Sean 'Diddy' Combs gets standing ovation from inmates after court victory, his lawyer says

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Sean 'Diddy' Combs gets standing ovation from inmates after court victory, his lawyer says

This frame grab taken from hotel security camera video and aired by CNN appears to show Sean ″Diddy″ Combs attacking singer Cassie in a Los Angeles hotel hallway in March 2016. [AP/YONHAP]

This frame grab taken from hotel security camera video and aired by CNN appears to show Sean ″Diddy″ Combs attacking singer Cassie in a Los Angeles hotel hallway in March 2016. [AP/YONHAP]

 
Sean “Diddy” Combs got a standing ovation from fellow inmates when the music mogul returned to jail after winning acquittals on potential life-in-prison charges, providing what his lawyer says might have been the best thing he could do for Black incarcerated men in America.
 
“They all said: ‘We never get to see anyone who beats the government,’” attorney Marc Agnifilo told The Associated Press in a weekend interview days after a jury acquitted Combs of sex trafficking and racketeering conspiracy charges.
 

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Combs, 55, remains jailed at a federal lockup in Brooklyn after his conviction Wednesday on prostitution-related charges, which could put him in prison for several more years. Any sentence will include credit for time already served. So far, that's almost 10 months.
 
After federal agents raided his homes in Los Angeles and Miami in March 2024, Agnifilo said he told Combs to expect to be arrested on sex trafficking charges.
 
“I said: ‘Maybe it’s your fate in life to be the guy who wins,’” he recalled during a telephone interview briefly interrupted by a jailhouse call from Combs. “They need to see that someone can win. I think he took that to heart.”
 
The verdict in Manhattan federal court came after a veteran team of eight defense lawyers led by Agnifilo executed a trial strategy that resonated with jurors. Combs passed lawyers notes during effective cross-examinations of nearly three dozen witnesses over two months, including Combs' ex-employees .
 
Marc Agnifilo, attorney for Sean ″Diddy″ Combs, arrives at Manhattan federal court in New York on Sept. 17, 2024. The jury in the Sean “Diddy” Combs sex trafficking trial went on to convict him of prostitution-related crime but cleared him of sex trafficking and racketeering charges. [AP/YONHAP]

Marc Agnifilo, attorney for Sean ″Diddy″ Combs, arrives at Manhattan federal court in New York on Sept. 17, 2024. The jury in the Sean “Diddy” Combs sex trafficking trial went on to convict him of prostitution-related crime but cleared him of sex trafficking and racketeering charges. [AP/YONHAP]

 
The lawyers told jurors Combs was a jealous domestic abuser with a drug problem who participated in the swinger lifestyle through threesomes involving himself, his girlfriends and another man.
 
“You may think to yourself, wow, he is a really bad boyfriend,” Combs’ lawyer Teny Geragos told jurors in her May opening statement. But that, she said, “is simply not sex trafficking.”
 
Agnifilo said the blunt talk was a “no brainer."
 
“The violence was so clear and up front and we knew the government was going to try to confuse the jury into thinking it was part of a sex trafficking effort. So we had to tell the jury what it was so they wouldn’t think it was something it wasn't,” he said.
 
Combs and his lawyers seemed deflated Tuesday when jurors said they were deadlocked on the racketeering count but reached a verdict on sex trafficking and lesser prostitution-related charges. A judge ordered them back to deliberate Wednesday.
 
In this courtroom sketch, flanked by defense attorneys Brian Steel, left, and Teny Garagos, Sean ″Diddy″ Combs, second from left, listens as Judge Arun Subramanian speaks during Combs' bail hearing in Manhattan federal court in New York on July 2.[AP/YONHAP]

In this courtroom sketch, flanked by defense attorneys Brian Steel, left, and Teny Garagos, Sean ″Diddy″ Combs, second from left, listens as Judge Arun Subramanian speaks during Combs' bail hearing in Manhattan federal court in New York on July 2.[AP/YONHAP]

 
“No one knows what to think,” Agnifilo said. Then he slept on it.
 
“I wake up at three in the morning and I text Teny and say: ”We have to get a bail application together," he recalled. “It’s going to be a good verdict for us but I think he went down on the prostitution counts so let’s try to get him out.”
 
He said he “kind of whipped everybody into feeling better” after concluding jurors would have convicted him of racketeering if they had convicted him of sex trafficking because trafficking was an alleged component of racketeering.
 
Agnifilo met with Combs before court and Combs entered the courtroom rejuvenated. Smiling, the onetime Catholic schoolboy prayed with family. In less than an hour, the jury matched Agnifilo's prediction.
 
