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Diddy would be released in DAYS after Trump pardon but a ‘free ride' out of jail will not help his future, lawyer warns

Diddy would be released in DAYS after Trump pardon but a ‘free ride' out of jail will not help his future, lawyer warns

The Irish Sun4 hours ago

SEAN 'Diddy' Combs would be a free man within days if Donald Trump decides to pardon him but it would not bode well for his future, a lawyer has warned.
Trump surprised reporters by commenting on
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Sean "Diddy" Combs with Donald Trump and Melania Trump before he became President of the US
Credit: Getty
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US President Donald Trump speaks in the Roosevelt Room of the White House in Washington, DC
Credit: AFP
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A sketch of Sean 'Diddy' Combs during his sex trafficking trial in New York on June 4, 2025
Credit: Reuters
Asked if he would consider pardoning him, Trump said, "Nobody's asked. But I know people are thinking about it. I think some people have been very close to asking."
He said he felt the former music mogul used to like him "a lot" but wasn't his biggest fan after he went into politics.
Despite this, Trump said, "I would certainly look at the facts. If I think somebody was mistreated, whether they like me or don't like me, it wouldn't have any impact on me."
Sean Combs
The U.S. Sun spoke to Los Angeles-based trial attorney
He said, "The pardoning power is one of the ultimate powers of the President. It's virtually unchecked, and he can do it.
'He doesn't even have to wait for the conviction. He can do it at any time after somebody's charged, even after the crime occurs.
"So the second that President Trump determines that he's gonna pardon him [Diddy]. It happens immediately.
Most read in Celebrity
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"They basically sign the pardon, it would be sent to Diddy, and assuming he accepted, which obviously he would, then that's that."
Lovell said if he had already been convicted there would be an administrative process through the Federal Bureau of Prisons to arrange his release and transportation but it wouldn't be long before he was out.
Diddy 'gave hotel guard $100k in paper bag to bury Cassie beating video'
"There may be a few hours, maybe one or two days sometimes that they can take time just because of the bureaucracy," he said.
Combs, 55, is currently on trial in New York after pleading not guilty to five counts of sex trafficking, racketeering conspiracy, and transportation to engage in prostitution.
He is facing up to life in prison if convicted.
The jury has heard from several witnesses in the case so far, including Combs' ex-girlfriend,
Diddy locked eyes with us as he entered the courtroom - inside the trial of the decade
By Israel S-Rodriguez, Senior News Reporter at The U.S. Sun:
The federal sex trafficking trial of Sean 'Diddy' Combs began with jury selection on May 5.
Combs is standing trial at the Southern District of New York Courthouse in Lower Manhattan - an intimidating federal courthouse where the cases of Ghislaine Maxwell, Donald Trump, and Bernard Madoff, among others, were tried.
Once a powerful founder of a music and business empire, Combs has been reduced to a defendant, inmate 37452-054, stripped of his mogul status, and now standing trial on five federal charges with the full wrath of the United States government against him.
When I attended Day 3 of jury selection at the federal courthouse on May 7, the buzz around the start of the trial was palpable.
Hours before the courthouse opened its doors, more than a dozen reporters and members of the public stood in line in hopes of securing a seat in the gallery for the high-profile trial.
As you walk through the glass door entrance of the Daniel Patrick Moynihan Courthouse, you are met by bulletproof vest-clad court officers.
All visitors must separate their electronic devices from their personal belongings, which are passed through a metal detector.
Visitors walk through a metal detector before a court officer hands them a poker chip.
The courthouse uses a poker chip system to sort the number of electronic devices visitors are in possession of.
Electronic devices, such as Bluetooth-powered headphones, voice recorders, laptops, cellphones, and smart watches, are confiscated before you're allowed to enter the courthouse's main hallway.
As about a half-dozen reporters and I waited in the gallery for jury selection, we witnessed how Combs entered the courtroom shackle-free.
Combs entered with his hands pressed together, greeted his defense team before he examined the gallery, and locked eyes with reporters and potential jurors.
The 55-year-old disgraced Bad Boy Records executive was attentive and engaged with his counsel as they grilled dozens of potential jurors.
As jury selection wrapped up for the day, Combs embraced each of his female defense attorneys before he mouthed "thank you" to a handful of supporters in the gallery.
I attended trial again as opening statements got underway on May 12 and the world media waited anxiously outside the federal courthouse before the sun rose in Lower Manhattan.
A line stretched down the block from the federal courthouse as some members of the media and from the public camped out overnight to try to obtain a coveted seat inside the gallery.
At least three overflow rooms were made available for reporters and the public, who are eager to witness the prosecutions case against the music mogul.
