Crime Stories with Nancy Grace - Diddy's Release Date Changes Again, WHY?
Episode Date: July 5, 2026A jury finds Sean "Diddy" Combs guilty of two counts relating to transporting individuals for prostitution, but the rap mogul is acquitted of the more serious charges of sex trafficking and racketeeri...ng conspiracy. After the verdict, Combs' attorneys ask for bail. He doesn't get it, instead getting a 50-month prison sentence. Now Combs is scheduled to be released from federal prison on February 23, 2028.This date has been adjusted or changed at least four times. Original date: June 4, 2028 First change: April 25, 2028 Second change: April 15, 2028 Current date: February 23, 2028 Release dates are determined by the Bureau of Prisons considering credits for good conduct time, participation in rehabilitation programs, and time served. Joining Nancy Grace today: Philip Dubé - Court-Appointed Counsel, Los Angeles County Public Defenders: Criminal & Constitutional Law; Forensics & Mental Health Advocacy Dr. Cheryl Arutt - Licensed Clinical and Forensic Psychologist (specializing in trauma recovery, PTSD and EMDR); Website: CreativeEMDR.com, IG: @askdrcheryl Robert Crispin - Private Investigator at “Crispin Special Investigations," Former Federal Task Force Officer for the United States Department of Justice (DEA and Miami Field Division), and Former Homicide and Crimes Against Children Investigator; Facebook: Crispin Special Investigations Inc. Rob Shuter - Host: Naughty But Nice Podcast and Former Publicist of Sean Combs; IG: @naughtygossip Lynn Shaw - Founder and Executive Director of Lynn's Warriors - an organization committed to ending human trafficking and sexual exploitation, Host of Lynn's Warriors on YouTube; X: @lynns_warriors, YouTube: @LynnsWarriors, Tisa Tells - Pop Culture Investigator & Commentator and Host of 'Tisa Tells' on YouTube; YouTube: @TisaTells, Instagram & TikTok: @TisaTellss Lauren Conlin - Podcaster/Reporter/Host- Co-Host of "PopCrimeTV" on YouTube; Website: primetimecrimeshow.com, X- @Conlin_Lauren, Instagram: @LaurenEmilyConlin, YouTube: @PopCrimeTV Sydney Sumner -Crime Stories Investigative Reporter See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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This is an I-Heart podcast.
Guaranteed Human.
Crime Stories with Nancy Grace.
Shock announcement.
Sean Combs, aka Diddy, aka Puff Daddy,
aka Puffy, aka Love.
Sean Combs now set to leave prison even sooner.
His release date moved up yet again.
You know what? There just ain't no justice. I'm Nancy Grace. This is crime stories. I want to thank you
for being with us. You heard it. Sean Combe set to be released from his four-year prison sentence
even earlier than projected. His sentence shaved for a third time. He will now be freed
Feb 23, 28, two months earlier than before. His sentence,
sentence has already been reduced before. Right now he's in New Jersey's FCI Fort Dix,
the Federal Correctional Institute. He was originally set to be released in May of 28, after his
convictions on two counts of transportation to engage in prostitution. Now it's been shaved down again.
He had a rocky start behind bars, claims he drank moonshine and made unauthorized phone calls,
his lawyer denied it all. Notwithstanding,
He keeps getting time shaved off his sentence.
I wonder why.
What landed him there in Fort Dix, FCI, Federal Correctional Institute, to start with?
After a split verdict where Sean Combs is acquitted of RICO, two other counts come into place,
Sean Combs convicted on two felony counts, there was a massive argument via paper to keep Sean,
comes behind bars, the defense fighting tooth and nail to let him out on appeal bond,
which means you get out while your conviction is being appealed.
Joining me right now, Tisa Tells, you can find her on YouTube at Tisa Tales.
Tisa, start at the beginning.
Start with the verdict, the split.
What happened?
When the jury walked in, everybody was on pins and needles.
I'm not going to lie, everybody in the courtroom expected him to be guilty on at least the sex trafficking.
There was a somber tone.
They walked in and when they said, please read and they said, what do you find ye on count one, not guilty?
It was a bomb that went off in the courtroom.
