Jurors who will determine the fate of Sean ‘Diddy’ Combs in his sex trafficking trial will be selected from today in New York City. 

Combs, 55, has pleaded not guilty on all counts, insisting that any sex acts were consensual – but prosecutors say for years he coerced victims into drug-fueled sex parties using threats and violence.

The music mogul has been held at Brooklyn’s notorious Metropolitan Detention Center since he was arrested by federal agents in New York in September last year.

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

Follow Dailymail.com’s live coverage below

Who is expected to testify in Diddy’s trial?

At least four alleged victims are expected to take3 the stand during Sean ‘Diddy’ Combs’ trial this month.

The central witness in the trial is his ex-girlfriend Cassie, whose lawsuit against the rapper began his downfall.

Combs’ attorney, Marc Agnifilo, said at a bail hearing that Combs wrote ‘a very large check’ to Cassie after she filed her lawsuit. The lawyer said the payout motivated others to come forward with false claims.

Several of Diddy’s former sexual partners, a business associate and a male sex worker are also among those who will testify at the rapper’s sex trafficking trial in New York City.

Diddy’s bold new ‘mental condition’ strategy revealed before trial

The 55-year-old disgraced rap mogul will have a defense built around his mental capacity to commit the crimes as his representatives are arguing that he was not of clear mind during the alleged crimes according to court documents.

According to court documents obtained by DailyMail.com, Diddy wants to have a doctor and Columbia professor Dr. Elie Aoun testify on his behalf that he had a ‘mental condition bearing on the issue of guilt.’

The details of his alleged condition had been redacted in the documents but there are a few clues of what it could be but federal prosecutors do not believe in its relevance.

According to the docs, prosecutors have stated that legal precedent requires the defense to give proper notice before offering any ‘evidence of the effects of drugs and alcohol on a defendant’s memory or cognitive function.’

Another clue would be that prosecutors are describing the doctor’s potential testimony as evidence of the ‘defendant’s inability to control behavior.’

Diddy wanted trial delayed but was denied

Judge Arun Subramanian ruled last month that Diddy’s trial would proceed as planned despite his lawyer’s claims that they needed an extra two months to prepare.

Lawyers for the entertainer had requested a two-month delay, citing a need for more time to gather information about trial witnesses and to cope with late additions to the indictment against their client.

But the judge, noting that Combs has at least four attorneys, said the defense has sufficient time to be ready for trial next month. He said he would not grant a delay and allow a ‘fishing expedition’ to seek more evidence.

Judge Arun Subramanian presides during a conference for Diddyahead of his trial next month on sex trafficking charges, in New York, U.S., April 18.

Diddy’s lawyers arrive at court

Sean ‘Diddy’ Combs’s attorney Brian Steel has arrived at the Southern District of New York Federal Court.

Jury selection begins Monday in New York in the blockbuster federal sex trafficking trial of the music mogul, who stands accused of years of harrowing abuse.

Who are Diddy’s lawyers?

Diddy’s defense team is led by powerhouse lawyer Marc Agnifilo.

The defense also includes Teny Geragos, a partner in Agnifilo’s law firm, as well as Alexandra Shapiro, Jason Driscoll and Brian Steel.

Attorney Anthony Ricco was on the defense team initially but has since withdrawn from the case.

Ricco, one of six attorneys representing Combs, did not offer any details about the decision.

Diddy sits with members of his defense team Marc Agnifilo, Teny Geragos, Alexandra Shapiro and Jason Driscoll for a conference ahead of his trial next month on sex trafficking charges on April 18.

Huge lines outside court for Diddy’s trial

Dozens of people lined up outside the Southern District of New York Federal Court in Manhattan as jury selection begins on Monday.

The hip-hop entrepreneur whose wildly successful career has been dotted by allegations of violence will be brought to a New York courthouse Monday to be tried on charges that he used the influence and resources of his business empire to sexually abuse women.

Humiliated Diddy is forced to use ‘macks’ instead of money in jail

The rapper is roughing it inside prison as an insider revealed he’s been forced to use packets of mackerel, or ‘macks,’ instead of money.

The disgraced 55-year-old mogul was well-known for bragging about his cash and jewels…but is now forced to trade packets of the oily fish inside Brooklyn’s Metropolitan Detention Center as he awaits trial for sex trafficking charges.

Diddy had an extraordinary fall from grace since calling prison his new home, as the embattled music mogul has traded in his lavish lifestyle for lasagna, snickers, Cheez-Its, bunk beds and monitored computer time without WIFI.

