Sean "Diddy" Combs' defense begins and ends in same day
The defense portion of Sean 'Diddy' Combs' highly-publicized sex trafficking trial both began and ended today. The prosecution rested earlier today after seven weeks of harrowing testimony from witnesses like Sean 'Diddy' Combs' ex-girlfriend Cassie Ventura, Ventura's family and friends, the mogul's former employees and collaborators, and more. Combs himself then spoke for what Variety reports as the longest amount of time since the trial began to tell Judge Arun Subramanian that he would not be taking the stand in his own defense. 'That is solely my decision. I mean, it's my decision with my lawyers,' Combs said after telling Subramanian he'd done an 'excellent job' with the trial thus far.
Combs' lawyers proceeded to wrap up quickly without calling any additional witnesses to the stand, Deadline reports. It's a very similar tactic to the one employed by Harvey Weinstein's lawyers in the movie mogul's retrial earlier this month. That trial ended in a split verdict on two counts, with a mistrial on the third.
It should be noted that the defense did mount a lengthy cross-examination of the prosecution's witnesses over the past seven weeks. The next stage in Combs' trial will see both sides present their closing arguments to the jury. That portion is set to begin June 26 and continue for at least a day, according to the trade. Jury deliberations will follow, with no set time limit on how long the 12-person group can take to reach a decision. If found guilty, Combs could spend the rest of his life behind bars.
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Sean "Diddy" Combs' defense begins and ends in same day

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USA Today
2 hours ago
- USA Today
Diddy trial updates: Closing arguments near in Sean Combs' sex-crimes case
This story contains graphic descriptions that some readers may find disturbing. Sean "Diddy" Combs' legal fate hangs in the balance as the music mogul's landmark criminal trial nears a close. After more than a month of harrowing testimony from several individuals in Combs' personal and professional orbit — from ex-girlfriends Casandra "Cassie" Ventura Fine and "Jane" to Danity Kane alum Dawn Richard and rap peer Kid Cudi — prosecutors rested their case in the sweeping federal sex-crimes proceeding on June 24. In their final round of arguments, attorneys for the U.S. government zeroed in on graphic evidence from Combs' alleged "freak off" sex parties, which included video footage, text messages and financial records. Prosecutors painted a picture of Combs and his employees being personally involved with organizing the elaborate sexual performances, working with escorts, Combs' partners and others. Meanwhile, Combs' attorneys rested their case in less than half an hour, with the defense opting not to call any witnesses to the stand. Their arguments mainly focused on romantic — and occasionally explicit — texts between Combs and Ventura Fine. Although Combs' alleged abuse is at the center of the trial, the Grammy-winning rapper told the court he would not be testifying. Judge Arun Subramanian asked Combs' lead lawyer Marc Agnifilo if he spoke with his client about his right to testify, and Agnifilo said they discussed it at length. Combs, 55, was arrested in September and charged with sex trafficking, racketeering and transportation to engage in prostitution. He has pleaded not guilty. Take a look back at some of the biggest moments from the trial, as well as where Combs' case stands. Diddy on trial newsletter: Step inside the courtroom as music mogul faces sex-crimes charges. What is Diddy charged with? Combs is facing federal sex-crimes and trafficking charges in a sprawling case that has eroded his status as a power player and kingmaker in the entertainment industry. He was arrested in September 2024 and later charged with racketeering, sex trafficking and transportation to engage in prostitution. The rapper has pleaded not guilty to the five counts against him. Discover WITNESS: Access our exclusive collection of true crime stories, podcasts, videos and more What is a RICO? Racketeering meaning Racketeering is the participation in an illegal scheme under the Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Statute, or RICO, as a way for the U.S. government to prosecute organizations that contribute to criminal activity. Using RICO law, which is typically aimed at targeting multi-person criminal organizations, prosecutors allege that Combs coerced victims, some of whom they say were sex workers, through intimidation and narcotics to participate in "freak offs" — sometimes dayslong sex performances that federal prosecutors allege they have on video. How to stream the Diddy trial The trial will not be televised, as cameras are typically not allowed in federal criminal trial proceedings. USA TODAY will be reporting live from the courtroom. Sign up for our newsletter for more updates. Contributing: USA TODAY staff If you are a survivor of sexual assault, RAINN offers support through the National Sexual Assault Hotline at (4673) and and en Español If you or someone you know is a victim of domestic violence, call the National Domestic Violence Hotline at 800-799-7233 or text "START" to 88788.


