Diddy
Will get One other Day In Courtroom …
Seeks Acquittal, New Trial
Printed September 25, 2025 1:00 AM PDT
Sean “Diddy” Combs is getting one other chunk on the apple … his attorneys shall be in court docket at this time arguing to overturn his conviction on 2 federal counts of the Mann Act.
Diddy’s authorized workforce is asking Decide Arun Subramanian to alter Diddy’s Mann Act conviction to an acquittal or give him a brand new trial. Federal prosecutors are against each.
As you understand, the Mann Act prohibits the transportation of people throughout state strains for the needs of prostitution.
TMZ.com
Diddy’s attorneys beforehand claimed he made no cash off prostitution and insisted the Mann Act is often designed for going after individuals working intercourse rings.
Additionally they say Diddy by no means had intercourse with the male intercourse employees, and by no means immediately organized for his or her transportation throughout state strains. His attorneys say Diddy was merely a voyeur and novice pornographer who loved recording his ex-girlfriends having intercourse.
Federal prosecutors, nonetheless, have countered … Uncle Sam says there was loads of proof to assist the jury’s Mann Act convictions … arguing Diddy was the mastermind of each facet of his notorious freak-offs.
TMZ.com
The feds have additionally attacked the notion Diddy simply favored to observe, saying he “totally participated by directing the sexual conduct between escorts and victims and masturbating all through the sexual episode.”
What’s extra, prosecutors claimed Diddy’s argument that he was extra like a porn producer protected underneath the First Modification would not maintain water as a result of lots of the freak-offs weren’t recorded — and for those that had been, Diddy usually did not give advance discover he’d be filming, and lots of the contributors did not consent to the recordings.
TMZ.com
Each side shall be in a courtroom at this time going forwards and backwards earlier than the decide … and as of now, Diddy remains to be scheduled for his Oct. 3 sentencing.