Sean ‘Diddy’ Combs loses bid to get out of jail prior to sentencing
By Luc Cohen
New York (Reuters) -Sean “Diddy” combs lost their proposal to be released from prison before the October 3 sentence before the penalty of 3 October, although the hip -hop mogul was not guilty of the sex crimes hearing on Monday.
Combs’ lawyers asked the US Regional Judge Arun Subramanian to release a bond on a bond of 50 million dollars on 29 July, and that the conditions in the Metropolitan Detention Center in Brooklyn were dangerous and other defendants who were convicted of prostitution similar to Combs were usually released before the punishment.
In a written decision, the judge said that the arguments of the combs may have traction in a case that does not contain violence, coercion or subjugation in connection with the prostitution actions, but all three of the records contain evidence.
Subramanian said that his decision did not impose against the combs that have been imprisoned in MDC since the arrest of September 2024.
The lawyers of the combs did not respond immediately to the request for comments.
In a file on August 1, prosecutors with Manhattan US advocacy office, MDC’tek personnel, medical services and conditions have recovered since the arrest of the combs, and the combs presented at the hearing shows that the proof of physical violence remained a danger to the community.
The 55 -year -old Combs was not found guilty of three points of sex smuggling and tribute conspiracy on July 2, and convicted on charges of two less transportation to enter prostitution.
The prosecutors claimed that Combs forced their two old girlfriends to participate in drug -fuel sexual performances, which are sometimes called “freak” with male sex workers. Defense lawyers said that women are willing participants.
Each prostitution accusation is sentenced to a maximum of 10 years of imprisonment, but prosecutors admitted that federal guidelines proposed a total of 5-1/4 years imprisonment.
Combs, the founder of Bad Boy Records, claimed that he was not guilty of all numbers. The hearing took seven weeks.
Just after the decision, Subramanian rejected Combs’s first release request and referred to the wide evidence presented in the trial of the violence actions he committed.
(Reporting by Luc Cohen in New York; Editing by Chris Reese)


