 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Actor Julian McMahon dies at 56: Tributes pour in from former co-stars

timean hour ago

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Two girls at Texas Christian camp found dead as dozens remain missing
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New York Post

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Two girls at Texas Christian camp found dead as dozens remain missing

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