With jury selection expected to end on Friday in the Sean ‘Diddy’ Combs sex trafficking trial, all eyes are on the names of the witnesses who may testify – or be brought up throughout the proceedings. 

Judge Arun Subramanian has warned prosecutors and the defense that they are running out of time and need to weed out more potential jurors so opening statements can begin next week, as scheduled.

It has been a struggle for the court to find individuals who have not heard of the case against Diddy, with many admitting they have seen a video that shows the rapper assaulting his ex-girlfriend Cassie, who will be one of the witnesses at the trial.

Potential jurors were handed a binder containing dozens of names and places that may come up during the music mogul’s trial. 

The list of at least 190 individuals includes comedian Mike Myers, actor Michael B Jordan and rapper Kanye West.

Potential jurors have also said they recognize the names of Destiny’s Child singer Michelle Williams, actor Lauren London, singer Dawn Richard and singer-producer Dallas Austin. 

Jury selection to end on Friday, opening statements set for Monday

A jury in Diddy’s trial is expected to be in place sometime Friday, after prosecutors asked for a delay in case potential jurors choose to back out.

The lawyers measured the progress made over two days after Judge Arun Subramanian completed questioning dozens of prospective jurors to weed out any biases.

The court will attempt to find as many as 10 additional potential jurors on Wednesday to get to a pool of 45 potential jurors.

On Friday, the pool is to be narrowed to 12 jurors and six alternates.

Opening statements are scheduled for Monday, when prosecutors will cast Combs as the head of a criminal organization who exploited his fame and fortune to sexually abuse women and destroy young lives.

Defense attorneys plan to counter by saying Combs was not committing crimes when he engaged in sexual activity with consenting adults.

Below, potential jurors answer written questions by U.S. District Judge Arun Subramanian during jury selection in Diddy’s sex trafficking trial in New York City on May 6.

Woman allowed to remain on jury despite thinking is guilty of domestic violence

Eyebrows were raised in court when a woman was allowed to remain in the jury pool despite saying that after watching the video of Diddy beating up Cassie she thought he ‘would be guilty of domestic violence.’

The black woman said that she recalled having seen news articles that said Diddy was ‘trying to get out of jail’.

And she wrote in her jury questionnaire that her mother – a domestic abuse survivor – told her ‘never to accept physical or mental abuse from anyone’.

But the woman, a middle school teacher, also said some things that appealed to Diddy, saying that she wouldn’t pre-judge him and was skeptical of some accusers.

‘Just because somebody does one thing doesn’t mean they did another,’ she said.

She said that ‘sometimes people testify to things that are not necessarily true’ because they had ‘jumped on the bandwagon.’

Timeline of Diddy’s allegations from baby oil ‘freak offs’ to the Cassie video

Heralded for decades as rap royalty, Sean ‘Diddy’ Combs now lives alone in an isolation cell in a notorious New York City jail – deemed too much of a ‘threat to the community’ by authorities to be let out even after offering a $50 million bond.

It’s a stunning fall for the ‘It’s All About the Benjamins’ rapper, who was once hip-hop’s wealthiest and most influential mogul.

But if the feds’ allegations are true it may be just be all the unlimited cash, unchecked power and the Hollywood privilege that goes along with it that landed Diddy where he now sits: facing a slew of racketeering conspiracy and sex trafficking charges that accuse him of presiding over a sordid empire of sexual crimes and physical abuse.

Diddy allowed to wear his own clothes in trial

Diddy has been granted permission to wear his own clothes at his upcoming sex trafficking trial following a judge’s ruling.

The disgraced hip hop mogul can ditch the prison issue, tan colored top and pants when jury selection begins and for the remainder of the case.

But certain conditions on Diddy, who has designed his own clothing range and once won a prestigious fashion industry award.

Diddy’s lawyers made the application for him to wear clothes other than those from the grim Metropolitan Detention Center, where he is being held, to Judge Arun Subramanian.

Cassie’s lawsuit started Diddy’s legal fall

Although dozens of men and women have alleged in lawsuits that Combs abused them, this trial will highlight the claims of four women.

One of them is Cassie, who filed a lawsuit in late 2023 saying Combs had subjected her to years of abuse, including beatings and rape after they met in 2005.

Her lawsuit, which offered the first public account of the Freak Offs described in the indictment, was settled in a day. Four months later, though, federal investigators raided Combs homes in Los Angeles and Miami and confronted him at a private airport in Florida, seizing 96 electronic devices. They also found three AR-15-style rifles with defaced serial numbers.

The three-time Grammy winner was indicted last September. He has since been held in a federal jail in Brooklyn after judges ruled that he would be a threat to intimidate witnesses and victims if released.

