Wednesday, July 2, 2025
Split Verdict in Diddy Trial: Guilty on Transport, Not Guilty on Trafficking
The verdict, reached just before 10 a.m., followed nearly 14 hours of deliberation by a jury of eight men and four women. They cleared Combs of racketeering conspiracy and sex trafficking involving both Cassie Ventura and a second accuser known as Jane Doe but found him guilty of transporting both women across state lines for prostitution — a charge that still carries potential prison time.
There was no visible reaction from Combs as the jury read the decision. The music mogul — whose three-decade career helped define hip-hop’s rise from gritty streets to global boardrooms — sat expressionless, flanked by his legal team. Afterward, he was quietly returned to federal custody at Brooklyn’s Metropolitan Detention Center.
The charges stemmed from a sprawling federal investigation into Combs’ alleged decades-long pattern of coercion, abuse, and manipulation. Prosecutors built their case on testimony from multiple accusers who described being lured into what they called “freak-offs” — drug-fueled sex parties allegedly arranged by Combs and his associates. But defense attorneys painted the interactions as consensual and framed the lifestyle as “eccentric, not criminal.”
Combs’ lead attorney called the partial verdict “a sign the system still works,” while federal prosecutors declined immediate comment.
The trial — sparked by Ventura’s explosive $20 million civil lawsuit in late 2023 — ignited a chain reaction of more than 30 legal complaints, many of which remain active. Allegations against Combs span from the early 1990s to as recently as mid-2024 and include claims from former employees, models, music insiders, and everyday civilians who encountered him briefly and left with lasting trauma.
Combs was acquitted of racketeering and sex trafficking, but his conviction for violating the Mann Act — the federal law prohibiting transport of individuals across state lines for sex work — remains significant. Each count carries a potential sentence of up to 10 years in prison. A sentencing date has not yet been announced, though legal analysts expect proceedings to begin by early fall.
For fans and critics alike, the verdict marks the culmination of a stunning downfall for one of hip-hop’s most influential architects — the man behind Bad Boy Records, “Making the Band,” and multiplatinum albums like “No Way Out.” But while he dodged the most serious charges, the guilty counts ensure his legacy — and legal future — are far from settled.
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