The federal government has called on Sean “Diddy” Combs to have his gallbladder to already create a post-jail plan without being released.
At a hearing of the music mogul’s verdict on Friday, prosecutors alleged that Kushi “booked a talk in Miami next week.”
The federal government has further denounced the “Bad Boy for Life” rapper, booking professional gigs and jumping over the gun, calling it “hub arrogance.”
Prosecutor Mary Slavic told Manhattan Federal Court Judge Arun Subramanian “I’m not completely addressing the way his actions led him here,” adding that “his respect for the law is just lip service.”
“It’s all about the Benjamins,” the rapper has a residence in Miami, which was attacked during a federal investigation, but it’s completely unclear why he got engaged in Magic City.
Page 6 contacted a Combs representative for comment but did not respond immediately.
The federal government asked the court to declare celebrities up to 135 months (or 11.2 years) in prison.
He was convicted of two transport charges of engaging in prostitution in accordance with the law. This is sentenced to the maximum sentence in 20 years in prison according to the law, but the Subramania judge calculated the range of sentences for each count of five to seven years. (Combs has been acquitted of assault and sex trafficking fees.)
Meanwhile, the “winning” rapper’s lawyer is seeking a near-image release of his client, pointing out that he has been “serving more than a year in one of America’s most infamous prisons,” and wants to “continue treatment and make the most of it.”
Combs was arrested in September 2024 following a few months of government investigations and has spent time at the Metropolitan Detention Center in Brooklyn, New York. He is being held without bail.
In a heartfelt letter to the judge ahead of Friday’s hearing, Combs said he would take “full responsibility and accountability for past mistakes.”
“This has been the most difficult two years of my life and no one can blame my current reality and circumstances,” he added. “In my life, I have made a lot of mistakes, but I’m not running away from them anymore.” He also pointed out a “positive step to healing” that was designed to make him calm.
Combs’ family, including mom Janice Combs and some of his children, attended court on Friday and advocated on behalf of the rapper “Last Night.”
Some children spoke to the judge in tears to mourn the release of their father.
The verdict is set to read aloud on Friday afternoons.