Combs held at understaffed, violent Brooklyn jail pre-sentencing
4/7/2025 6:20
Despite being found not
guilty on the most serious counts at his sex trafficking trial,
Sean "Diddy" Combs will spend months awaiting sentencing at a
notoriously understaffed and violent Brooklyn jail where the
music mogul has lived through nearly ten months of lockdowns and
fights.
Combs, 55, has been held at the Metropolitan Detention Center
since his September 2024 arrest. The facility, which has also
held convicted sex traffickers like British socialite Ghislaine
Maxwell and rhythm and blues singer R. Kelly, is a far cry from
the luxurious Los Angeles and Miami mansions Combs called home
until last year.
After the verdict was read on Wednesday, Combs' lawyers
asked U.S. District Judge Arun Subramanian to release him on $1
million bond ahead of his sentencing, expected to take place by
October.
"I understand that you don't, that Mr. Combs does not want
to go back to the MDC," the judge said. Combs shook his head.
His hopes of returning to one of those homes and the embrace
of his family after being cleared of the more serious charges
were soon dashed. The judge denied Combs' request for bail,
citing evidence of his violent behavior presented during the
trial.
In recent years, MDC has been plagued by persistent staffing
shortages, power outages and maggots in inmates' food. Two weeks
after Combs' arrest, prosecutors announced criminal charges
against nine MDC inmates for crimes including assault, attempted
murder and murder at the facility in the months before Combs
arrived.
In January of last year, a federal judge in Manhattan declined
to order a man charged with drug crimes detained pending trial
at the MDC, calling the conditions there an "ongoing tragedy."
Last August, another judge said he would convert an older
defendant's nine-month jail term to home incarceration if he
were sent to MDC, citing the jail's "dangerous, barbaric
conditions."
The U.S. Bureau of Prisons, which operates MDC, said in a
statement it was engaged in "intensive efforts to improve
conditions at MDC Brooklyn." The agency said it confiscated
drugs, weapons and other contraband during a multi-day sweep of
the jail last October and November.
During the eight-week trial, U.S. Marshals transported
Combs to and from the courthouse in Lower Manhattan each day
from the facility in Brooklyn's Sunset Park neighborhood, which
has also housed former cryptocurrency entrepreneur Sam
Bankman-Fried and Luigi Mangione, accused of killing a health
insurance executive.
Bankman-Fried has since been moved to a low-security prison
in California and is appealing his fraud conviction and 25-year
sentence. Mangione has pleaded not guilty to murder charges.
A jury found Combs not guilty on Wednesday on sex trafficking
and racketeering charges, sparing him a potential life sentence,
but convicted him on two counts of transportation to engage in
prostitution that could land him in prison for several years. He
had pleaded not guilty to all charges.
Combs' defense lawyer Marc Agnifilo said in court on
Wednesday that Combs had been housed in "a very difficult part
of the MDC" where there have been fights. His lawyer Alexandra
Shapiro said in a November 2024 court filing that frequent
lockdowns at the facility had impaired Combs' ability to prepare
for trial.
On Wednesday, Combs' lawyers praised MDC staff, who they
said had facilitated their access to him during the trial.
"Despite the terrible conditions at the MDC, I want to thank
the good people who work there," defense lawyer Teny Geragos
told reporters after the verdict.
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