DJ Akademiks Live Streams - BREAKING: DIDDY TAKEN INTO CUSTODY... FACING LIFE IN PRISON?
Episode Date: September 17, 2024Streamed live 9/16/24 Cop some merch at http://djakademikstv.com... Make an account and follow my stream at http://www.twitch.tv/akademiks https://rumble.com/c/Akademiks Follow me Elsewhere. Twitter - http://www.twitter.com/akademiks Instagram - http://www.instagram.com/iamakademiks Facebook - http://www.facebook.com/iamakademiks
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Oh, fuck, I'm so low.
In my hat, boy.
The New York hat on.
O'le!
Big act!
Scraking with y'all.
What's cracking? What's cracking?
What's cracking?
Hop up in here.
Everybody's online.
No intro today.
Live.
Breaking news.
Breaking news.
Breaking news.
Breaking news.
Ooh, what's that?
I don't know what that is.
Breaking new, niggas.
Breaking news.
Holy, they don't got the Diddler.
God damn it.
They took the Diddler in custody.
Wow.
Wow, wow, wow, wow, wow, wow, wow, wow, wow.
Big Act is here.
We're locked in for the rest of the night.
I'm hearing if this is what I believe it is,
I believe that the indictment should be unsealed in the morning.
Matter of fact, by the way, all this is happening right now.
I've been on the phone with a lot of people.
This is very big breaking news right here.
Number one, let me see Loggage.
Here we go.
Here we go.
How y'all doing?
Welcome, everybody.
Welcome, welcome, welcome.
Unfortunately, we are here under very, under very unfortunate circumstances.
One second.
One second.
We're looking at this.
I'm just checking this federal database real quick to see if we have any indictments.
The indictment is clearly sealed.
By the way, breaking news, people, Sean Puff Daddy Combs has been taken into custody.
Now, what custody seemingly means is that what's this?
That's not there.
What custody seemingly means is that he has been arrested on a federal indictment.
Now, this is going to be very important.
Also, you know, to clarify, and by the way, you know, we're going to be doing a whole bunch of things tonight.
So, chat, you guys are going to want to stay tuned.
Could you hear me?
Mike check, mic check, mic check, mic check.
I just want to make sure we good.
I'm going to make, you guys want to make sure you're tuned in for the entirety of this stream.
Once again, Sean Puff Daddy Combs has been taken into custody in New York.
I did tell you it was something about Diddy, not only putting up that property,
supposedly he's going to sell the property at the Hombley Hills property in L.A.
But it appears that Sean Diddy Combs, we all saw him go to New York.
I told y'all something about this told me that he was getting prepared, right?
I told you that I expected the indictment to come or news of indictment or lack thereof
to happen before the end of this month.
and I only told you that about four or five days ago.
And, you know, from what I've learned about the feds,
they might take you into custody on the weekend,
but you only find out on Monday, okay?
Obviously, we're hearing that it happened today.
But regardless, maybe and possibly we will hear a possible arraignment tomorrow,
but a lot of things to discuss, okay?
A lot of things to discuss.
us. Now, truth be told, and what we should be very aware of, and we're going to read some of these
details. We're getting exclusively via TMZ, and they have actual sources I notice as a fact.
With HSI and also with the Southern New York District, they work a lot there getting tips,
lees, and third. So when they say something, it's official. There's two things to be to consider.
First and foremost, if Diddy's taken into custody, that word custody is very loose.
You could be taken into custody but not being arrested necessarily for these said crimes.
Now, it's more likely that he's arrested and he's going to be charged officially for these crimes,
which means the grand jury is over with, because, as I've said before,
Diddy, not only because he came back to New York,
looked like he was tied up loose and elsewhere,
and he came to New York voluntarily.
This also tells me that I believe, you know, again, I'm telling you,
the rumors are Diddy is paying in between $2 to $3 million per month on lawyers.