Chicago Tribune
3 hours ago
- Chicago Tribune
‘Smoke' review: Arsonists on the loose, but the drama flames out
A fire investigator (Taron Egerton) is reluctantly paired with a police detective (Jurnee Smollett) to work the cases of two separate serial arsonists in the Apple TV+ crime thriller 'Smoke.' One of the culprits won't be a mystery to anyone familiar with the podcast 'Firebug,' from which the nine-episode series draws fictionalized inspiration. That's not a spoiler; 'Firebug' is cited in the opening credits. A true crime podcast about a real arsonist who was eventually caught, someone a lot like the person at the center of the podcast forms the basis for one of the characters here. The reveal is meant to be a twist (though it is heavily telegraphed) and it comes at the show's midway point, when we already know the identity of the other arsonist, because he might as well be followed around by a blinking arrow pointing to him. So the question becomes: Will the show's characters figure out what we already know, and will that process be interesting? Or will it drag on, filling time? Most streaming shows suffer from 'shoulda been a movie' syndrome, so you can probably guess the answer. But 'Smoke' doesn't have enough meat on its bones even for that. Created by Dennis Lehane (best known as the author of novels such as 'Mystic River' and 'Gone, Baby, Gone'), the series seems to have aspirations of Scorsese, but plays like an unintentional parody, working hard to capture 'gritty' instead of just being gritty. Vibes abound, but they aren't effective without a solidly constructed narrative. Sometimes people set buildings on fire for the insurance payout. Sometimes they are driven by other reasons, and 'Smoke' offers a paper-thin psychological study: Arsonists commit their crimes because they are filled with feelings of inadequacy, neglect and alienation, and this is how they regain a measure of power. Two arsonists have been targeting a rainy, nondescript town and they've managed to elude the best efforts of Dave Gudsen (Egerton). His investigative know-how is supposedly legendary, but the arsons remain unsolved and there are new fires that keep following the same patterns. So he's paired with Det. Michelle Calderon (Smollett), who is there to help narrow down the suspects. He's an ex-firefighter haunted by dreams of being trapped in an inferno. Married with a teenage stepson, he's turned his real-life work experience into fodder for a novel. Great stuff, he thinks to himself! Outwardly, he is the picture of competence and regular guy-ness. Privately, he is both wildly overconfident and deeply insecure. She's an ex-Marine with a tough exterior. She's only been a cop for a few years, and this new assignment does not seem good for her career, but someone in the police department has shuffled her off to arson investigations, likely due to her history of bad decisions, including an affair with a toxic coworker who is also her boss. They are both outrunning demons, but otherwise, they are like oil and vinegar. Dave drops F-bombs liberally, but is the kind of person who flashes a big smile to massage a situation. Michelle has a chip on her shoulder and takes more of a dogged, sledgehammer approach. Tonally, the show is all over the place, laying on the moody theatrics one moment, mocking Dave's writerly pretenses the next. Greg Kinnear plays Dave's worn-out boss, with John Leguizamo as the dirtbag ex-cop who was Dave's partner before Michelle came along, and Anna Chlumsky is an investigator who joins the team late in the game. Everyone is compromised and not particularly good at their jobs, but the characters are too flat to register as meaningful. Ntare Guma Mbaho Mwine especially is too good an actor to be stuck in the role of a troubled, slack-jawed man who might have developmental disabilities, but is rendered as an awkward person who has been treated poorly all his life and has finally been pushed over the edge. Only Smollett really shines. The show is pulpy without being entertaining, with a ludicrous showdown in the finale that's followed a few scenes later by another, even more ludicrous staredown. Plenty of smoke. No fire. 'Smoke' — 1.5 stars (out of 4) Where to watch: Apple TV+


Miami Herald
5 hours ago
- Miami Herald
Notorious New York City jail, two other federal facilities, to receive ICE detainees
Three new federal correctional facilities were approved to house immigrant detainees this month – including a jail in New York City known for violent and poor conditions that has held high profile individuals such as Ghislaine Maxwell and Sean 'Diddy' Combs. As the Trump administration's mass deportation campaign strains immigration centers nationwide, the Federal Bureau of Prisons has been housing hundreds of U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement detainees in jails and prisons following an interagency agreement in February. Now the Metropolitan Detention Center in Brooklyn, the Federal Correctional Institution in Lewisburg, Pa., and the Federal Detention Center in Honolulu are joining the list, according to internal communication obtained by the Miami Herald. The expansion brings the total number of approved facilities under the agreement to eight. Benjamin O'Cone, a spokesperson for the Bureau of Prisons, confirmed the facilities in an email to the Herald, but did not share the new agreement, or answer questions about how many people each will hold and when. FDC Honolulu has held immigrant detainees under a previous agreement with ICE, but the agency declined to answer what will change. 