Sean 'Diddy' Combs trial live updates: Defense delivers closing arguments in sex trafficking case
'Up until today, the defendant was able to get away with these crimes because of his money, his power, his influence. That stops now,' Assistant U.S. Attorney Christy Slavik told jurors at the end of a nearly five-hour presentation. 'It's time to hold him accountable. It's time for justice. And it's time to find him guilty.'
The 55-year-old hip-hop mogul is facing five criminal counts: one count of racketeering conspiracy; two counts of sex trafficking by force, fraud or coercion; and two counts of transportation to engage in prostitution.
Combs has pleaded not guilty. If convicted, he could face life in prison.
Follow the live blog below for the latest updates culled from various reporters and news organizations in the courtroom, including the New York Times, CNN, NBC News, and the Washington Post.
The courtroom is taking a break for lunch. Defense attorney Marc Agnifilo will continue his closing argument around 1:45 p.m. ET.
The defense is trying to establish a different narrative for the security video showing Combs assaulting Cassie Ventura at the InterContinental Hotel in March 2016.
The prosecution argued that this video footage showcases Combs hurting Ventura in the hotel hallway because she left a "freak off" and he wanted her back in the room.
Defense attorney Marc Agnifilo showed the video to the jury and pointed out that Combs grabs a phone from Ventura. Agnifilo argued that the fight was not over sex but because of the phone. (Agnifilo did not show any of the later security footage where Combs becomes violent with Ventura after taking the phone.)
The defense has argued throughout the trial that Combs had taken a bad batch of drugs before this incident.
"He stays in a towel in a public hallway way too long," Agnifilo pointed out, suggesting Combs was not in the right headspace.
Agnifilo then argued that once Combs got the phone, Ventura later did come back to the hotel room because it "was not a scary place." He also referenced a sexual text exchange the couple had before they met at the hotel that day.
Defense attorney Marc Agnifilo recounted the relationship between Sean "Diddy" Combs and Cassie Ventura, again arguing that Ventura is not a victim.
"They are swingers," Agnifilo said about the couple. He went on to say that the "sex trafficking" charge would apply if Combs had made money off of selling Ventura into prostitution but argued that it didn't happen.
'Your likes and their likes become one,' Agnifilo continued, referring to Ventura's involvement in "freak offs." "That's actually what love is, and that's what's going on with Cassie.'
"She is not clutching her pearls," he added as he read the jury some sexually explicit messages Ventura sent Combs. 'There was nothing that would say to him this was against her will."
Defense attorney Marc Agnifilo said his client "obviously has a drug problem," but pushed back on the prosecution's argument that Combs intended to distribute and sell the drugs.
"Distribution as part of a racketeering conspiracy, and there is no evidence of that," Agnifilo argued. "This is personal-use drugs."
Resuming his closing argument, Combs's lawyer Marc Agnifilo moved on to addressing allegations from "Mia," a former assistant who testified under a pseudonym. She described a harrowing and 'toxic' work environment dominated by Combs's 'unpredictable and terrifying' behavior, telling the court that he physically and sexually assaulted her multiple times.
Agnifilo argued that the sex was consensual.
'There was not any unwanted sexual contact between Mr. Combs and Mia,' Agnifilo said.
Agnifilo also denied the prosecution's assertion that Mia was a victim of "forced labor."
"Mia loved working with Sean Combs; she loved the work she did," Agnifilo argued. "Forced labor is when you want to be out of there as soon as possible.'
The defense displayed a photo Mia posted on social media showing her smiling along with several of Combs's employees.
"This is your racketeering enterprise, folks,' Agnifilo said sarcastically.
During the break when jurors were out of the room, lead prosecutor Maurene Comey told Judge Arun Subramanian that the prosecution thought the defense's arguments were too sarcastic about the government's charges against Combs.
"Respectfully, I think I'm allowed to be sarcastic," defense attorney Marc Agnifilo said.
In response to the prosecution's complaint, Judge Subramanian told Agnifilo not to question or speculate why the government was pursuing its charges against Combs, calling the situation "grossly improper."
When jurors returned to the courtroom, the judge reminded the group, "I will be instructing you on the law in this case."
Judge Arun Subramanian is back on the bench after the court took a break.
Defense attorney Marc Agnifilo spoke for around 94 minutes before the break. The defense said its closing argument should be around three hours long.
Judge Arun Subramanian has called for a 15-minute midmorning break. The defense will continue with its closing argument when court resumes.
After mentioning Capricorn Clark's testimony claims that she was kidnapped by Combs and taken to rapper Kid Cudi's house at gunpoint in December 2011, defense attorney Marc Agnifilo addressed the prosecution's allegations that Combs was behind Kid Cudi's Porsche catching on fire in early 2012.
Kid Cudi testified that his Porsche was set on fire with a Molotov cocktail after Combs learned that he and Cassie Ventura were dating. Prosecutor Christy Slavik reminded the jury of Kid Cudi's testimony about the Porsche yesterday and said, "Of course, the defendant was behind this."
Agnifilo argued that the small DNA profile that was found on the Molotov cocktail bottle was "consistent with a female."
'There is no evidence that he had anything to do with the Porsche,' he said.
Marc Agnifilo, Combs's lead defense lawyer, started to comb through some of the prosecution's key witnesses and their testimonies, reminding the jury members that they are allowed to question or disregard testimonies if they don't trust them.
Agnifilo brought up Capricorn Clark, whom the prosecution argued had been a victim of being kidnapped by Combs twice while working as his personal assistant.
