What we're watching ahead of Diddy's trial
The moment is almost here: Unites States v. Combs starts Monday with jury selection, opening one of the most anticipated celebrity trials in recent memory. In the weeks ahead, we'll take you inside the courthouse for all the key arguments, testimony and cross-examination.
In today's edition of Diddy on Trial, our reporters and analysts tell us what they'll be watching for during the proceedings. But first, here's a rundown of our team's latest reporting on the case:
Diddy confirmed at a hearing Thursday that he had rejected a plea deal from federal prosecutors. Adam Reiss was in the courtroom.
Adam told us that Diddy carried a black binder filled with notebooks as he entered the courtroom. He waved to supporters in the gallery before hugging and shaking hands with his attorneys.
This week, prospective jurors were asked to fill out a questionnaire to determine how much they know about the hip-hop star and whether they have any biases. Janelle Griffith has details.
I asked my colleagues to share the legal issues and questions on their minds as we approach the trial's start date.
My eyes are glued to Combs' legal team. I'm fascinated by the decision to bring on Atlanta-based attorney Brian Steel. Up until this point, Marc Agnifilo had been the lead attorney — but throwing Steel into the mix makes me wonder: Who will end up being the biggest showman during the trial?
Each of these attorneys has a hefty reputation and ego, rightfully so. I'm betting that if celebrity defense attorney Mark Geragos officially signs on, he'll end up handling the opening statement, given his long relationship with Combs. Don't forget, Geragos' daughter Teny Geragos is set for her debut as one of Combs' attorneys, making for a family affair and an interesting dynamic in the courtroom. Grab your popcorn!
Sean Combs may be the defendant sitting in the courtroom for the next several months but, really, his entire business empire is also about to be on trial.
Prosecutors allege that he used his business as a criminal enterprise, which means that to convince a jury, they'll need people who can speak to how it operated in reality. Prosecutors need insiders. And insiders typically don't talk. Which means, of all the men tried on charges of sexual abuse in this post-#MeToo era, this case could prove to be one of the most revealing, not only about a powerful individual, but also about the person's business.
We are expecting an all-female prosecution team. Does that help or hurt their case? We don't know how the optics will play with the jury.
I'm also wondering which defendant will show up. Will it be the brash music mogul — confident and unrepentant? Or will it be another persona: contrite, remorseful and sorry for his actions, but not willing to admit to committing a crime.
My eyes are peeled to whoever the prosecution is calling to the stand. Typically, reporters get a witness list at some point prior to a trial so that we can prepare — but that won't be the case with the Combs proceedings.
I've covered quite a few of the civil suits filed against Combs in the last year and a half, since Cassie came forward. I'll be interested to see how many familiar names will be part of the government's case.
This article was originally published on NBCNews.com

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Newsweek
12 minutes ago
- Newsweek
Meet the Gen-Z Man Devoted To Living in the 2000s Era
Based on facts, either observed and verified firsthand by the reporter, or reported and verified from knowledgeable sources. Newsweek AI is in beta. Translations may contain inaccuracies—please refer to the original content. Though he has not yet reached his late 20s, Terry Cairo lives as if the clock has been turned back by two decades. With frosted tips, flip phones and a Bratz doll collection that could rival a toy store from 2004, the Florida-based content creator has built his life—and his online following—around the sounds, styles and beachside energy of the late 1990s and early 2000s, transforming his home into a Y2K time capsule. "I always loved all the cool outfits I saw characters wearing in movies and on TV and always admired what I saw the adults wearing in my own life," Cairo told Newsweek. "The music from that era is also just superior and super nostalgic!" Cairo was only a child when the decade was in full swing, but his fascination with it started early. Today, he describes himself as a "niche nostalgia content creator" with a dedicated space in his home tinged in what he calls "spooky island core"—an aesthetic inspired by the 2002 live-action Scooby-Doo movie. "The room includes hibiscus flowers, beach-themed Bratz and Barbie dolls, surfboards, and Scooby-Doo obviously," he said. From left: Terry Cairo poses with a flip phone; and in a Von Dutch cap. From left: Terry Cairo poses with a flip phone; and in a Von Dutch cap. @terrycaiiro The aesthetic spills into his wardrobe, with pucca shell necklaces, vintage Abercrombie hibiscus shorts, rash guards and Von Dutch caps making regular appearances whether or not he is near the water. His social media accounts, under the handle @terrycaiiro, showcase his wide array of 2000s relics: DVDs of pop star films, shelves of childhood toys, thrift store fashion finds, early-2000s video games and full tours of his themed bedroom. Posters of Britney Spears