People Are Being Paid to Wear ‘Free Diddy' Shirts Outside Courthouse
Sali Coulibaly, a 29-year-old tech project manager, was standing outside the U.S. District Court in New York's Southern District on Friday, watching the public gathering attracted by Combs' ongoing sex trafficking trial, when she said she came across a strange sight.
'I saw a group of [people] awkwardly standing outside of the playground across the street from the courthouse,' Coulibaly told the Daily Beast of the moment she spotted several clumped together strangers wearing 'Free $Diddy' and 'Free Puff' t-shirts.
'I was wondering why they were wearing those shirts,' she continued. 'I was curious. I crossed the street, and I'm standing there with my phone out, and then this older lady is staring at me. She's just staring at me for a period of time. Then she tells me, 'Do you want to come out here and wear a shirt for $20 an hour?''
The woman then motioned over to a younger man and told her, ''Just go to that guy. If you're already standing out here, you may as well get paid.''
A video of Coulibaly posted by freelance journalist Emilie Hagen went viral Friday, racking up millions of views. Rapper 50 Cent was among those who reposted it during his latest Diddy trolling session over the weekend. 'Diddy paying people to wear Free Diddy shirts is diabolical, but $20 an hour ain't bad,' he quipped.
Who exactly is paying the bystanders to don the paraphernalia remains unclear. But drumming up the appearance of support is reminiscent of Combs' early days as a musician and producer—when he and others of the 'mixtape generation' would pay people to buy up his mixtapes, generating hype for a new music release.
Coulibaly told the Daily Beast that most if not all the paid protesters outside Combs' trial appeared to her to be unhoused. At least one seemed to be on 'drugs or something, since he just kind of looked like he didn't know where he was.'
She continued to observe the situation, noticing that a more coordinated version of the t-shirt operation seemed to be underway in the park near the courthouse.
'I went inside the park and I see the young man that was giving away the shirts, was sitting on the bench with maybe a bag or a box-full,' she said. 'And I can see a group of [people] were changing in the park. He was asking for their sizes.'
An investigation by Hagen uncovered that the shirts promote $DIDDY coin, the growing internet currency token representing Combs' media moment—and thus, may be more of a cash grab than an ego boost for Combs. Even though Combs' camp denied involvement with the t-shirts, according to Hagen, his X account did at one point promote the $DIDDY crypto currency.
20 dollars a head seems to be motivation enough for the people milling around the courthouse to keep the shirt gambit going for now, whatever its endgame may be. 'She was very persistent, like she just wanted me to wear it so bad,' Coulibaly added of the woman who approached her. 'I just walked away.'
Combs hopes to do the same, now that he's turned down a plea deal to face the federal charges against him and risk spending the rest of his life in prison.
After his ex-girlfriend Cassie Ventura has finished her bombshell testimony, Combs' lawyers are hard at work to defend him from more state-presented evidence that he coerced mass numbers of victims into sexual activity through threats, blackmail, and violence. Combs has consistently denied all charges.

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


New York Post
an hour ago
- New York Post
Chinese national in NYC tries to smuggle $1.4M worth of protected turtles to Hong Kong — by labeling them ‘toys'
U.S. District Court for the Western District of NY A Chinese national living in Brooklyn tried to smuggle $1.4 million worth of protected turtles out of the United States — by passing them off as 'plastic animal toys,' prosecutors said Monday. Wei Qiang Lin worked to ship 222 packages of about 850 turtles to Hong Kong for more than a year leading up to November 2024 before his clandestine operation was brought to a halt, the Department of Justice said. A man in Brooklyn tried to smuggle protected turtles out of the country by claiming they were 'toys,' authorities said. U.S. District Court for the Western District of NY Advertisement Lin mostly shipped eastern box turtles and three-toed turtles, which both have colorful markings that make them attractive on the domestic and foreign pet markets but are protected species by international trade rules, according to prosecutors. Law enforcement at JFK Airport in Queens found 106 of the turtles bound and taped inside knotted socks, and some were even wrapped in diapers, between August 2023 and October 2023, according to a criminal complaint. Some of the turtles were wrapped in tape and then stuffed into socks. U.S. District Court for the Western District of NY Advertisement Over the next year, another 608 of turtles, as well as seven venomous snakes and 28 lizards, being smuggled by Lin were also intercepted by authorities at the Big Apple airport, the feds said. The parcels were falsely labeled 'plastic animal toys,' according to prosecutors. Only a handful of the illicit packages from Lin snuck through to Hong Kong during his 15-month scheme, which ended after authorities conducted undercover sales, according to the complaint. He copped the scheme and is expected to be sentenced Dec. 23. He could face as much as five years in prison and a fine as high as $250,000.