The public audibly gasped.
Nobody was expecting that.
There were tears of joy from Diddy's side.
Count two, what say ye, not guilty.
Again, another bombshell went off.
People were in utter disbelief.
Even Diddy's most ardent supporters
did not expect him to get off
on the count of sex trafficking with Cassie.
Count three, when they said guilty
for transportation of a prostitute,
when they said guilty for prostit for the manet,
that is when Diddy's team actually cheered.
Yeah, that's all right.
Okay, okay, come on,
almost like we were watching.
a pro football game. When the other ones came in after that, there were jaws on the ground.
It was unbelievable. People were looking at the jury searching into how they could get a verdict
in this day and age. They heard Cassie's mother, the 20,000. They heard Capricorn Clark. They
heard about the savage beatings. And it was unbelievable that the only thing they said was
prostitution. And that is because Daniel Phillips, in his testimony, actually
said, at least I'm guessing that just because that he got paid to have sex for money.
It was a travesty. It was an all-out circus. Everybody, including myself, are running to safety.
I've got a question for you, Tisa Tells, and everyone's going to want to know this.
You had to leave the courthouse. Why? I had to leave the courthouse because Ditties supporters
were out of control. The first time I ran and dipped my live, of course, I had two arms
security guys. Everyone told me the people in the courthouse is like, make sure you have security.
There's a lot of weird stuff going on. It wasn't just me, but I'll tell you what I experienced.
Diddy supporters surrounding me, threatening me, saying that they were going to hurt me.
It was a serious situation. It got so bad and there was so much chaos and violence that they
actually had to lock the courtroom down and force the Diddy supporters across the street.
It was something myself, the news media, mainstream media, new media have never seen in their lives.
The level, and again, the jurors, I hope to God they know how to sleep at night.
Because again, I'm sure they did their duty.
But when all that chaos was happening, as I was being threatened and etched out by armed security people,
I thought this is what the jury did.
They sent a signal that it is okay to use violence.
It's okay to drug people up.
It's okay to live a life of debauchery.
It's okay to do whatever you want.
Because guess what, if you work hard enough
and you have enough money and enough delusional fans
and you have ingrained yourself in culture enough,
that you can do whatever you want.
And 12 of your peers will look the other way.
Again, this jury was shocking.
Tisa tells, when you say that Sean Combs'
supporters threatened you,
What were they saying?
They were saying, you B, you F and B, we're going to kill you, you Fing B.
You worked, apparently I worked for the feds.
You're a plant.
You made this all up because of you.
Again, they're not too smart because of you.
That's how this case got started.
We're going to treat you worse than we treat it Cassie.
Cassie, what we do to you, it's going to be nothing that they had on Cassie.
They were screaming, they were yelling.
Some people were saying, apologize to ditty.
Apologize the ditty.
Of course, thank goodness, we had Lenny and we had Jimmy, two of the best arm guards out there.
So the one thing is they, and also they started foaming like wild dogs because they realized that I was not an unprotected woman.
And they realized they could not just do what they felt like.
And they started foaming like wild dogs screaming.
Their voices cracking in anger that they literally wanted to rip me apart.
This is why their hero had been exonerated.
the best of times, these people that support him, there's something wrong with it. And I got to tell you, Nancy, it wasn't just me. It was not just me. It was anybody that didn't have a pro-ditty stance from the beginning. That's who suffered.
Joining me in an all-star panel, but I want to thank Tisa Tells for what she's doing tonight. You know, Rob Sheeter is joining me.
Rob, I really don't know where to start.
This is a blow.
This is a huge blow to crime victims all over the country.
Huge blow.
The big news is right now, Sean Combs is going to jail.
Okay?
He's going to jail.
I was actually worried that somehow the judge would contravening the law.
And the law is under the Bell Reform Act that for these two charges on which he was convicted, he has to go to jail.
There is no appeal bond, period.
But I was so concerned that the judge would somehow find a way to let him walk.
And all this time, Shooter, we've been hearing, I've got all these letters here.
Here's one from Deontay Nash, in fear, in fear, talking about comes this long, well-documented history of violent retaliatory behavior.