Diddy’s lawyers claimed prosecutors were ‘polluting’ his trial

Sean ‘Diddy’Comb’s lawyers claimed federal prosecutors were ‘polluting’ the Bad Boy mogul’s trial even before it begins and asked the court to block other witnesses from testifying earlier this month.

The rapper’s attorney asked the judge to exclude ‘prior bad act’ witnesses from taking the stand in court, according to court documents obtained by DailyMail.com.

Combs’ attorney argued allowing potentially dozens of witnesses outside of the four victims tied to the rapper’s criminal indictment would be the ‘worst abuses of the character evidence rule in the history of American law.’

They also claimed prosecutors did not plan to divulge the growing witness list until April 18 — just two weeks before jury selection for the high-profile case.

‘The allegations implicate dozens of unidentified witnesses and alleged co-conspirators around the world — and some of the key witnesses to the supposed incidents are dead,’ the defense attorneys wrote.

‘Collectively, these new allegations require many months if not years to investigate, and if admitted, would require a series of mini-trials certain to double the length of a trial the government originally said would last ‘three weeks’.

Diddy has faced past criminal accusations

In 1999 he was charged with bursting into the offices of an Interscope Records executive with his bodyguards and beating him with a champagne bottle and a chair. The executive, Steve Stoute, later asked prosecutors to go easy on Combs, who pleaded guilty to a lesser charge and took an anger management class.

Later that same year, Combs was stopped by police after he and his then-girlfriend, Jennifer Lopez, fled a nightclub where three people were wounded by gunfire.

Combs was acquitted of all charges related to the incident at a 2001 trial, but a rapper in his entourage, Jamal ‘Shyne’ Barrow, was convicted in the shooting and served nearly nine years in prison.

Then in 2015, Combs was charged with assaulting someone with a weight-room kettlebell at the University of California, Los Angeles, where one of his sons played football. Combs said he was defending himself and prosecutors dropped the case.

Rap artist Sean Combs and Jennifer Lopez arrive for the MTV Video Music Awards at the Metropolitan Opera House at Lincoln Center in New York on 09 September, 1999.

Video of Diddy beating Cassie will be at the center of his trial

Combs, 55, has acknoledged one episode of violence that is likely to be featured in the trial.

In 2016, a security camera recorded him beating up his former girlfriend, the R&B singer Cassie, in the hallway of a Los Angeles hotel.

Cassie, real name Cassandra Ventura, filed a lawsuit in late 2023 saying Combs had subjected her to years of abuse, including beatings and rape.

Combs’ attorney, Marc Agnifilo has said Combs was ‘not a perfect person’ and that there had been drug use and toxic relationships, but said that all sexual activity between Combs, Cassie and other people was consensual.

How Diddy’s appearance has changed behind bars

The rapper’s appearance has changed now that he has no access to the luxurious of the outside like hair dye.

Since being locked up at Brooklyn’s Metropolitan Detention Center following his arrest in September, Combs has grown noticeably grayer and scruffier, and on Thursday appeared in court wearing eyeglasses.

He was holding a black folder filled with documents and hugged his lawyers, fist bumping with one female attorney, Teny Geragos, and exchanging smiles with her.

He waved to a man in the public gallery but nobody from his family was present, unlike previous hearings.

When does jury selection begin?

Jury selection is scheduled to begin in the morning and potentially take several days. Opening statements by the lawyers and the start of testimony is expected next week.

The 17-page indictment against Combs reads like a charging document filed against a Mafia leader or the head of a drug gang, accusing him of en engaging in sex trafficking and presising over a racketeering conspiracy.

The indictment says that with the help of people in his entourage and employees from his network of businesses, Combs engaged in a two-decade pattern of abusive behavior against women and others.

Diddy declined last-minute plea deal

The disgraced hip hop mogul confirmed that he did not accept the offer during his pretrial hearing in New York on Thursday.

The specific terms of the deal were not disclosed, but prosecutors said the Bad Boy founder would have faced less prison time if he had accepted it and been found guilty.

His lawyer Marc Agnifilo told the court that the two had discussed the agreement last week and ‘came to a decision’ together.

Bespectacled Diddy was asked to stand by Judge Arun Subramanian who asked him if he had read the plea deal offer.

‘I have, your honor’, he said.

When the judge asked if he had ‘rejected the plea offer’. Diddy replied: ‘Yes I did, your honor’.

Read the full story here.

Will Diddy have to wear prison clothes?