and other chart-topping icons from the time line his walls, while 2000s pop hits often play in the background, making the room a full sensory experience of the era. Cairo's devotion to the decade also stems from his love of beach culture, which he believes does not get the recognition it deserves. "I feel like the 2000s summer scene is super underrated and it should be appreciated more," he said. "Growing up in the 2000s I just always loved the beach and jamming out to music! "As an adult I wanted to move to Florida, which is where I live now, to fully get that beach experience! I love going to local tiki bars and shopping at little beach shops!" In line with his image, Cairo sports brands that were once staples of surf shops and mall storefronts in the 2000s, including Abercrombie and Von Dutch. His everyday life blends modern content creation with activities that keep him immersed in the bygone era: surfing, antiquing, photography, watching early-2000s films and searching thrift stores for more memorabilia. He began making YouTube videos about his passion for the decade's games and gadgets in 2024, later moving on to TikTok where he now has over 15,000 followers. "It is super fun," he said. "And I have also had many opportunities from growing online such as collaborating with some of my favorite 2000s brands." Living Like It's the 2000s Among his most prized possessions is a small but cherished flip phone collection, featuring two models from his childhood and others he has picked up secondhand. In an age dominated by smartphones, his old devices serve as both nostalgic keepsakes and reminders of a slower, less connected time. For Cairo, keeping the 2000s alive is also about breaking away from the narrow definitions of what adulthood should look like that is often projected on social media. "I feel like there is this stigma on what an adult should be and how they should live their lives," he said. "I think more adults should feel comfortable being themselves and experimenting with hobbies and not feeling so forced to lock themselves in this box that this world tells you to be. "You can love and have passion for whatever you like at any age!" From left: Terry Cairo's DVD collection; and Cairo wearing his surfing gear while holding a surfboard. From left: Terry Cairo's DVD collection; and Cairo wearing his surfing gear while holding a surfboard. @terrycaiiro Cairo's devotion to the early 2000s mirrors a broader wave of Gen Z nostalgia, where younger audiences are romanticizing trends from before the smartphone era. From low-rise jeans to the tactile satisfaction of flip phones and disposable cameras, many in Cairo's generation are embracing the aesthetics and slower pacing of a pre-streaming, pre-constant-notification world. Fashion and lifestyle brands have taken note, with several, including Hollister and Coach, rising in popularity and making new collections inspired by the styles of the era. As for Cairo, whether he is posting a "2000s unboxing," heading out to the surf in retro gear or flipping open a thrifted Motorola, Cairo is committed to sharing the joy and creativity the decade has inspired in him.


New York Post
41 minutes ago
- New York Post
Even liberal Maureen Dowd of The Times admits DC is crime-ridden
Proving the old saw that a conservative is a liberal who's been mugged, one of The New York Time's marquee columnists has agreed — grudgingly, stubbornly, kicking and screaming — that President Donald Trump is right: There's too much crime in the nation's capital. And, just possibly, Washington, DC, currently under Democratic control, could benefit from Trump calling in the National Guard and other feds to help restore law and order. 'It's ridiculous to drag F.B.I. agents from their desks to be cops on the beat. And the tableau of National Guard troops — even unarmed — raises the specter of martial law being normalized and weaponized,' Pulitzer Prize-winning DC-based scribe Maureen Dowd wrote over the weekend. Then, hold your horses, La Dowd suddenly hit the brakes, skidded, and did a complete 180. 'It is also true that many D.C. residents are secretly glad to see more uniforms. No matter what statistics say, they don't feel safe.' This about-face was brought on by her sister's close encounter with slovenly car thieves. As Dowd tells it, she was having dinner with her sibling Peggy in the upscale Georgetown neighborhood recently when the metaphorical mugging zapped the liberal right out of her: Peg's beloved Buick vanished from its parking spot by Maureen's house. 'Two polite officers who responded to our call said they could do little, amid a rash of brazen car thefts by teenagers,' Dowd wrote. 