How long is the trial expected to last?

Jury selection is expected to wrap up in about a week, with the trial’s opening statements scheduled for May 12. The proceedings are estimated to last eight to 10 weeks.

Stick with us for the latest updates throughout the day and to listen to our The Trial of Diddy podcast click here.

The charges Diddy is facing

Diddy is facing five felony charges, namely:

  • Racketeering conspiracy
  • Two counts of sex trafficking by force, fraud or coercion
  • Two counts of transportation to engage in prostitution

The charge of racketeering conspiracy, the federal statute known by its acronym RICO that was once primarily used to target the mafia but in recent years has been wielded in cases of sexual abuse, including against the fallen R&B star R. Kelly.

It allows government attorneys to project a long view of criminal activity rather than prosecuting isolated sex crimes.

If convicted, the one-time rap producer and global superstar, who is often credited for his role in ushering hip-hop into the mainstream, could spend the rest of his life in prison.

Diddy’s secret trial weapon revealed

Jury consultant Linda Moreno has joined his top-tier legal team, the Daily Mail can confirm.

She will help defense attorneys to profile potential jurors as selection starts Monday in Combs’ federal criminal trial in Manhattan.

Moreno gained fame as one of the country’s leading jury consultants after high-profile cases including the 2005 trial of Sami Al-Arian, a Florida college professor indicted on terrorism-related charges under the Patriot Act.

Will Diddy’s trial be televised?

Unlike other high-profile cases, the rapper’s trial will not be televised as it is in federal court.

Electronic media, including cameras, are banned in the Manhattan court room.

A sketch artist’s work will be the only visuals coming out of the courtroom.

Diddy’s new lawyer Nicole Westmoreland drops rape bombshell

Diddy has hired Nicole Westmoreland as the eigth lawyer on his defense team.

Westmoreland revealed she was raped in 2001 when she was just 19 years old.

She said a man named Alfred Cleveland raped her at Patchwerk Recording Studio in Atlanta, as reported by TMZ.

The star attorney joined Diddy’s team on Tuesday morning.

She is pictured leaving court this week.

Bizarre links between former FBI director and the Diddy trial

The daughter of former FBI director James Comey, Maurene Comey, is one of the prosecutors in the sex-trafficking trial against Diddy.

She was also among the prosecutors in the trial of Ghislane Maxwell, who was convicted of luring teenage girls to be sexually abused by Jeffrey Epstein.

James Comey, nominee for FBI Director, shares a laugh with his daughters, Kate, center, and Maureen and his wife Patrice during his conformation hearing in 2013.

James Comey shares a laugh during his conformation hearing in 2013 as his daughters Kate, left, and Maureen.

Maurene Comey points at Ghislaine Maxwell as she delivers the rebuttal argument for the government during the trial of Maxwell in 2021.

Court is in session for day three of Diddy’s trial

The court announced on Wednesday that the official jury will be selected on Friday after the prosecution requested a delay.

The judge, prosecutors and defense are now discussing the jurors who made it through the next round of questioning on Monday and Tuesday.

The defense asked that an HBO staffer, Juror 29, be removed from the pool, citing the bombshell documentary, The Fall of Diddy.

Judge Submarian dismissed the juror after the prosecution agreed with the defense.

A-listers are dragged in court during Diddy trial

Other names mentioned on the list by a female juror who said she recognized them were Michelle Williams from Destiny’s child, actress Lauren London – who was the girlfriend of Nipsey Hussle who was fatally shot in 2019 – and rapper Kid Cudi.

Judge Subramanian said that the list of people and places runs ‘several pages’ and felt like an ‘appendix from Lord of the Rings’. To speed up the process, he ruled that jurors would be given the list to review before they are brought into court and questioned one by one before they seat a final panel of 12 jurors and six alternates.

Judge slams Diddy star attorney after he calls prosecutors a ‘six-pack of white women’

Judge Arun Subramanian admonsihed Mark Geragos in court after he made comments in a podcast calling Diddy’s prosecutors a ‘sick-pack of white women.’

According to prosecutors, Geragos has been advising Diddy’s team during the jury selection process even though he is not one of the rapper’s officials attorneys in the trial.

Subramanian, who is of South Asian descent, called Geragos’ comments ‘outrageous,’ but Geragos’ whose daughter Teny is a member of Diddy’s legal team, pushed back at the judge.

‘I think when you’ve got a Black man who’s being prosecuted and the client feels like he’s being targeted, it’s a — it’s an observation,’ Geragos said.

But the judge wasn not having and shot back: ‘I think this is ridiculous.

