Thu | Nov 28, 2024

Diddy’s third bail bid to be decided this week

Published:Monday | November 25, 2024 | 12:06 AM
Sean ‘Diddy’ Combs
Sean ‘Diddy’ Combs

NEW YORK (AP):

Sean ‘Diddy’ Combs’ lawyers tried for a third time last Friday to persuade a judge to let the hip-hop mogul out of jail while he awaits his sex-trafficking trial, but a decision won’t come until this week.

US District Judge Arun Subramanian said he’ll rule promptly on Combs’ bail request after the defence and prosecution file letters by noon Monday, fleshing out some of the arguments they made during at a two-hour hearing in Manhattan federal court.

Combs’ lawyers pitched having him await trial under around-the-clock surveillance either at his mansion on an island near Miami Beach or – after the judge scoffed at that location – at an apartment on Manhattan’s Upper East Side.

Their $50-million bail proposal, secured by his Florida home, essentially amounts to keeping Combs on house arrest instead of in custody at the troubled Brooklyn federal jail where he’s been held since his September arrest.

Under their plan, Combs’ lawyers said he’ll be under near-total restrictions on his ability to see or contact anyone, but them. But prosecutors argued that no bail conditions can mitigate Combs’ “risk of obstruction and dangerousness to others”.

Combs has routinely flouted jail rules while locked up at the Metropolitan Detention Center in Brooklyn, prosecutors said, accusing him of attempting to interfere with witnesses and taint the jury pool.

“Really, this amounts to the defendant paying his way out of custody,” Assistant US Attorney Christy Slavik told Subramanian.

Defence lawyer Anthony Ricco countered that the prosecution’s portrayal of Combs as “a lawless person who doesn’t follow instructions” or “an out-of-control individual who has to be detained” is inaccurate.

Combs, 55, has pleaded not guilty to charges that he coerced and abused women for years with help from a network of associates and employees while silencing victims through blackmail and violence, including kidnapping, arson and physical beatings.

His trial is slated to begin May 5.

Two other judges previously concluded that the Bad Boy Records founder would be a danger to the community if he is freed, and an appeals court judge last month denied Combs’ immediate release while a three-judge panel of the 2nd US Circuit Court of Appeals weighs his bail request.

Friday’s hearing was the second time Combs was in court last week. On Tuesday, a judge blocked prosecutors from using as evidence papers that were seized from his cell during a jail-wide sweep for contraband and weapons.

Prosecutors contend that while incarcerated, Combs has orchestrated social media campaigns aimed at influencing potential jurors. They allege that he has also attempted to leak materials he believes would help his case and is contacting potential witnesses via third parties.

“Simply put, the defendant cannot be trusted,” Slavik argued.

In renewing their push for Combs’ release, his lawyers sought to undercut the strength of a potential key piece of evidence: a March 2016 video showing him hitting and kicking his then-girlfriend, R&B singer Cassie, in a Los Angeles hotel hallway.

Prosecutors contend the assault happened during a “Freak Off”, an event in which they allege Combs used his “power and prestige” to induce female victims into drugged-up, elaborately produced sexual performances with male sex workers.

Combs’ lawyers said in court papers that newly unearthed evidence refutes that, and that the video, which first aired on CNN in May, was “a minutes-long glimpse into a complex but decade-long consensual relationship” between Combs and Cassie.

Slavik, responding to defence claims that the recording was manipulated or taken out of context, said prosecutors don’t have the full version because Combs paid hotel staff $100,000 “to make the original video go away”.