He's, it's a full court press, not only on a, on a criminal level,
but civilly as well.
he's handling every and anything
because he does realize
that some of these civil cases
turned into something
that became a federal, you know,
investigation.
So his lawyers are working around the clock.
When he came to New York,
it told me that, you know,
we're not talking about a public defender.
We're not talking about some run-of-the-mill lawyer.
We're not talking about some low-level.
We're talking about the best of the best.
Did he got the most money?
Well, he has enough money to pay for any lawyer he needs.
And those lawyers, the difference between two to three million dollars a month and you pay your lawyer maybe $2,000 a month is the fact that they're going to be talking to the U.S. attorney directly, okay?
Not trying to torpedo the case.
They can't call no favors like, nah, don't indict him.
But what they could call in is some transparency on usually a process that's non-transparent.
right the grand jury process is non-transparent usually for defendant i told you guys before it was
possible that maybe ddi was here to testify which is usually unusual in a grand jury indictment
proceeding however the reason why i thought he might have been involved is that his lawyers
have been cooperative okay even though did he
these the subject of this investigation, your lawyers still got to cooperate, right? So, you know,
hey, again, maybe they got some safes. Yo, hey, we'll just unlock them for you. Hey, oh,
you said you guys can't find what? We'll help you out. Now, again, this also is usually a sign
a good faith, especially if you believe you're innocent, right? Hey, listen, we'll help you figure out
and investigate because we know you're going to come to the conclusion. We ain't do nothing, right?
So again, even if Diddy's guilty, if you got the best lawyers, the best lawyers are going to talk to the U.S. attorney, right?
The people who are presenting this to the grand jury.
So I thought when he came to New York, maybe he would testify.
He's very rare, but you got the best lawyers in the world that are probably friends with these guys.
Maybe they could say, hey, could we have the grand jury consider Diddy side of things?
He's down to testify.
You guys could, you know, ask him.
certain questions unless he has to plea the fifth.
And, you know, that was unlikely.
And by the way, I'm still not sure if that happened.
Regardless, if that didn't happen, the other thing happened.
And it tells me that did he come into New York, it was probably abundantly clear
and was sent a notice to his lawyers that, hey, you know, brother, we're probably going
to come to a decision soon within the next week or so.
you know, I've talked to a few people who said,
damn, why Diddy ain't run?
It ain't running here, right?
The reason why there ain't on running,
yes, his passport isn't taken,
but for you to leave legally the United States
on any flight, private or commercial,
there's something called a manifest.
You have to register it with the FAA,
with the location, your original location,
to the destination.
And if they ever saw that Diddy was going to any place,
that could protect him from, you know, extradition, Bali, or something like that,
they don't need to wait on the grand jury to arrest him, okay?
It becomes a different process, but they could arrest him immediately.
So I'm pretty sure it was like a handshake type of situation to say,
we ain't going to lock you up while we go through this process
because we want to make sure we make the right decision
and pretty much ensuring that there's no, you know, police,
tainting this process, no detective, no elected official that's sway in this process,
a grand jury is going to be a peer of Diddy.
Like it's going to be, well, people who are constituents of that particular district,
which is the Southern District of New York.
So, you know, that is the preferred way to indict,
especially for people who think that, you know, for example,
if you indict Diddy and Diddy beats the case, you're done.
Like, so if you do it, so a DA could do it through, you know, obviously what's called a complaint.
If you indict Diddy through a complaint, which then goes to a judge, they're going to arrest them,
but they're going to go to a judge for what's called a preliminary hearing.
And I showed you that that's what happened with A. Sap Rocky.
Let's say even if that goes through, even if that goes through the preliminary hearing and they do indict.
write him, if Diddy beats that case, which you got to imagine, if Diddy, Diddy's facing life,
I don't care what charge you we're going to see, he's going to be facing life, right?
If Diddy beats and spanks that case, that DA is finished, right?