They're afraid, Rob Scheter.
Guys, Shooter knows, Combs better than any of us.
His longtime publicist know more.
But now you can find him at his substack,
robesheeter.substack.com and naughty but nice podcast.
Sheeter, I got to tell you,
it was like a kick in the stomach when that split verdict came down.
Yeah, I think everybody was stunned.
Before I continue then, Nancy,
I just want to send my best to Tisha.
What happened to her outside that courthouse is horrific.
It's wrong.
and I'm afraid these people now have been emboldened.
When we heard the judgment, I think we were all shell-shocks.
We were all heartbroken.
We all felt like we'd been kicked in the stomach.
However, as the day has gone on, we do have to remember Nancy
that he has been found guilty of two very serious charges.
If any other celebrity had been charged with those two charges,
those alone, and being found guilty,
we would be done with them.
So the celebration from Team Didy,
the disappointment from people who've been watching this as closely as we have,
I think we can take a step back, both sides,
and realize that this is not a good day for Diddy.
He is now a federal criminal.
He's in jail tonight.
He's going to remain there.
And so at least he can take some solace in that.
You know, Rob Sheeter, I've been getting flooded.
by crime victims, rape victims from all walks of life that are upset.
They don't really sound mad yet.
They're devastated.
They're sad.
They can't believe this has happened.
I've been already subjected to a lot of attacks, verbal attacks.
Nothing like what Tisa tells has been subjected to already.
But I give the credit to the prosecutors for going
in there, and I truly
believe this was the David and Goliath.
And they went in
against one of the highest profile
personalities
in our country, Sean
Combs, who
many people think that
they know and they love
him. And for some reason
that blinded them, that
drowned out everything
that three sex
attack victims said, and one
had
the video.
What had the video?
I just, I don't get it, Rob Sheeter.
Give me some insight into how Sean Combs got a split verdict.
But yes, you're right.
He is going to jail on two felonies, two felonies.
That's a victory that Sean Combs is going to jail.
Yeah, that's a victory.
We have to hang on for that, Nancy,
because in this moment, in this hour,
it's not a lot of hope.
Everything seems so bad.
We have let down not just the people in this case, but victims around the world.
Did he now will be empowered.
This is not the end of the story, Nancy.
When he gets out of jail, if he gets out of jail, his behavior will not change because he thinks
he has gotten away with it again.
If you enable someone, Nancy, they do not change.
So mark my words, Nancy.
This is not the end of the diddy.
story. It's the end of a very, very sad chapter. And I think we've led a lot of people down.
And as far as being concerned about safety, I just broke reporting that Cassie has now increased
her security. Cassie in New York, her home now has security increased. And I think a lot of other
people, courageous people who came forward assistance, people that worked with Didi,
came forward and testified, they're very vulnerable and they are very, very scared right now.
Lynn Shaw joining me, founder and director Lynn's warriors dedicated to ending sex trafficking and sex abuse on girls and women.
When I learned about the split verdict, I was speechless. I couldn't believe it. But it's happened. So what do you want the prosecutors to do? Go home and hide under the bed. Should they have just never even brought the case? They did it because they believed it. And I still do believe it.
Lynn, I believe Cassie Ventura was coerced and beaten into having sex with male sex workers.
That's sex trafficking.
I believe her.
I believe Cassie.
I believe Jane.
I believe sex trafficking.
This is a sober reflection on everything I've been talking about for about eight weeks now with this trial that the public.
And I'm going to say the jurors, okay, do not understand predation,
power, what sex trafficking is. And a reminder, again, this case was not just about one man.
This case was about all of the victims across the country, the world, whose voices have been silenced
because they don't come forward because the justice system usually picks power, wealth, status,
over believing their truths. But I want to point out, there is hope I've spent all day
coaching people, talking people, fielding text messages. And I want to say, you know what,
these victims that reach out to me, Nancy, they're not even angry. You know what they keep saying?
Please, Lynn, please remind everybody, we're victims. Please remind everybody we have a voice.