At least half a dozen members of Combs' family arrived at the courthouse as spectators filed in single order to enter the federal building to turn over all their electronic devices.
Combs' trial is being held on the 26th floor in Judge Arun Subramanian's courtroom and is expected to last for eight weeks.
We'll bring it all to you on The U.S. Sun.
He said it wouldn't make sense for Trump to pardon him halfway into the prosecution's case when the jury hasn't yet heard all of the facts, adding that it would be "premature" to act now.
"I was very surprised that Trump is considering pardoning Diddy, especially in light of the fact the trial is ongoing now,' he said.
"We are hearing witness after witness after witness testify to some horrible things.
'It would be a slap in the face to the witnesses, to the victims, to a lot of people to just pardon him, you know.
People will think he got a free ride and beat the system."
Attorney Tre Lovell on a possible pardon for Diddy
"It would seem that he would want to wait until the trial is over, and if there's not a conviction then there's no need for him to get involved.'
He went on to say, "There's one thing that Americans stand for … it's accountability, and if he were pardoned in light of what's been happening, these allegations and this testimony, there would be a sense of loss and lack of accountability.
"And so I don't know how that would sit with most Americans with respect to President Trump."
But Lovell said he doesn't think anybody would be surprised if Trump pardoned Diddy.
"He's pardoned a lot of people that people take umbrage [with]. And he's not worried about a re-election, so I don't really think it would affect him.
"He may have some more detractors, but I don't think he really cares, and his conduct thus far shows he's going to do what he wants to do."
Lovell feels if Diddy is acquitted it would be a sense of victory and it would be easier to acclimate to society because he will have been vindicated in court.
However, if he's convicted and pardoned by Trump it would have more of a negative impact on him.
"It'll be a little tougher because people will think he got a free ride and beat the system," he said.
But regardless, Lovell feels "Diddy's reputation has been irreparably harmed" and he will never be the billionaire music mogul he was once admired by millions.
It comes after...
Cassie Ventura
Ventura testified Combs
Celebrities like Prince, Mike Myers, and Bill Gates have been mentioned throughout the trial
Kid Cudi testified about how his
Trump has pardoned several high-profile inmates in recent months, including reality TV stars Todd and Julie Chrisley three years after they were convicted of bank fraud and tax evasion.
Combs' federal trial has been ongoing for more than three weeks and there are
more witnesses set to testify.
More and more damning accusations have emerged about the alleged violence he inflicted behind closed doors.
The singer, 38, alleged
Ventura, who said she did not want to engage in the sex acts, told the court her music career took a backseat due to the toll the orgies took on her day, testifying how she needed days at a time to recover.
Prosecutors also released photos of the injuries Ventura allegedly suffered from Combs' years-long abuse, including a gash on her forehead that had become a permanent scar.
Combs has remained mostly stone-faced in court as his lawyers insist he is innocent.
The prosecution's case is slated to rest the week of June 9.
If you or someone you know is affected by any of the issues raised in this story, call RAINN (Rape, Abuse, & Incest National Network) at 800-656-HOPE (4673).
Diddy's charges explained by a lawyer
Former federal prosecutor Neama Rahmani explained the set of charges Diddy is facing to The U.S. Sun:
"Diddy is facing three charges, or three sets of charges.
"The first is racketeering, which you typically see with organized crime enterprises - so the mob, cartels, street gangs -but we're seeing it a lot more in sex trafficking cases.
"And you don't need an organization like the mob, as long as it's an enterprise, which is something that consists of two or more people, and they engage in two or more RICO predicate acts, that's enough for racketeering.
"Racketeering is a powerful charge because it allows the government to bring in all sorts of evidence of criminal activity, as well as all sorts of people, into that racketeering conspiracy.
"And anyone who's a co-conspirator, they're on the hook for any criminal acts committed in furtherance of the conspiracy.
"The most serious charge, though, is sex trafficking.
"What separates sex trafficking from normal sex? Adults, of course, can consent to any type of sex, no matter how freaky it is. But sex trafficking has one of three elements: force, fraud, or coercion.
"And the government is saying that Diddy used force to force these men and women to participate in these freak-offs, and he coerced them by drugging them.
"The least serious charge is the prostitution, sometimes called the Man Act, and that's engaging in prostitution using some sort of interstate commerce across state lines. That obviously is unlawful.
"Typically, you don't see federal cases for prostitution only, which is why it's the least serious of the crimes."
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Sean "Diddy" Combs attends the 2018 Fox Network Upfront at Wollman Rink, Central Park
Credit: Getty
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President Donald Trump has spoken of the possibility of pardoning Diddy who is on trial in New York
Credit: AFP

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