Like, yo, you're overzealous DA trying to make a name by indicting a black man.
Diddy could spin this all type of ways.
If he gets indicted by a DA or a DA's office, that was just overzealous.
And, you know, he can even flip the narrative, yo, you listen to a bunch of civil lawsuits,
which don't really account for the fact and their only complaints, at least the initial stages.
So they wanted to cross their T's dot their eyes.
The DA is not making a decision.
The DA is offering up evidence that they've found through search warrants, interrogations,
snitches, anything else, witnesses, victims, that they would have the,
grand jury to basically say, do we have probable cause to indict?
And what happens at a point is that, you know, remember I said when they started serving
no subpoena?
I said, oh, we're getting close.
Because it feels like it was at the last part of validation, or not validation, but
just check in a few things.
And even then I thought it was for maybe additional charges.
I think that they went through the brunt of the evidence already.
and they were finalizing this whole thing.
So they had to do a vote, right?
Now, that vote would most likely have been done,
I would think, last week.
Again, I don't know exactly how, you know,
every grand jury proceeding works,
but maybe we've done last week,
maybe Friday could have been done today, right?
The reason I would say Friday,
if a grand jury's been held for months,
because from we heard grand jury's been months now.
So these people have been living,
listening to this fucking probable cause case for months,
I would imagine if they were going to vote,
they would probably vote on the Friday
because why come back on the Monday to vote?
Today's Monday, right?
So they probably voted then,
and then what happens is there's a,
the next step is a presentment, right?
Now, the presentment is where the grand jury,
after their vote,
presents it to the court what their findings are.
Now, again, you know, the difference between a grand jury and a jury in your criminal case, right?
Your trial jury is that your trial jury has to go, if it's 12 jurors, 12-0.
Everyone has to agree that you're guilty.
In a grand jury hearing, usually they have 23 people and they look for at least, or 23 people, and they look for like 12, right?
So if 12 people, you know, so it would be 12 that say yes, and maybe less.
said no, they indict, right?
So they're looking for majority.
Majority rules at that point, okay?
Remember, this is not to convict you.
It's only to indict.
Inditing someone means that there's probable cause that these charges
should be listened to in a full court hearing, right?
If you don't, so after they vote, clearly,
it seems like they would have gotten a positive vote.
We don't know what that number is.
And I don't think that usually they don't bar the people
who are on grand juries from,
actually speaking out about the proceeding,
but you never know that the judge might to say,
hey, we don't want to taint this case,
don't say nothing about it,
or they might say you can't say anything about it
until the case is done.
But regardless, those people,
we're probably going to hear some leaks on what that process was like
and what the vote was like.
Like, was it close?
Was it 24 or 23-0?
Was it 12-11?
Who knows?
Regardless, they do a presentment, and that's when they, you know, the presentment is an official bill, which what they call, if there is no indictment, it's called a no bill.
So they basically fill out a paper.
They say it's a no bill indictment, which means we don't find probable cause that this potential defendant could be brought up on charges on anything that any of the criminal charges that were presented.
to us. So they present the criminal charges that the DA things could match the crimes, present the
evidence to the crime, they get to look at the probable cause, and if there is probable cause,
they vote yes. If there is none, they vote no. If they're voting, if the overall majority is
no, they would say the no bill, we're giving a no bill, which means did he would be
scot-free, usually in cases where grand juries choose not to indict, and they present a no-bill,
unless there's some drastic change
or some niggas just like fucking confesses
that the case is pretty much dead, right?
Like, you know what I mean?
You're not going to bring another,
you know, usually detectives did the best job
they could to fucking file in all the evidence
to bring to grand jury.
If the grand jury can indict, usually dead, right?
Now, it doesn't mean you're indemnified.
So if like, you know, if you come back later,
you know, the difference between that and going to trial,
say, say O.J. Simpson,
say O.J. Simpson came out, right?
And O.J. Simpson said, you know what? I didn't kill that bitch.