Please remind everybody, we are here. And that goes back to I have to do, we have to do in society
a better job of educating about sex trafficking, about trauma bonding, trauma, what predation
really looks like. This is the most frightening thing to empower this Sean Combs. And I just want to make
the commitment that we will work very hard to continue reforming, raising awareness, and working with
the justice system. Straight back out to Tisa Tells, who has made it to a safe location,
Tisa tells, I want to talk about what happened when the split verdict was announced in the
courtroom. And then I want to move to the appeal bond hearing. Let's start with the split
verdict. Take it from the very beginning. When you heard count one, not guilty. A bomb went off in the
courtroom, not guilty. No one could believe it. Sean Diddy's calm side even looked around as if
they hadn't heard correctly. No one thought that the jury would actually go this far. Everybody
thought that the delay meant that he was actually guilty. When the second count was read, again,
Jaws dropped open. Did he leaned back in relief, raised his hands. The defense team was like,
yes, I get it. They literally pulled a magic act, okay? They literally pulled a magic act.
His team, his side started celebrating, started saying, yeah, when we heard the third count guilty
for the prostitution, okay? Everyone on his side was like, that's okay, that's okay.
they were clapping almost like they were watching a football game.
When they first came out with the verdict, the prosecution was doing what they were doing.
They were looking straight.
It is a job, I would assume, to look like they always have it under control.
By the time they got to the third count, Marine Comey looked over at the jury in disbelief.
Literally, again, she's always very composed, but even for her to finally look over at the jury on some,
are you kidding me?
And she just kept looking at the jury as they read the counts.
Again, I know the jury did their best, but I cannot feel that justice was served.
How can you forget the vicious beatings?
How can you forget the 20K, the mom had to wire in order for two freak-off tapes not to be released?
Okay, that's what she thought when she wired it.
How can you forget what happened to Bonner being hung over balcony?
She might have got the date wrong by a few days, but the point.
is it happened? How you can forget Deontay Nash and the best friend Carrie who got a hanger
to the head and saw Cassie get impiled driven into the corner of a bed on purpose? How can you forget
all that and come back and say, you know what? We don't see anything criminal here. Again, we can
argue about the prosecution, prostitution got ditty on the head. We can argue about the prosecution,
what they could have did better. But the fact that the jury
chose to overlook all that, it brought me back to what Rob Shooter said weeks ago when I first
started joining you, Nasty, that people get starstruck and they want some of that magic.
And it makes me wonder, were they starstruck?
Were they feeling sorry and trying to protect a legacy for someone that hit their depravity
and their evil ways behind it?
It makes you wonder.
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Crime Stories with Nancy Grace.
The Federal Bureau prisons declines to provide any details on why Sean Combs' release date has been moved up yet again.
They stated, quote, they do not discuss conditions of confinement for any individual, including release plans.
Hmm, I hope they warn a few people before he walks free.
Why? Because Sean Combs has a very bad temper and holds a grudge.
Sean Combs faced many serious charges during his trial, including sex trafficking, racketeering,
all of those would have landed him behind bars for life, but he was acquitted on those counts.
He was placed in custody at Brooklyn's notorious MDC, the Metropolitan Detention Center,
but now has been transferred to a federal pen at Fort Dix.
His constantly changing release dates have been all tangled up in claims,
He drank moonshine, aka Pruno behind bars, made unauthorized cell phone calls, and more.
According to reports behind bars, he was tipping the bottle with fermented fanta, sugar, and apples, according to sources.
Hmm.
That said, that is a far cry from the jet-set life he lived before he was convicted.
happened in court. Back to Tisa tells joining us, she had to be escorted by armed guards
out of the courthouse and leave the scene after she was mobbed by Diddy fans. Explain to me
what was happening outside the courthouse. I understand that once this split verdict was
announced, the Diddy followers, the Diddy Worshippers went cray outside the courthouse,
actually dousing each other with baby oil and chanting. They formed the circle.
It looked like a mosh pit of depravity.
They were spraying baby oil on each other,
jumping around, feeling fantastic.
One woman in a pair of Calvin Klein briefs
and a bra started jumping up and down,
wiggling while they sat there spraying baby owner
and the crowd was chanting, yay, yay, yay,
go and hyping them up.
It was a monstrous ball of depravity.
