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lite.cnn.com - on gopher - inofficial | |
ARTICLE VIEW: | |
Sean ‘Diddy’ Combs was sentenced to over 4 years in prison after | |
day-long court hearing. How we got here | |
By Lauren del Valle, Nicki Brown, CNN | |
Updated: | |
6:30 AM EDT, Sat October 4, 2025 | |
Source: CNN | |
A federal judge to four years and two months in prison Friday | |
afternoon, telling the disgraced music mogul that his crimes were | |
serious but there is “light at the end of the tunnel” for him. | |
Combs has been jailed in a federal detention facility in Brooklyn, New | |
York since his arrest in September of last year, and was facing up to | |
ten years in prison for each of the two counts of transportation to | |
engage in prostitution he was found guilty of in July. | |
He was convicted of transporting two of his former girlfriends to have | |
sex with paid male escorts at drug-fueled nights called “Freak | |
Offs” or “hotel nights.” | |
Judge Arun Subramanian’s ruling Friday departed from the | |
prosecutors’ 11-year sentencing recommendation, and the defense | |
team’s request for a lenient 14-month sentence that would’ve | |
secured Combs’ imminent release after time served. | |
The judge said he considered the fact that Combs is a self-made artist | |
and businessman who has “inspired and lifted up communities” and | |
called his impact on the Black community and entrepreneurship – all | |
of which was highlighted by his defense team in court on Friday – | |
“celebrated and iconic.” | |
But Subramanian also said, “A history of good works cannot wash away | |
the record in this case, which showed that you abused the power and | |
control you had over the women you professed to love dearly. You abused | |
them physically, emotionally and psychologically and you used that | |
abuse to get your way.” | |
The judge rejected “the defense’s attempt to characterize what | |
happened here as merely intimate consensual experiences or just a sex, | |
drugs and rock ‘n’ roll story.” | |
“I was sitting right here,” Subramanian said, in reference to the | |
testimony given at trial by two of Combs’ former girlfriends, | |
Casandra Ventura and a woman who testified under the pseudonym | |
“Jane.” | |
“We read about it in text messages and emails. We saw it in the | |
images of gashes, bruises, broken doors, and we saw the video of your | |
savage beating of Ms. Ventura,” Judge Subramanian said. “This was | |
subjugation, and it drove both Ms. Ventura and Jane to thoughts of | |
ending their lives.” | |
Judge Subramanian thanked the victims for their courage to speak out | |
about the abuse they endured from Combs. | |
”I want to say first we heard you. I am proud of you for coming to | |
the Court to tell the world what really happened,” he said. | |
The judge also questioned the authenticity of Combs’ claims of | |
reform, pointing to his assault of Jane in June 2024. The judge said | |
Combs assaulted Jane and arranged a hotel night with her and an escort | |
while knowing he was under active federal investigation and the had | |
been become public. | |
‘A universe of people who love you’ | |
Subramanian addressed Combs directly, encouraging him to let his family | |
support him through his sentence and when he is released, quoting from | |
several positive messages in letters submitted by his family and | |
friends to the court. | |
“These letters, all those letters that I saw, show that you have a | |
universe of people who love you,” the judge said. “Let them lift | |
you up now, just like you’ve lifted them up for so many years.” | |
“I’m counting on you to make the most of your second chance,” | |
Subramanian said. | |
Combs begs for mercy | |
Combs addressed the court before Judge Subramanian imposed his | |
sentence, pleading for a second chance. | |
“I ask your honor for mercy. I beg your honor for mercy,” Combs | |
said. | |
He apologized to Ventura and her family, and to Jane. To Jane he said, | |
“I didn’t mean to hurt you. I’m sorry that I brought you into my | |
mess.” | |
Combs also apologized to abuse victims around the world who may have | |
been triggered by the surveillance footage of him assaulting Ventura. | |
Regarding the video he said, “My actions were disgusting, shameful | |
and sick. I was sick. Sick from the drugs, I was out of control. I | |
needed help but I didn’t get the help. Because of that I can make no | |
excuse.” | |
Combs said he understood the severity of his convictions and pledged, | |
“I’ll never put my hands on another person again. I know that | |
I’ve learned my lesson.” | |
“I lost all my businesses, I lost my career, I totally destroyed my | |
reputation. But most of all, I lost my self-respect. I’ve been | |
humbled and broken to my core. I hate myself right now. I’ve been | |
stripped down to nothing. I really am truly sorry for it all, no matter | |
what they say,” he said. | |
Combs grew emotional when he turned to apologize to his children and | |
mother seated in the courtroom. | |
Emotional pleas from Combs’ children | |
Earlier, several of Combs’ children addressed the judge, pleading | |