‘I think referring to the prosecution in this case as a six-pack of white women is outrageous. All right. And I understand what you’re saying about the cases and everything else, but I think this is outrageous and this would not be tolerated in any court from any lawyer anywhere across the nation.’

Trump hotel shooter Jonathan Oddi’s extraordinary links to Diddy

Daily Mail can confirm Oddi did know Diddy – and was guarding a secret so scandalous that the rapper asked him to sign an NDA agreement to protect it.

The agreement is dated 2014 – four years before the Doral shooting – and ten years before Diddy’s life came crashing down with a federal indictment for sex trafficking.

Oddi told police in Doral that he signed the document in exchange for $5 million.

Diddy jury will not be sequestered

Diddy jurors will be able to leave court and go home after each day of the trial.

‘There are no plans to sequester the jury, which means you will go home every day after court,’ the jury questionnaire obtained by the outlet read.

However, jurors were instructed to “avoid all media coverage and not to go on the Internet or social media with regard to this case for any purpose.”

They are advised to avoid discussing the case with family, friends and colleagues until after the trial is done.

Diddy admitted being ‘nervous’ in court

Composed and with his hands in his pockets, Sean ‘Diddy’ Combs greeted potential jurors who hold his fate in their hands with a slight nod as the sex trafficking trial that could send him to prison for life began Monday.

And despite the gravity of the crimes against him, Combs, 55, remained composed and calm, hugging his lawyers as he came in and nodding his head slightly when he faced the jurors with his hands in his pockets.

Until he cracked midway through the process after Diddy’s legal team requested a bathroom break. When the judge asked if they could carry on, Diddy put up his hand and said: ‘I’m sorry your honor, I’m a little nervous today.’

What happens after jury selection?

Another 10 potential jurors must be selected on Wednesday for a total pool of 45 prospective jurors.

The last step in the jury selection process will occur when lawyers on both sides strike a limited number of individuals off the jury for reasons they usually are not required to disclose.

The judge has scheduled peremptory challenges for Friday.

Opening statements are set for Monday.

Judge wants 45 prospective jurors

Judge Arun Subramanian was seeking to build a pool of 45 prospective jurors from which a panel of 12 jurors and several alternates can be chosen. Nineteen were chosen on Monday and six more by noon Tuesday.

Opening statements are scheduled to be presented on May 12 for a trial projected to last up to two months.

Read the full list of charges against Diddy

Rapper Sean ‘Diddy’ Combs faces a slew of charges related to his alleged sexual and physical abuse of women.

He was charged with three crimes – racketeering, sex trafficking and transportation to engage in prostitution.

Prosecutors say star attorney unfairly helping Diddy in court

In a court filing Tuesday, prosecutors complained that a prominent attorney, Mark Geragos — the father of one of the lawyers on Combs’ legal team — had a long-standing relationship with Combs and seemed to be acting as an adviser to Combs and the defense team even as he spoke out about the case repeatedly on his podcast.

Prosecutors urged the judge to require the attorney to obey rules that require lawyers working on the case to limit their public comments.

Some potential jurors dismissed after admitting they have seen damning Diddy video

Several who were eliminated from the jury pool had seen or heard media reports related to the case, including some who said they saw a video in which Combs was hitting and kicking one of his accusers in a Los Angeles hotel hallway in 2016.

But one man who had written on a questionnaire that the video left him with the ‘impression of an angry hostile person who is entitled’ was not dismissed from the jury pool.

After the video aired on CNN last year, Diddy apologized, saying, ‘I take full responsibility for my actions in that video. I was disgusted then when I did it. I’m disgusted now.’

Diddy Jury pool is down to 35 potential jurors

On Monday and Tuesday, the judge assembled a pool of 35 potential jurors, 10 individuals short of the group of 45 would-be jurors that are one step from sitting on the jury for a trial projected to last up to two months.

The last step in the process will occur when lawyers on both sides strike a limited number of individuals off the jury for reasons they usually are not required to disclose.

WATCH: The Austin Powers joke that dragged Mike Myers into Diddy trial

A potential juror said he recognized comedian Mike Myers’ name in a list of individuals provided to the jury pool.

The individuals may come up during the trial.

It’s likely Myers was dragged into the case over a scene in 2002’s Austin Powers: Goldmember, where the character of Dr Evil had an ‘E. Diddy’ tattoo on his buttocks after spending time in prison.

The scene also features Beyonce.

How Diddy is trying to connect with jurors in sex-trafficking trial

The rapper, 55, repeatedly nodded and smiled at the individuals being questioned during the jury selection process this week.

He appeared to be showing his approval for some jurors by nodding his head up and down or shaking it left and right, giving a subtitle indication of how he was feeling towards each person.

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