When I say I was sickened,
when I say I shook my head,
and when I said,
These are the peers.
These are the jury of the peers.
And it makes me wonder, as a jury goes home,
and they look at the television sets,
and they see what their decision costs
and what was on the line.
It makes me wonder how can they sleep at night?
It was absolute pandemonia.
In between the jumping up and down
with the baby oil women willingly,
baby oil being skirted on them,
and everybody laughing and having a time,
like Christmas had just come with Santa and the 12 perverted elves.
What happened after that was even more amazing? Because while that was going on,
there were little fires everywhere of these bands of, I don't know if they're
incels, if they're idiots, what was going on looking for anybody they had ever saw
make anti-ditty content. And by anti-diddy, according to them, it is pro-justice.
They were going out their ways to make sure that
everybody paid. And again, I said, this is what that jury cost us. It let us know. It sent a message.
It's okay to be depraved. It's okay to beat women. It's okay to do drugs. It's okay to do whatever
you want. And that jury, that jury, when they gave their verdict, signaled that. Again,
I'm still coming to terms with how the jury got to this thing. Thank God, this man was denied bail.
Thank God.
Straight out to Sydney, summary joining us. Crime Stories investigative reporter on the case of the very
beginning. Break down the counts for me, said. Nancy, count one is that racketeering
RICO conspiracy. Combs was found not guilty on count one. Count two, three, four, and five
are those sex trafficking and transportation to engage in prostitution charges. So there was
one count each for Kathy and Jane on both of those charges. So the jury found that Combs was
liable for both transportation to engage in prostitution charges and not guilty on sex trafficking
for either Jane or Cassie.
Straight out to Philip Dubay joining us, veteran trial lawyer joining us out of the LA
jurisdiction.
So, Dubay, this is the breakdown.
Count one, racketeering.
Not guilty.
Count two, sex trafficking by force, fraud, or coercion as it relates to Cassie Ventura,
you know, the woman that was beaten in that video and dragged by.
to a freak off her, the one that had to get plastic surgery on her face after Diddy beat her up,
that one. That's a not guilty. Count three, transportation to engage in prostitution as it relates
to Cassie. Guilty. That carries the maximum of 10 years. And that comes, I believe, from the
sex worker who came in, Philip, and described Sean Combs wearing a burqa from the chin up
and naked from the chin down and had him have sex with Cassie.
on video and directed them.
That was across state lines.
So guilty on that.
Count four, sex trafficking by force, fraud, or coercion as it relates to Jane, victim
two, not guilty.
Count five, transportation to engage in prostitution as it relates to Jane, guilty.
So we got two guilties, three not guilties, split verdict.
So there was great jubilation at first.
First, when Diddy followers heard split verdict, they heard the words not guilty on count one and went crazy.
What do you think is going to happen now, Philip?
He will be getting prison time.
There's no question.
Right.
And another thing, debate, let's get real.
It's really rare in federal and state court that once you're convicted and a jury convicts you on a violent offense, that you get an,
appeal bond, which means, okay, judge, I know he just got convicted, but could you please
let him walk free now until we take this all the way up to the appellate court and get a
decision? That rarely works. Agree? Disagree. Oh, I agree 100%. No higher court is going to find
that this judge abused his discretion by not letting him out or by not setting a bond.
You know, Robert Crispin joining me, private investigator at Crispin's special investigations
former homicide and former vice detective.
Crispin, here's the deal.
If the judge had granted Sean Combs a bond and appeal bond.
Now remember, once he was arrested, Crispin, he was kept behind bars.
He did not have a bond, right?
For a reason.
He's got money and he squats right over by Teterboro, the private airport near New York.
You know, if the judge...
judge had given Sean Combs
an appeal bond?
He'd go straight to Teeterborough and take
off, probably under an assumed name.
When you fly a private plane,
you can give a fake ID.
It's not
the same as going through TSA
at Hartsville International or
LaGuardia or JFK.
No, where they will frisk you
and look in all your bags. It's not like
that at a private plane. You kind of just walk on
onto your private plane
that he has. Have a glass of shampoo.
campaign and go, bye-bye, U.S., hello Paris.