'One officer said that, even if they saw the perp driving in her car, they could not chase him, because of laws passed by the D.C. Council.' Dowd initially seemed to dismiss Trump's hard-core stance on juvenile crime as over-the-top payback against two 15-year-olds charged with assaulting and attempting to carjack a former Department of Government Efficiency employee. That is, until Peggy's Buick showed up in a park in nearby Maryland the morning after it was snatched — still running, nearly out of gas, with a $215 tow charge she was required to pay, Dowd griped. There was a half-eaten pizza, grape soda cans, fast-food wrappers, a used condom and a pair of debit cards inside, Dowd reported. But cops said they could do nothing to nail the fiends. Insult to injury, Peggy soon received more than $1,800-worth of speed-camera tickets for driving 70 miles an hour in a 25 mph zone, and had to prove the car was stolen in order to get the summonses tossed. Dowd's co-workers haven't gotten the message. Last week, shortly after the president declared war on DC crime, The Times worked double-time to minimize the threat. One article refuted Trump's statement that the 2023 murder rate was the highest 'probably ever.' False! crowed the paper. The homicide rate of about 40.4 deaths per 100,000 people was the highest in 26 years, not ever. And in 2024, that number dipped to some 26.6 corpses per 100,000 Washingtonians But Dowd is not favorably impressed. 'While the district's homicide rate has fallen,' she writes, 'it's almost as high as New York's at its most dangerous, in 1990.' Dowd, whose father was a cop, confesses she packs pepper spray these days to protect her from troublemakers when walking around town, a habit she adopted years ago when her mother drove her to her college dorm with a butcher knife on the seat between them. Her mom also gave her a Chinese letter opener with written instructions on how to find the jugular of an assailant. Over the weekend, Times reporters visited DC neighborhoods populated primarily with people of color to find out how residents felt about attempts to wipe out crime. Perhaps surprisingly to the Times, not everyone in these communities opposes being safer. Though every attempt was made to find people who said they did not trust the president, others admitted liking to continue breathing. Dowd summed things up, writing, 'But progressives should not fall into Trump's trap and play down crime, once more getting on the wrong side of an inflammatory issue. As with inflation, they should remember that personal experiences can count more than sanguine statistics. 'Even if Trump is being diabolical, Democrats should not pretend everything is fine here. Because it's not.' Finally — all the news that's fit to print.


New York Post
2 hours ago
- New York Post
FBI urged to probe NYC's seedy 'Market of Sweethearts'
Queens activists are demanding the FBI investigate the 'foreign national' crime syndicates turning seedy Roosevelt Avenue into a 'gangland' — claiming the criminals pose a national security threat. 'We request that you initiate an investigation into what we understand are gangs engaging in criminal enterprises including human trafficking, illegal narcotics sales and the mass distribution of fraudulent documents which poses a national security threat,' wrote Rosa Sanchez, head of the Restore Roosevelt Avenue Coalition, and Democratic district leader Hiram Monserrate in an Aug. 14 letter to FBI Director Kash Patel. Federal intervention is required because state and local laws are limited and inadequate to address the problem, the activists said. Advertisement 5 A suspected sex worker seen outside of a brothel on Roosevelt Avenue near 89th Street in Queens on Aug. 17, 2025. NY Post 5 Local activists are calling on the FBI to investigate 'foreign national' crime syndicates operating on Roosevelt Avenue. NY Post In their missive, Sanchez and Monserrate thanked the FBI and other agencies in the Trump administration for prosecuting members of migrant gangs — including the Venezuelan-based Tren de Aragua and the 18th Street gang, which regularly extort brothels, beat rivals and sell drugs and phony IDs to finance an illicit network based in El Salvador. Advertisement 'However, both gangs continue to operate in our community and we impress upon you that more needs to be done to keep our community safe,' they told the FBI director. They noted that the NYPD has made more than 500 prostitution-related arrests thus far this year along what is called 'The Market of Sweethearts,' but brothels continue to operate. 5 Suspected sex workers on the sidewalk in the 'Market of Sweethearts' on July 27, 2025. New York Post Many of them are controlled by Chinese gangs, Sanchez and Monserrate said. Advertisement 'According to our sources several locations are being operated and controlled by Chinese organized crime. … The information we have continued gathering is unsettling,' the Corona-Elmhurst neighborhood leaders said. Monserrate said the Triads are one of the Chinese groups involved in sex-trafficking. 5 Illegal street vendors seen on Roosevelt Avenue near 89th Street in Jackson Heights on Aug. 17, 2025. Gregory P. Mango 5 Vendors set up on the sidewalk in Jackson Heights near the 'Market of Sweethearts' on Aug. 17, 2025. Gregory P. Mango Advertisement The 18th Street Gang members are still selling fraudulent green cards, Social Security and driver's licenses on Roosevelt Avenue between 80th and 84th Streets, too, the letter writers said. 'Organized crime by both Latino and Chinese foreign nationals continues to wreak havoc in our community,' Sanchez and Monserrate said. 'We urge your agency to respond and rid our community of modern slavery and a dangerous criminal element that operates flagrantly.' They forwarded suspected addresses of brothels to the FBI. In the past year, The Post has exposed the seediness, crime, drug-peddling and illegal vending along the Roosevelt Avenue corridor. Gov. Kathy Hochul last year even dispatched state troopers to assist the NYPD to crack down the lawlessness.