Nothing could happen to him. He went through the trial of him being, you know, charged criminally with murder, and he beat it.
So even if he admits it, can't go back. That's called double jeopardy.
With the grand jury, the case is usually just dead because there's no reason to ever bring.
it back to a grand jury if the evidence isn't there.
But if that person comes out and says,
oh yeah, I didn't do that shit, you're probably going to get indicted.
That's just how it works.
That rarely ever happens unless somebody's a fucking idiot,
if they did the crime, whatever.
But that wouldn't appear to be the situation here.
This situation looks like they've voted and they've agreed
with the U.S. attorney office basically saying,
hey, there are probable cause.
Now, we don't know if they're indicting on every count
or every particular charge.
We will see how many counts, what charges.
What we do and should probably note
about this whole situation is that
if you listen to any lawyer,
historically, a grand jury,
they have a saying to say a grand jury
could indict a ham sandwich,
which means it doesn't take much
to convince them,
because they only need probable cause, right?
If you can make a good argument that that seems to be the thing that happened,
which every, you know, Mo's prosecutor could do the bare minimum.
Like, think about Young Thug.
Like, again, I think that they'd go through, I think that they'd go through grand jury indictment,
I believe.
Actually, the first time, there was three people charged with nuts murder the first time.
They got grand jury indicted and they got found innocent.
They got found innocent.
They got found, no, actually, no, the case got dropped because they realized, even after it got indicted, the case got dropped because they realized they had the wrong people.
But the grand jury looked at it and said, well, it kind of makes sense.
So we're going to indict them.
But then as a case developed and other things kind of came out, the prosecutors realized this case was not going to go anywhere.
So they dropped it, right?
So again, a grand jury indictment, it's all about probable cause.
they could also indict you for literally anything.
The thing in Diddy's situation and this why I said,
I said it's on Vlad, right?
I did an interview on Vlad.
Well, actually, I don't know if that came out yet.
I definitely predicted that, you know,
Diddy would be indicted?
I think many people did.
Because here's the thing.
It's one thing to indict someone on very specific crimes.
Yo, did you shoot that person at that time on that street?
street, right?
Now, if you have an alibi, well, at that time, I was fucking my bitch in another state.
Well, that's, that kind of blows up the probable cause.
That's an alibi.
You're not going to indict, right?
Like, you know, again, this is if you're innocent, right?
Like, you know, obviously if you were chilling on the street, had a gun on your waist,
like, you may get indicted because motherfucker like, there's probable cause that you fit
the description, had a gun was on the same street that somebody got shot at the same time.
here's the point I'm trying to say
they hit Diddy not with specific
and we're going to see specific like
you know allegations and charges
that's why I think right
I'm by the I'm guesstimating here
I do think that the indictment will be on sealed
tomorrow in the morning or maybe Wednesday
however
the reason why I always say
when you get hit with a few charges
not only is it easy to indict
it's just hard to beat
period
Rico, racketeering charges historically are hard to beat.
Because while maybe one particular crime of being an organized criminal gang or whatever
criminal organization might be hard to prove like, hey, did like, and I'm going,
this is some state shit now, even though the feds have higher standards.
Say for example, you know why Young Thug wasn't charged?
Well, you got to prove that Young Thug, even though he rented the car that fit the description
that did the drive-by was Young Thub.
thug in the car did he give somebody else the car like you can't just you did he know about someone
else driving like you can't just indict or or just like bring somebody to trial for one thing
because you kind of have a hunch unless you have somebody who was in the car who did it who may have
you know could so had some type of text message to thug to say thug told me to do it he gave me the gun
here actually he's called him my ring camera i drove his car it's that's called like yeah
thug gets arrested the easier way to get thug to go down is you you just follow
Rico. So you put that allegation, right, which is kind of patchy without all those, you know,
details with five other allegations. And it basically, you overwhelm the jury. Like, like, I kind of
have a mixed feeling about Rico cases because it's all about overwhelming the jury. Like, I know a
lot of people like, nah, man, why is that? What do you got young thug off? Why do you think that? Like,
they're presenting shit after shit after shit. Yeah, that one of, that might have been one of the main
murders that he would supposedly be the main witness for, but they're presented like 20 other
different crimes.