That's what happens, Crispin.
Yeah, I actually earlier, just before we came on, Nancy, I was trying to find out where
his G550 was because we know that it was out in L.A.
A couple days ago, I was trying to see if they had already got those guys up and running,
and that plane was coming eastbound, thinking he was going to probably get out and dip out
back out to L.A. or back down here to, you know, Miami to where his neighbors aren't
certainly thrilled about him coming back, but it doesn't look like he.
anytime soon he's going to be gracing his presence with these guys.
So I was trying to find out where that jet was, but I haven't found out yet.
But the verdict is just, it's heartbreaking.
And it's a black eye to the victims.
It's terrible, horrible for any of these victims that want to come forward or any witness
that wants to put their ass on the line, raise their right hand and testify against somebody
when a jury is going to find that guy not guilty.
That's really bad for these witnesses and victims.
They know what's coming now.
Look what's happened to our reporter as she was leaving the courthouse.
They were attacking her.
This guy was found guilty of federal crime.
And I'd like to point out, Rob, Scheter, what they were saying to Tisa Tells.
Rob, they were saying, we're going to do worse to you than we did to Cassie.
Sheeter, I mean, it's heartbreaking.
Diddy.
He has to be condoning this.
He has been orchestrating the crowd.
He's been orchestrating everything.
Yeah, Nancy, I think looking for Diddy to do the right thing at this moment is unrealistic.
This is who he is.
The whole world has seen who he is.
And unfortunately, there's a large amount of people out there who are just perfectly fine with this.
Nobody can pretend anymore that we don't know who Diddy is.
We know we've seen him on tape.
That tape will exist forever.
We've heard the testimonies.
We've heard the accounts.
We've heard the details.
We've seen them.
and yet some people still support him.
There's nothing we can do about that, Nancy,
and to think the Diddy is going to stop it, that ain't going to happen.
He's going to encourage it.
He wants people out there.
He wants the violence.
He wants people screaming.
This to him is the party that he always wanted to throw.
Shameful.
You know, Rob Shooter, everything you're saying can be transposed to him before he was arrested.
You know, in every case, I've told you this before off air.
I've seen a million homicide scenes.
I've been to the morgue.
I've seen it all.
But there's always a moment in a trial that just twists the knife.
It's very disturbing.
And in this trial, there were two moments like that for me.
And one was in the Hotel Intercontinental Video Beatdown, where she had already been beaten
and she was backing up
and she tried to hold up.
She's right-handed.
It was holding her mouth,
I think, with the right hand,
and holding up her left hand
against Sean Combs,
like she could fight him off.
Okay.
And the other moment
was when she was getting beaten
and she was down in the floor
and Combs had a
glass, a liquor glass,
held up ready to throw down at her face.
And she said, can't you see what's happening?
And nobody did anything.
And it's just like in the courtroom.
The jury didn't do anything.
They didn't.
They didn't answer.
It's heartbreaking.
People I know who have worked with him, who knew him,
many of us are on a text exchange,
and they're heartbroken.
And a lot of people are really worried, too.
I don't want to keep harping on about this, Nancy,
but this is a very dangerous man.
This is a man who allegedly tried to firebomb the car
of somebody that was dating his girlfriend, his ex-girlfriend.
This is a dangerous, dangerous man.
And what that jury has just done has said, it doesn't matter.
It's okay.
You keep being Puffy.
You keep being you.
And we will support you.
But let me just say, Nancy, we can't just blame.
the jury here. We've got to blame the person that did it, and that's Diddy. Diddy is responsible
for all this. Everything else is a red herring. He's the problem, and he will continue now to be a problem.
Dr. Cheryl Erritt, who is a clinical and forensic psychologist, explain the effect this is going to
have on not only these victims that we heard on the stand, but other victims everywhere.
Nancy, once there is the threat of violence, that power control tactic shapes everything that
happens after that.
We have a jury who heard evidence about a tremendous amount of violence, threats, threats
of blackmail, videotaped assaults that were maintaining the power and control.
And yet they didn't feel that they had enough evidence to be able to find that what was
happening there was not consensual.
has to do with force, fraud, coercion, consent is anything but.