'The Bureau of Prisons (BOP) can confirm we are assisting the United States Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) by housing detainees and will continue to support our law enforcement partners to fulfill the administration's policy objectives,' O'Cone wrote. The agreement comes amid an ongoing understaffing crisis at the Bureau of Prisons: Thousands of positions are vacant nationwide and the agency frequently relies on overtime, according to recent Congressional testimony. On June 16, the bureau announced the agreement expansion to staff, and noted that it has 'supported the temporary detention' of over 4,000 individuals so far. The message said that because detention standards are different in the two agencies, internal audits were being conducted of the approved facilities. The Herald reached out to ICE for comment, but did not receive a response by the time of publication. Some federal prison employees told the Herald that the correctional facilities have space and are accustomed to similar arrangements with BOP detainees awaiting trial – but others questioned if the lockdown facilities were an appropriate place for individuals undergoing civil proceedings to determine if they can stay in the United States. Government data of the average daily populations at ICE facilities lists the majority of immigrant detainees in BOP institutions as having 'no ICE threat level' – meaning they have no criminal convictions. In all ICE facilities nationwide, about a third of detainees have no criminal history. In May, activists and lawyers in Kansas and Florida published letters raising alarms about ICE detainees in BOP facilities. At FCI Leavenworth, civil rights organizations reported a host of issues, including frequent lockdowns for over 72 hours due to understaffing, crowded and unsanitary conditions, delayed medical care and immigrants who had won their legal cases left languishing in detention for months. At FDC Miami, attorneys wrote that their clients had been denied access to legal mail, legal documents and legal counsel. A recent Miami Herald investigation also found long lockdowns, harsh conditions and the use of force at the federal detention center in downtown Miami, including an April incident in which officers threw crowd control grenades into a room of protesting ICE detainees. Andrew Dalack, a trial attorney in New York who has represented clients at MDC Brooklyn for over seven years, described the facility as a 'tinderbox environment.' In July 2024, one of his clients was stabbed and killed by another inmate, said Dalack, who works for Federal Defenders of New York, a non-profit organization. The decision to house ICE detainees at the jail was 'obviously a terrible development,' he said. 'And I think it should be reconsidered.' The Agreement First signed on Feb. 6, the initial agreement between ICE and the Bureau of Prisons created designated units at FDC Miami in Florida; FCI Atlanta in Georgia; FCI Leavenworth in Kansas; FDC Philadelphia in Pennsylvania; and FCI Berlin in New Hampshire for men above the age of 18 who were in ICE custody. ICE covered costs and expenses. At the time of the agreement, lawyers and detainees had reported severe overcrowding in immigration detention centers – with some at a facility in Florida describing sleeping on the floor, or overnight in buses. But it also comes amid a nationwide staffing crisis at the Bureau of Prisons. Across the country, there are 4,000 vacant positions, and the agency has spent $437.5 million on overtime in fiscal year 2024 alone, Kathleen Toomey, the associate deputy director of the BOP testified before Congress on Feb. 26. She cited a 2024 report from the Office of the Inspector General that found staffing shortages were a 'longstanding challenge' in efforts to prevent and respond to deaths among incarcerated individuals. 'BOP staff have indicated that these shortages pose the greatest threat to ensuring the safety and security of inmates and staff,' she said. Toomey also described the poor physical state of many BOP facilities. Several have had to close in the last few years due to 'roofs needing replacement, asbestos debris and mold, and leaking ceilings that created unsafe conditions for staff and inmates.' Over 4,000 beds are unusable, she said, due to 'crumbling conditions in housing units.' Brandy Moore White, the national president of the Counsel of Prison Locals 33, a coalition of unions representing federal officers nationwide, said that a staffing crisis, low morale, and high rates of PTSD and suicide among officers creates a 'perfect storm' at the agency. But she is 'hopeful everything will work as it should' with the ICE agreement. She said that the agencies are working together to identify facilities able to handle a population influx, and solve issues as they arise, like a lack of translators. 