They don't, the point of a RICO is not to prove one crime is to prove that you guys had a
operation that that historically did multiple crimes, right?
And also, you know, by the way, you know, obviously the fans specifically love it.
But law enforcement loves this type of way of charging people because,
they, you know, historically when the top guy would never touch the drugs or the gun to kill somebody
or touch the money so he would always look clean, he would have somebody else tell somebody else to tell
somebody else to do it, how do you catch the guy who's making all the plays and financing and doing
all the shit? You catch him with the recall. So, you know, it's popular for that reason. We see all our
favorite, you know, again, this is coming out of the Southern District, and I'm going to read this
in a second. This is coming out of the Southern District of Neckon. This is coming out of the Southern District
New York. Now, the Southern
District of New York, I've told you, this is
the, um,
ah, see? Okay,
now TMZ just update us. A law
enforcement source confirms.
The arrest was scheduled for Tuesday,
but something happened that
caused the feds to move in a day earlier.
Now, what this means is that
they were watching
him, maybe
most likely,
not even most likely,
5 million percent.
Diddy's phone is tapped.
His associate's phones are tapped.
And they were sitting on it and they were going to arrest him.
Like I'll give you the story on the 6-9 situation.
I remember when 6-9, I remember 6-9 saw me or wanted to see me that Saturday.
They were going to arrest him, I think, like four or five days later.
Then they hear him on the phone.
Also, they had trucks, like, I guess he realized after a while.
They had trucks all lined up, like white trucks all lined up outside this building, pretty much just surveillance shit, right?
Like, this is why people be like, oh, did he should go to, did he should run to another country?
You think the feds are just like over here watching them on Instagram, walking around Harlem?
Or the feds is like literally there.
Like, my nigga, they've spent so much money on this shit.
They can't have this.
Anyway, with 6-9, when he was on the phone saying, oh, yeah, I'm about to go to this casino.
somehow shoddy and found out and they said,
and that's when the Jim Jones thing coming,
they'd be like, yo, y'all got to go make an example out of him.
They realized he's going to be the main guy
who we could possibly flip.
We can't do with a dead snitch.
By the way, six times didn't snitch yet,
but they knew he probably would.
So they arrested him early.
So they said, hell now, nigga,
we ain't going to have you get shot, okay?
So I'm pretty sure Diddy might have planned to,
I don't know, maybe there was something on the itinerary.
Maybe somebody was coming in town that they feel could like it have aided him to either do some shit to jeopardize their case.
So they arrested him today.
Right.
So if the arrest was meant for tomorrow, it probably means that the U.S. attorney was probably ready to unseal this case on Wednesday.
So I'm still thinking Wednesday.
So I think they're going to take him into custody.
I would expect that whatever interrogation, they would have.
wanted to do to Diddy, they would have probably ran it by his lawyers already.
They're not waiting until like, brook niggas, if they collar you, they're going to be like,
let me take it to the station, ask you some question.
They probably already asked Diddy like, hey, you and your lawyers want to come in,
we do want to have some, we got a question for you.
Or maybe they even offer the proffer, right?
So I'm pretty sure that there's going to keep Diddy in custody.
and him being in custody, again, what we don't know yet or realize is that most likely, most likely,
D.D. is not the only person charged.
The thing with RICO cases, and we do believe he's getting hit with a few things.
And let me backtrack again, too.
So racketeering cases hard to beat.
easy to indict, especially if they have
multiple isolated areas of criminal activity,
which they obviously do with Diddy.
