Sean ‘Diddy’ Combs sentencing live: mogul’s children say he is ‘changed man’; prosecutor says he is casting himself as ‘victim’ | US news

Summary: Combs’ sentencing hearing so far

Sean “Diddy” Combs’ sentencing is continuing after a brief lunch break, as a judge considers the convicted hip-hop mogul’s punishment.

Here’s a brief summary of the sentencing hearing so far. The court is set to reconvene at 2:15 p.m. Eastern Time.

  • In July, the 55-year-old Combs was convicted of flying people around the country for sexual encounters, including his girlfriends and male sex workers. He was acquitted by a jury of more serious racketeering conspiracy and sex trafficking charges.

  • Prosecutors say he should spend more than 11 years in prison for his conviction for “transportation to engage in prostitution,” the AP reports. And Combs’ attorneys want him freed now. The prosecutors argued this morning that Combs deserved the 11 years to also deter more people from committing such crimes. They also argued that he had not owned up to his crimes and instead chose to portray himself as a victim in a letter addressed to the judge on Thursday night.

  • Combs’ attorneys have attempted to portray him as a changed man deserving leniency from the judge. One of his attorneys, Nicole Westmoreland, even teared up during the sentencing hearing when discussing Combs’ accomplishments as a Black entrepreneur.

  • Six of his children took the stand, with two of his daughters breaking down in tears as they read their prepared statements. Combs, himself, also cried during the hearing.

  • Before the lunch break, Combs’ attorneys played an 11-minute-long video, where Combs is seen with his children, praying and engaging in philanthropic work.

  • Attorneys also emphasized that Combs taught classes in jail and gave advice to other inmates at the Metropolitan Detention Center in Brooklyn, a looming federal prison in the Sunset Park neighborhood.

  • Three more defense lawyers – and even Combs himself – are expected to speak in court after returning from lunch.

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When speaking about Combs’ past, Steel also brought up Combs’ former close friend, Christopher Wallace (known as the rapper Biggie Smalls and the Notorious B.I.G) and how his 1997 murder impacted Combs.

He also spoke about his client’s addiction to painkillers following a medical procedure in 2000. After that, Combs was high “every single day,” Steel said, according to the Associated Press.

“He was medicating because his body was hurt and his emotions were hurt,” he added. “But he never stopped working. And all of that, the drug addiction and the trauma — untreated, your honor — caused him to hit, on occasion… the woman he loved.”

Steel said Combs remains haunted by his violent outbursts, remembering “every strike” he’s inflicted.

Combs “has punished himself more than anyone will be able to punish him and it will stay with him for the rest of his days,” Steel argued. “Mr. Combs does not need any additional time in custody. That is not the way we treat” drug addiction and trauma today, he said.

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