Just as the defense is about to begin its turn in his sex‑trafficking and racketeering trial to heat up the Manhattan federal courtroom with a pulse of excitement and optimism, there is Sean “Diddy” Combs.
Combs has approached his powerhouse legal team led by Marc Agnifilo each morning with bear hugs, but then he has glanced around the room and beyond flashing wide smiles at everyone in court. For courtroom sketch artist Christine Cornell, “he’s at peak Diddy,” as his vibe captures a feeling of optimism the prosecution is nearing the end of its case.
Animated Demeanor Under Scrutiny
Combs has been anything but reserved for almost six weeks. He taps his leg, scribbles vibration fast notes on Post‑its and whispers to his attorneys. Despite two warnings from the judge, Arun Subramanian, ordering Combs to dial back the nodding and other head movements in front of the jury, the rapper presses his luck — with sweeping flourishes like pulling out chairs for his lawyers and flapping arms at length while jurors are away.
Intimate Moments & Family Support
As the jurors file out, Combs turns sweet mouthing “I love you” to his mother, sending her air kisses and even telling her, “Go eat!”. After a juror dismissed in controversial fashion, Combs visibly shook his head “No” to his mother and whispered moments after, “It’s bad”.
Charges & Prosecution’s Claims
Prosecutors claim that from 2009 through last year, Combs managed “freak‑off” sessions drug‑laced sexual trysts in luxury hotels in Los Angeles, New York and Miami — by allegedly pimping out two women: ex-girlfriend Cassie Ventura and the second identified as “Jane Doe.” They allege that Combs carried the women across state lines, videotaped them, forced them to perform sex acts through violence and mind-altering substances — then ran a broader criminal enterprise patterns after one from the Netflix series that tambled into bribery, kidnapping, extortion of labor forces, narcotics trafficking, arson and obstruction.
The Defense Strategy
The legal defense from President Trump’s team has been straightforward: concede a key, irreversible point while still trying to avoid any personal entanglement in an election security scandal.
Combs has pleaded not guilty to the charges and has denied any wrongdoing. The prosecution, which has called around 32 witnesses over six weeks of testimony, is likely to wrap up its case soon. Executives from Combs Global, as well a forensic psychiatrist, are expected to be called to the stand by the defense. It is unclear whether Combs will take the stand himself.