with him to give their father a lenient sentence. | |
“I ask you to give my father a second chance, a second chance at | |
life, a second chance to right his wrongs, a second chance to be the | |
man that he truly is,” Justin Combs said, calling his father his | |
“superhero.” | |
“Seeing him broken down and stripped of everything is something I | |
will never forget.” | |
Three of Combs’ daughters gave tearful addresses to the court. | |
“We know he isn’t perfect and he has made many mistakes and we | |
aren’t here to excuse any of those mistakes. But your honor, he is | |
still our dad, and we still need him present in our lives,” Jessie | |
Combs said. | |
His daughter D’Lila Combs pleaded with the judge to release Combs to | |
heal out of the media spotlight. | |
“Please, your honor, please, give our family the chance to heal | |
together, to rebuild, to change, to move forward, not as a headline but | |
as human beings who are trying to do better,” she said. | |
Judge Subramanian thanked Combs’ children for addressing the court. | |
“I know how hard it was to stand up here and tell me those things but | |
it’s very important for me to hear.” | |
The defense also played a ten-minute campaign-style video highlighting | |
Combs’ life with his family and good works. | |
Combs’ defense team gave a more than three-hour presentation that | |
dominated the court day. Judge Subramanian allowed five of Combs’ | |
attorneys to argue for a lenient sentence on his behalf in addition to | |
the character witness statements. A reverend from Miami also told the | |
judge that he’d take personal responsibility for Combs’ | |
rehabilitation when he’s released. | |
No victims speak in court | |
While the court heard several pleas from Combs’ supporters Friday, | |
the victims who testified at trial were noticeably absent from the | |
hearing. | |
Ventura, in a letter submitted ahead of the proceedings, wrote that she | |
fears for the safety of herself and her family if Combs is released. | |
She told the judge she is keeping “as private and quiet” as | |
possible for fear of retribution. | |
Prosecutor Christy Slavik read an excerpt from Ventura’s letter about | |
the lasting trauma she still experiences. | |
“I spent the last seven years of my life slowly rebuilding myself – | |
physically getting clean from the drug abuse Sean Combs forced and | |
encouraged, and mentally understanding how to live with a seemingly | |
insurmountable level of trauma,” Ventura wrote. “The horrors I | |
endured drove me to have thoughts of suicide – ones I almost followed | |
through on, if not for my family’s intervention and urging that I | |
seek professional care.” | |
Jane did not submit a letter weighing in on Combs’ sentence. | |
A former employee of Combs who testified at trial under the pseudonym | |
“Mia” was slated to speak at the hearing, but on Friday morning | |
Slavik said she’d changed her mind. | |
Combs’ lawyers had submitted a letter opposing Mia speaking at the | |
hearing earlier in the week that Slavik called “bullying.” | |
The judge agreed and admonished the defense on the bench Friday. “The | |
tone of the defense’s letter was inappropriate and so I agree with | |
Ms. Slavik on that point,” he said. | |
Prosecutors: Combs respect for the law is ‘lip service’ | |
Slavik spent less than an hour in total addressing Combs’ sentencing | |
for the government, but made clear its stance that his claimed remorse | |
is disingenuous. | |
“It’s clear that the defendant doesn’t understand or appreciate | |
the gravity of his criminal conduct,” Slavik said. | |
Combs doesn’t “fully grapple with how his actions got him here. His | |
respect for the law is just lip service.” | |
The prosecutor said Combs and his lawyers have minimized the violence | |
tied to his conviction. | |
“The defendant’s abuse was consistent, casual even, but | |
life-altering for those on the bruised end of it,” Slavik said. | |
“Today the court has the opportunity to send a message to the victims | |
in this case, to all victims of abuse and exploitation, and to the | |
public – that the defendant’s crimes are serious, that victims | |
matters, and that people who abuse, exploit, and manipulate will be | |
punished,” Slavik said. | |
Slavik knocked Combs for lining up speaking engagements for as soon as | |
next week with the supposition that he’d be released. | |
“He has booked speaking engagements in Miami for next week,” Slavik | |
said. “That is the height of hubris, your Honor.” | |
Combs’ lawyer Xavier Donaldson later said he’d arranged engagements | |
for Combs to begin teaching inmates, as he’s started doing in his | |
detention in recent months. The director of a Miami nonprofit that | |
helps convicted citizens reenter society also said at the hearing that | |
he hoped to work with Combs to expand his leadership and business | |
curriculum. | |
It is unclear where Combs will serve his prison sentence, but Judge | |
Subramanian said he hopes Combs will continue working with his fellow | |
inmates. | |
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