'We do very similar missions every day of the week,' Moore White said. 'We are there to protect inmates and detainees and keep them safe while they're in our custody.' Immigrants have been housed at BOP facilities in the past – such as the one in Hawaii. In 2018, immigration detainees at FCI Victorville in California sued ICE over inadequate conditions. They were moved after a settlement. But this agreement means that the arrangement is happening on a much larger scale. Eunice Cho, a senior staff attorney with the American Civil Liberties Union's National Prison Project, said that the agreement 'erases this line between civil detention and criminal punishment.' She described it as a broadening of 'the immigration detention system' to places that it has not traditionally been incorporated. 'We've documented serious concerns across the BOP and its use of these facilities for immigration detention, and this should concern all of us, in light of the expanded enforcement tactics that we're seeing in the United States with respect to immigrant communities,' Cho said. The Facilities The three new federal correctional facilities that could begin housing immigrant detainees have each attracted some scrutiny in recent years. A Hawaii crime boss was found dead of a fentanyl overdose last December while in the federal detention center in Honolulu, which is located across the street from the Honolulu airport, and holds over 300 men and women. Earlier this year, a former officer at the facility pleaded guilty to sexually abusing people incarcerated at the facility in 2017 and 2018. After a February 2024 inspection, an OIG report found 'serious issues' at FCI Lewisburg, a medium security prison and minimum security camp roughly three hours from Philadelphia that has been open for over 90 years. The findings noting that staffing was at 78%, and raised concerns about inadequate suicide prevention practices. Recommendations were later marked as addressed. Matthew Barth, the president of the union representing officers at the institution, said that the space and staff are equipped to receive and house the detainees. He said he has full confidence in the officers' ability to keep detainees safe, after working there as a paramedic for over 14 years. 'We are happy to accept the mission from the agency,' he said. 'Our staff are up to the challenge.' The Metropolitan Detention Center houses over 1,000 men and women in the Sunset Park neighborhood of Brooklyn, and is among the most notorious federal correctional facilities. Attorneys, federal judges and employees have criticized conditions for years and called for changes at the jail. The president of a union representing officers penned a letter to her regional director, titled 'unsafe working conditions' on June 23, 2023. She said the turnover rate for staff was 50%, units were left unsupervised by staff and locked down daily, and the agency failed to act. 'What are you waiting for, another loss of inmate life?' Rhonda Barnwell wrote. The following year, in January 2024, a judge in the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York ruled against sending a man to the facility, citing long lockdowns, delay in necessary medical treatment, and poor physical conditions. He attributed many of the problems to understaffing. 'The best the courts can do is not add unnecessarily to the inmate population and thereby avoid exacerbating the already frightening staff-to-inmate ratio,' U.S. District Judge Jesse M. Furman wrote in the decision. In her testimony earlier this year, Toomey said that the agency launched a 35% recruiting initiative in February 2024 at MDC Brooklyn that has improved the issue. But the changes haven't eliminated safety concerns. Last summer, at least three other judges followed Furman's lead. One said he might have given the defendant a short sentence at the jail, if not for the 'challenging' conditions. Another decided to release a defendant in a tax fraud case instead of sending him to MDC Brooklyn – condemning the conditions there as 'dangerous' and 'barbaric.' 'Chaos reigns, along with uncontrolled violence,' wrote U.S. district Judge Gary R. Brown, in the tax fraud case. In March, federal prosecutors brought charges against 25 defendants – including prisoners and a former correctional officer – for violence and contraband smuggling. 'Inmates viciously attacked fellow detainees, a correctional officer betrayed his duty by attempting to smuggle drugs into the facility, several inmates orchestrated elaborate contraband smuggling operations and yet another inmate continued to engage in fraud schemes while detained,' said John J. Durham, the U.S. Attorney for the Eastern District of New York. Dalack, the trial attorney, questioned why the government would choose to put immigrant detainees in that environment. He called it a 'nightmare scenario.' 'Detaining people at MDC Brooklyn should be the absolute last option,' he said. 'We should be focusing on putting fewer people there, and certainly not adding immigrant detainees to the population.'