When somebody really scary makes you an offer
that you cannot refuse, that is not consent.
And what I think people are failing to understand
about the way that even the threat of violence shapes behavior
is that when someone does not believe
that they can survive a threat by actually fighting back,
they use fawning, they use appeasing,
They use the freeze response.
They are trying to placate the person who is scaring them.
And this man certainly has no shortage of people who were really, really frightened of him
and still are.
And I think that these really normal autonomic nervous system survival responses, fawning,
appeasing the freeze response, these are things that need to be understood better by
juries, understood better by the public, and even by survivors themselves.
You know, Rob Sheeter, would you look one more time at the celebrations going on outside the courthouse after the split verdict was announced?
Take a look.
Nancy, I can tell you as somebody who knows Puff.
Those people standing outside that courthouse have never met him.
They've never been to his apartment.
They've never been on his private plane.
They've never had a text or an email or a phone call with him.
I have.
He doesn't care about any.
of those people, all those people who have took their time, their energy to go and support
this guy, let me talk to them directly.
He does not care about you.
If he can treat his girlfriend Cassie, the way that we've seen him treat her on video,
this is not testimony, this is video.
If he can treat someone who he's supposed to love like that, how do you think he can treat
you?
He doesn't care about you.
wasting your energy on him.
And honestly, my friends, stop.
He doesn't care.
He's laughing at these people
outside that courthouse. He's
egging them on, but he doesn't
care. You know, Rob
Sheeter, you speak with so much
conviction and so much feeling.
And that tells me that you
know something, something you haven't
told me. Why
do you believe this? What
did you observe to make
you say what you just
said? I've observed a really selfish person, Nancy. I've observed a person who doesn't have any shame,
who has no sense of pride, who has no sense of decency. He's a really bad man. And through
his career, through the media, through his products, he has managed to con us all, to kid us all
into believing he is somebody else. Now, I hoped that day was coming to an end. In fact,
I could even tell you the day that I thought it was ending.
It was today.
I'm absolutely punched to my gut, to my stomach, to know that Puffy once again rises,
maybe not like a Phoenix, but justice does not feel as if it has been served.
Shooter, do you know that people are flooding the courthouse, the judge's chambers with letters?
Please don't let him out.
We're afraid.
from Cassie Ventura's lawyer to Deontay Nash,
so many others in fear, just like what you're saying.
And we heard earlier how this affects people.
They saw what happened to Kid Cuddy.
They saw what happened to Cassie.
And now he's going to walk.
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Crime Stories with Nancy Grace
According to his attorneys, quote,
his only focus is becoming the best version of himself
and returning to his family.
Oh, if that were only true,
can a leopard change his spots?
This is what we know about what happened in court.
Everyone was spraying each other with baby oil outside the courthouse
and begging and yelling and celebrating.
Combs goes back into the courtroom, Sidney, for the hearing.
Right? The hearing on, is there going to be an appeal bond?
Is Combs going to walk out of the courthouse, a free man today?
During that hearing, Combs briefly tries to raise his hand to speak.
After the judge denies his request for release again, the judge seemed to ignore the move
and instead asked the U.S. Assistant Attorney, Marine Comey, to respond.
and she says, quote, he is extremely violent with an extraordinary temper who has shown no remorse and no regret.
And it makes me think, Sidney, about that fake apology.
I'm going to cue that up and play it for you just a moment, said, where he does all this apologizing after beating Cassie.
But according to what we learned in court and sworn testimony, he continued the violence after the apology.
after the apology video.
That's what she said.
No remorse and no regret at all.
Yeah, that is definitely what the judge and prosecutors are thinking.
Comey referenced the violent incident with Jane.
Mr. Combs knew he was already under investigation.
The judge referenced the multiple instances of Combs trying to reach out to potential witnesses,
trying to sway their opinions of what they might tell investigators after this investigation began when Combs was well aware it was underway.
Judge Supermonian also referenced Mark Ackmanfellow's own closing arguments.
You full-throatably told the jury that there was violence, domestic violence, and all of Combs' relationships.