The seemingly chastened Combs mouthed “thank you” to jurors and smiled as family and supporters applauded. After he was escorted from the room, spectators cheered the defense team, a few chanting: “Dream Team! Dream Team!” Several lawyers, including Geragos, cried.
 
Rapper Kid Cudi, center, arrives at Federal Court for the trial of Sean ″Diddy″ Combs, in New York on May 22. [AP/YONHAP]

Rapper Kid Cudi, center, arrives at Federal Court for the trial of Sean ″Diddy″ Combs, in New York on May 22. [AP/YONHAP]

 
“This was a major victory for the defense and a major loss for the prosecution,” said Mitchell Epner, a lawyer who worked with Agnifilo as a federal prosecutor in New Jersey over two decades ago. He credited “a dream team of defense lawyers” against prosecutors who almost always win.
 
Agnifilo showcased what would become his trial strategy — belittling the charges and mocking the investigation that led to them — last September in arguing unsuccessfully for bail. The case against Combs was what happens when the “federal government comes into our bedrooms,” he said.
 
During an eight-week trial, Combs’ lawyers picked apart the prosecution case with mostly gentle but firm cross-examinations. Combs never testified, and his lawyers called no witnesses.
 
Sarah Krissoff, a federal prosecutor in Manhattan from 2008 to 2021, said Combs' defense team “had a narrative from the beginning and they did all of it without putting on any witnesses. That’s masterful.”
 
Ironically, Agnifilo expanded the use of racketeering laws as a federal prosecutor on an organized crime task force in New Jersey two decades ago, using them often to indict street gangs in violence-torn cities.
 
Music artist Kid Cudi testifies on the witness stand during Sean ″Diddy″ Combs' sex trafficking and racketeering trial in Manhattan federal court on May 22 in New York. [AP/YONHAP]

Music artist Kid Cudi testifies on the witness stand during Sean ″Diddy″ Combs' sex trafficking and racketeering trial in Manhattan federal court on May 22 in New York. [AP/YONHAP]

 
“I knew the weak points in the statute,” he said. “The statute is very mechanical. If you know how the car works, you know where the fail points are.”
 
He said prosecutors had “dozens of fail points.”
 
“They didn’t have a conspiracy, they just didn't,” he said. “They basically had Combs' personal life and tried to build racketeering around personal assistants.”
 
Some personal assistants, even after viewing videos of Combs beating his longtime girlfriend, Casandra “Cassie” Ventura, had glowing things to say about Combs on cross examination.
 
For Combs, Agnifilo sees a long road ahead once he is freed as he works on personal demons, likely reentering a program for domestic batterers that he had just started before his arrest.
 
Cassie Ventura wipes tears from her eye while testifying in Manhattan federal court, Tuesday, May 13, 2025, in New York. [AP/YONHAP]

Cassie Ventura wipes tears from her eye while testifying in Manhattan federal court, Tuesday, May 13, 2025, in New York. [AP/YONHAP]

 
“He’s doing O.K.,” said Agnifilo, who speaks with him four or five times daily.
 
He said Combs genuinely desires improvement and “realizes he has flaws like everyone else that he never worked on.”
 
“He burns hot in all matters. I think what he has come to see is that he has these flaws and there’s no amount of fame and no amount of fortune that can erase them," he said. “You can’t cover them up."
 
For Agnifilo, a final surprise awaited him after Combs' bail was rejected when a man collapsed into violent seizures at the elevators outside the courtroom.
 
“I'm like: ‘What the hell?'” recalled the lawyer schooled in treating seizures.
 
Cassie Ventura, left, and Sean ″Diddy″ Combs appear at the premiere of ″Can't Stop, Won't Stop: A Bad Boy Story″ on June 21, 2017, in Beverly Hills, California. [AP/YONHAP]

Cassie Ventura, left, and Sean ″Diddy″ Combs appear at the premiere of ″Can't Stop, Won't Stop: A Bad Boy Story″ on June 21, 2017, in Beverly Hills, California. [AP/YONHAP]

 
Agnifilo straddled him, pulling him onto his side and using a foot to prevent him from rolling backward while a law partner, Jacob Kaplan, put a backpack under the man's head and Agnifilo's daughter took his pulse.
 
“We made sure he didn't choke on vomit. It was crazy. I was worried about him,” he said.
 
The man was eventually taken away conscious by rescue workers, leaving Agnifilo to ponder a tumultuous day.
 
“It was like I was getting punked by God,” he said. 

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