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.

In his ruling, the judge said:

The defendant Sean Combs, Inmate # 37452-054, will be permitted to receive non-prison clothing at the MDC to wear for his trial scheduled to begin on May 5, 2025.

He is permitted to have up to five button down shirts, up to five pairs of pants, up to five sweaters, up to five pairs of socks, and up to two pairs of shoes without laces to wear to court.

Before his fall from grace Diddy was considered one of the most fashionable men on the planet with his own fashion line winning the Council of Fashion Designers of America award in 2004.

Jaw-dropping questions Diddy’s jurors will be asked

The jurors selected to decide Diddy’s fate in his high-profile sex trafficking trial will be asked a series of unusual questions – including about their views on sex with multiple partners, drugs and hip-hop.

Rapper Sean Combs, 55, is facing myriad civil lawsuits alleging he sexually abused several anonymous complainants between 1990 and 2023 at star-studded events including VMA’s afterparties and his notorious ‘White Party’ functions in New York.

The sordid accusations range from gang-raping minors as young as 13 alongside celebrities including Jay-Z, to drugging women in order to sexually assault them.

Read the full story by Laura Parnaby here:

Will Diddy appear in court and what happens during jury selection?

Diddy will be driven across the East River by U.S. Marshals to the federal courthouse in Lower Manhattan, where he is due to arrive at 8:30am EST.

Once there, District Judge Arun Subramanian is expected to begin questioning prospective jurors one-by-one in a bid to seat a panel of 12 jurors and six alternates.

Hundreds of prospective jurors have already filled out questionnaires designed to elicit any bias they may have about the case.

Combs’ defense lawyers and prosecutors with the Manhattan U.S. Attorney’s office agreed on about 150 who could proceed to in-person questioning by the judge, known as voir dire.

Subramanian said in a May 1 hearing that the goal will be to choose 45 potential jurors who are qualified to serve, and lawyers for both sides will then have the opportunity to dismiss jurors without stating a reason, known as peremptory strikes.

The jury will be anonymous, which is frequently the case in high-profile trials in which jurors could face threats or harassment if their identities are known

Diddy was star of Met Gala two years ago.. now he’s behind bars

Sean ‘Diddy’ Combs attends The 2023 Met Gala

Two years ago, Diddy was one of the stars of New York’s Met Gala, one of the world’s most glamorous fashion events.

Speaking to reporters outside the Gala, which traditionally takes place on the first Monday in May, two years ago wearing his own Sean John fashion label, he told reporters:

This is Sean John’s [Met Gala] debut, as you can see. First time I designed in 10 years, and we’re feeling good.

But since then he’s swapped The Metropolitan Museum of Art for Brooklyn’s notorious Metropolitan Detention Center.

Once a mainstay at the Met Gala, the 55-year-old’s downfall is particularly apparent today as jurors are selected for his sex trafficking trial.

How case against Diddy came to court

Diddy and Cassie pictured together in Los Angeles in 2017

Core to the case against Diddy is his relationship with his former girlfriend, the singer Casandra ‘Cassie’ Ventura, who is expected to be a key trial witness.

A disturbing surveillance video from 2016, which was aired by CNN last year, shows Combs physically assaulting Ventura at a hotel.

Prosecutors say the encounter occurred following one of the ‘freak-offs’ they argue were a feature of his pattern of abuse.

The so-called ‘freak-offs’ were coercive, drug-fueled sexual marathons including sex workers that were sometimes filmed, according to the indictment.

The floodgates opened after Ventura filed a civil suit alleging Combs subjected her to more than a decade of coercion by physical force and drugs as well as a 2018 rape.

That 2023 suit was quickly settled out of court, but a string of similarly lurid sexual assault claims against the Grammy winner from both women and men followed.

Charges facing Diddy as he awaits trial

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.

Jury selection begins in Diddy sex crimes trial

Hello and welcome to Dailymail.com’s live coverage as jury selection gets under way in the blockbuster federal sex trafficking trial of music mogul Sean ‘Diddy’ Combs, who stands accused of years of harrowing abuse.

Combs, 55, has been held in detention in New York since September last year and is facing five felony charges

Prosecutors allege the influential hip-hop producer drugged and coerced women into sexual activities with male prostitutes.

Investigators said they found drugs and more than 1,000 bottles of baby oil that were intended to be used for orgies known as ‘freak offs’.

Combs, 55, has pleaded not guilty on all counts, insisting that any sex acts were consensual.

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

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