Y'all owned that, and it may have helped on some of these charges.
it may have helped with the guilty not guilty verdict,
but it is definitely coming back to bite him now.
Straight out to Lynn Shaw, this also happened in the proceedings.
This is after Combs tried to raise his hand
to address the judge directly during the arguments.
And this is after the split verdict,
when everybody was celebrating outside,
now comes the appeal bond,
where the judge is going to decide,
Will Combs walk free tonight.
The judge looks over at the defense, and he says, as Sydney just reported, quote, you full-throatedly, I've never even heard anybody use that phrase, but he did.
You fool-throatedly in your closing argument told the jury there was violence, and domestic violence is violence.
You said this was a case that did have violence. This is the judge talking to combs.
As to the basic question of violence, you concede to that in your closing argument.
Now, throughout this, Combs is furiously passing notes back and forth to Agnifalo,
who is trying to stand there and argue and read all of Sean Combs' notes.
Wait for it, Lynn Shaw.
Agnifalo responds, I just think we should trust him.
He's not going to flee.
He just deserves a chance.
Please, let us all get off this dirty-ditty, degenerate merry-go-round that we're all on.
How dare that lawyer?
How dare he?
He's got a wife.
He's got a daughter, I believe.
He's got sisters, a mother, talk like this.
Violence is violence.
Trust him.
We have seen everything to the contrary, including video evidence of Cassie being beaten.
How much more do we need?
This goes back to this is one of the worst days here at the Warriors.
all of this video to hear the way they're talking about victims. Trust him. Trust him. There's no way
anybody should trust him. I'm here in New York City. And Rob Shooter's correct. We've got these
dirty ditty disciples running around. People should be in fear of this guy. But that brings me to,
how does he get away with all of this for decades? What about the victims that I've been up for 48
hours now, counseling, helping, giving out phone numbers, resources, come stay with me if you don't
want to be alone. What a slap in the face today to all of these victims, survivors of any kind of
sexual abuse. And you know what? This is the problem with sex trafficking. Nobody, I'm a broken
record. Nobody understands it. Nobody understands what forced fraud. Coercion. Nobody understands
coercion. And you know what? It is time. We change it up. But this is a travesty. What a slap in
everybody's face. Sean comes, goes to jail, split verdict. Not.
guilty on RICO, not guilty on two counts of sex trafficking, guilty on two counts of bringing
people across state lines to engage in illegal activity, that being prostitution as it relates
to Cassie Ventura, a victim, and Jane, not her real name, a victim.
To Robert Crispin joining me, P.I. But, former beat cop, former special investigator.
with the Federal Task Force for the U.S. Department of Justice, and on, and on.
Robert Crispin, have you ever been in a case where the bad guy walks?
Oh, my God, Nancy, this brought back, this brought back such a memory of a guy who was leaning over the balcony,
holding two kilos of cocaine in a CVS bag, getting ready to drop it on the floor because the feds were knocking on the front door,
and I was covering the back door, and he dropped it, and I got it.
and I ID them and we went to the jury and the jury found him not guilty when me as the federal
DEA drug agent watched him drop that bag and you know why Nancy because juries are so unpredictable
you know why we didn't pull his DNA off the bag but I watched him i watched him drop those
kilos of cocaine out of the ground these juries have a mind of their own I know how that must have
Felt. And the thing is, this is a violent crime. Philip DeBay, from what the judge was saying,
when Sean Combs raised his hand, trying to speak to the judge while Agnifalo was arguing,
the judge acted like he didn't even see him. The judge did note the wide divergence between
what the state wants is sentencing and what the defense wants is sentencing. But hearing what the judge
said, the judge can't just erase from his mind what he saw on the cast.
Bette Down video. He cannot erase from his mind what the victim said on the stand.
Combs' lawyers appealed his conviction, demanding a federal appeals court overruled the decision
and give him immediate release, calling his former girlfriends Cassie Ventura and Jane,
who went anonymous. On the carpet, he denied all claims, but a jury disagreed.
Well, Sean Combs, his release date has been.
while Sean Combs's release date has jumped up, it's even closer.
What's next?
I hate to think about it.
Nancy Grace, crime stories, signing off.
Goodbye, friend.
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