The first alleged experience was in 2004, after Clark had started working for Combs. Clark testified she had to undergo five days of lie detector tests to prove she hadn't stolen jewelry and was repeatedly told by the test administrator that if she was caught lying, "they're going to throw you in the East River."
But Agnifilo emphasized that Clark testified she went home after the lie detector tests every day.
"It's not a kidnapping," he said, before pointing out that the jurors had spent hours watching the trial for the last seven weeks. "Anyone feel kidnapped?"
The second alleged incident was in 2011. Clark testified that Combs came to her home with a gun and brought her to Kid Cudi's house, but Agnifilo emphasized that Kid Cudi testified Clark did not mention any guns when she called him and Cassie Ventura that day.
'Had Capricorn said 'gun,' Cudi would've remembered 'gun.' You're not gonna forget 'gun,'' Agnifilo argued. He also reiterated his earlier point that Clark, like most of Combs's employees, loved working for him and would willingly do anything for him. 'If he asked her to take a trip to the moon, she'd go, and he knows that. He doesn't need a gun."
Moments after conceding his client was "guilty" of assaulting Cassie Ventura, Combs's lawyer Marc Agnifilo called Ventura a "gangster" for using a burner phone to contact Kid Cudi while she was seeing both men.
'Cassie's keeping it gangster!' Agnifilo said. "She played them both.'
During her relationship with Kid Cudi, Ventura repeatedly lied to Combs, Agnifilo said, arguing that it showed she was "not afraid of him."
Marc Agnifilo, Combs's defense attorney, used part of his closing argument to mock the raids on Combs's homes.
In its indictment, the prosecut said that federal agents recovered guns, drugs and 'more than 1,000 bottles of baby oil and lubricant.'
'Boxes of Astroglide, taken off the streets, whoo! I feel better already,' Agnifilo said.
'Thank goodness for the special response team," he added. "They found the Astroglide, they found the baby oil, they found like five valium pills. Way to go, fellas.'
Defense attorney Marc Agnifilo argued to the jury that Cassie Ventura is not part of a "one-sided, oppressive" relationship with Combs, as the prosecution argued, but ultimately the financial "winner" of the breakup.
"She is sitting somewhere in the world with $30 million," Agnifilo said. Ventura won a $20 million civil settlement from Combs after filing a lawsuit against him in November 2023, and is expecting a $10 million settlement from the owner of the InterContinental hotel where she was assaulted by Combs in 2016.
Agnifilo called Combs and Ventura's relationship 'a great modern love story,' and said that this case isn't about crime.
"We're here because of money," he said.
In his closing argument, Marc Agnifilo acknowledged that Combs is "guilty" of domestic violence, but that's not what he's been charged with.
Multiple women, including Combs's ex-girlfriend Cassie Ventura, testified that he beat them repeatedly. And a key piece of evidence for prosecutors was a surveillance video that showed Combs assaulting Ventura in the hallway of a Los Angeles hotel.
"We own the domestic violence — I hope you guys know that," Agnifilo said. 'It happened. That's not charged.
'He did not do the things he's charged with,' Agnifilo said. 'He didn't commit racketeering — he just didn't.' The lawyer added: 'He did what he did. But he's going to fight to the death to defend himself from what he didn't do.'
Defense attorney Marc Agnifilo argued that Combs's employees were loyal to him because 'Sean Combs has become something that is very, very hard to be. Very hard to be. He is a self-made, successful, Black entrepreneur.'
Even though multiple former employees have testified in the trial, Agnifilo argued Combs had been integrating DEI — diversity, equity and inclusion — into his businesses since he was 24 years old.
'Did they always like him? No way. Let's not even go there,' Agnifilo said about the former employees. 'But they loved him. They didn't want to leave him.'
Marc Agnifilo, Combs's lead attorney, began his closing argument by telling jurors that the case presented by federal prosecutors was "false" and "exaggerated."
Agnifilo said the evidence does not show criminal behavior but rather 'a lifestyle — you want to call it swingers.'
'Whatever you want to call it, that's what it is," Agnifilo said. "That's what the evidence shows."
Judge Arun Subramanian is on the bench, members of the jury have been seated, and Combs's lead attorney, Marc Agnifilo, is delivering the closing argument for the defense.
Combs's sister, Keisha Combs, is sitting with their mom, Janice Combs, in the family section of the courtroom. Combs's three teenage daughters, Chance and twins D'Lila and Jessie, are also in the spectators' gallery.
The defense will deliver its closing argument to the jury at 9 a.m. ET.
Combs's lead attorney, Marc Agnifilo, said he expects his presentation to take about three hours.
The prosecution — which took nearly five hours to deliver its closing argument — will have a chance to give a rebuttal.
Judge Arun Subramanian will then give the jury its instructions.
Subramanian said the jury will determine its own schedule for deliberations, which could begin as soon as Friday afternoon.
The prosecution delivered a lengthy closing argument.
For nearly five hours, Assistant U.S. Attorney Christy Slavik told jurors how Combs operated as the "leader of a criminal enterprise," using "power, violence and fear" to force women to participate in drug-fueled marathon sexual encounters called 'freak offs.'
Slavik said Combs exhibited a "pattern" of coercion, using money, drugs and threats to control his victims, including former girlfriends Cassie Ventura and a woman identified by the pseudonym "Jane."
The prosecutor recounted their harrowing testimony detailing years of physical abuse and sexual assault.
Slavik outlined the five counts Combs faces, including racketeering conspiracy, sex trafficking and transportation to engage in prostitution.
'Up until today, the defendant was able to get away with these crimes because of his money, his power, his influence. That stops now,' Slavik said. 'It's time to hold him accountable. It's time for justice. And it's time to find him guilty."
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