NBC News
3 hours ago
- NBC News
Man faces jail for smuggling turtles worth $1.4 million in socks to Hong Kong
A Chinese man has admitted to smuggling around 850 protected turtles and other animals worth an estimated $1.4 million from the U.S. to Hong Kong, the Justice Department said. The man, Wei Qiang Lin, 'labeled the boxes as containing 'plastic animal toys,' among other things,' the DOJ said Monday in a statement. 'Law enforcement intercepted the turtles during a border inspection and observed them bound and taped inside knotted socks within the shipping boxes,' it added. 'Lin also exported 11 other parcels filled with reptiles including venomous snakes,' the department said. Lin pleaded guilty at the U.S. District Court for the Western District of New York "for falsely labeling live turtles as fake toys prior to exporting them in delivery boxes on a weeks-long journey to Hong Kong," the DOJ said. It added that he 'primarily shipped eastern box turtles and three-toed box turtles, native U.S. species which feature colorful markings — a prized feature in the domestic and foreign pet market, particularly in China and Hong Kong.' The creatures are also in high demand in Asian markets like mainland China and Thailand, where people consider turtles from other countries and continents as desirable exotic pets, according to the Association for Asian Studies. Both are protected by the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora (CITES). The animals Lin smuggled from mid-2023 to late 2024 were valued at $1.4 million, the Department of Justice said. Lin is facing a maximum penalty of five years in prison and a fine up to $250,000 or twice the gain or loss from the illegal activity when he is sentenced on Dec. 23, according to the DOJ. 'As part of his plea, Lin also agreed to abandon any property interest in the reptiles seized during the investigation,' the department said. In a similar case in March, another Chinese national, Sai Keung Tin, also known as Ricky Tin, was sentenced to 30 months in prison for smuggling more than 2,100 eastern box turtles, the DOJ said at the time. The animals were also hidden in socks and packed in boxes labeled as almonds and chocolate cookies. Authorities estimated at the time that each turtle could have been sold for $2,000, bringing the total value of the smuggled reptiles to $4.2 million.


USA Today
18 hours ago
- USA Today
Diddy doubles down on defamation lawsuit over alleged sex assault videos, seeks $100M
Sean "Diddy" Combs is escalating his legal battle against one of his accusers and the news outlet that helped publicize his claims. Combs, who sued Courtney Burgess in January for $50 million on allegations of defamation, amended his complaint against the man in the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York on Aug. 11, according to court documents obtained by USA TODAY. Burgess' attorney, Ariel Mitchell, and news broadcaster NewsNation are also named as defendants in the lawsuit. The Grammy-winning rapper is now seeking additional compensation, no less than $100 million in damages, for the harm caused by Burgess' "outlandish claims," which Combs' attorneys allege culminated in a "media frenzy" against the embattled hip-hop mogul. "People who heard and believed defendants' lies have accused Mr. Combs, on social media that is consumed by hundreds of millions of viewers each and every day, of being a debauched 'monster' and a pedophile," the lawsuit states. "The unrelenting tide of negative publicity and threatening social media posts resulting from defendants' lies have caused and will continue to cause Mr. Combs severe reputational harm." USA TODAY has reached out to Mitchell for comment. In an October 2024 interview aired by NewsNation, Burgess and Mitchell alleged that the man, who reportedly at one point testified in front of a grand jury for Combs' federal criminal case, possessed several videos purportedly showing Combs sexually assaulting minors, including celebrities, at his "freak off" sex parties. At the time of his original lawsuit in January, Combs, who was awaiting trial in his landmark sex crimes case, sought $50 million in damages for Burgess and Mitchell's claims. The disgraced music mogul said the pair's remarks about "freak off" footage had the potential to "poison the minds" of people who might serve on Combs' jury. Diddy takes legal action: Rap mogul files $50M defamation lawsuit over alleged sex assault videos Combs was arrested in September 2024 on charges of sex trafficking, racketeering and transportation to engage in prostitution. In July, the rapper was found guilty on two charges of transportation to engage in prostitution and acquitted of the remaining offenses. The rapper, who remains in custody at the Metropolitan Detention Center in Brooklyn, was denied bail on Aug. 4 after his legal team requested he be released on a $50 million bond. Contributing: KiMi Robinson, USA TODAY