So we think they're going to hit him with a racketeering,
a RICO statue, and under RICO, you could put multiple things.
So like the RICO is a big thing.
So like you're a criminal organization.
Now, what criminal organization acts did you habitually participate in?
sex trafficking is going to fall underneath that, right?
There probably is going to be, you know,
I got to get my nigga Maher and all here.
But if you talk to like some people who are, you know,
familiar with the Fed system and how like the U.S. attorney usually get down,
especially Southern District, they always throw drugs in it.
Like, for example, I'm going to use 69 a lot as an example.
It's the same people who charge 69.
When they charge 6'9, they put that, yo, he was,
selling drugs back on Locust Street back in a day.
What the fuck?
The 6-9 sell drugs.
It's not even a matter of him selling drugs.
It makes the charges look more appealing, right?
Also, if you're trying to map out an organization, you want to show that they're making
money in illicit ways.
They're blatantly just breaking the law by either doing violence, extreme violence,
or just doing some really deviant behavior like sex trafficking.
So I think we're going to see some drugs.
And I think we're going to see something in terms of violence.
Okay?
Now, the big thing, obviously, and I'm kind of getting ahead of myself here with a lot of things.
They're probably, if they could tie him to Tupac, they're going to, right?
If they could tie him to the 99 club shooting in New York, they're going to.
Right?
By the way, all of these things have no statutes of limitation.
Murder, attempted murder.
These all are going to be, you know, par for the course.
Now, the drugs, that does have statute of limitation.
I don't know what it is at the top of my head.
Statue of limitations, drugs, federal.
Yeah, federal drug crime.
I think it's, yeah, drug crimes usually is around five years.
Now, granted, the way how they write these, because also,
the way how they write these two is that they could use 20 years ago,
as long as you kept doing it as, as long as it was continual,
and it kept going until five years ago.
So that's also like a loophole.
So they could charge you for selling drugs in the 1930s,
as long as you kept selling drugs until 2019.
You got what I'm saying?
Now, if you're five years out and you haven't done none of that,
that shit, you're clear, right?
But they could bring it all the way back up as long as you kept doing it.
So again, they're going to try most likely, you know, obviously they had arrested that
guy who everybody called a drug mule, right?
Remember this guy?
Like, we haven't heard nothing from him since.
Drug mule, did he?
Right?
Which I think we all probably feel like they probably flipped, right?
This guy.
I firmly believe.
If he goes in there and says, yes.
Did he had me,
did he had me transporting,
by the way, he did, he did do a plea as well, too.
He did do a plea.
He did do a plea.
But if he goes in there and says,
yo,
you know,
Did he used to have me bring,
you know,
drugs in my booty hole
across all of the fucking country.
You know what I mean?
Like,
I used to put the crack in my brack or whatever the fuck.
I don't know what the fuck.
You know what I mean?
If he does that,
And I was doing it up till this point.
This is 2024.
Those are drug charges that would probably go underneath it.
So if you ask me, and by the way,
I think I've been pretty accurate with the predictions.
Sex trafficking, we're going to see 100%, I believe.
I think we're going to see something with drugs and something with violence.
Now, we might see some other things like extortion, blackmail.
However, they're going to follow those.
but we're almost anticipating it's going to be something to that extent.
Yeah.
Wow.
Okay, okay, okay, okay.
All right.
So, yeah.
So pretty much, you know, I've told you like the worst,
anytime you see somebody get charged with these crimes, they're fucked.
You got to just take a plea.
Just do a couple of years and hopefully a couple of years and get out.
Sex trafficking, right?
That's like a catch-all shit.
Like, nigger, were you pimping this bitch?
Like, yes, you got him.
Because it's kind of weird how it's set up.
It says, if you've moved a individual across state lines
for the purpose of commercial sex acts
that interfered with interstate commerce,
which is like a really hazy way of sex.
saying if you fuck bitches and you got money, you could be sex trafficking, depending how we
want to see it, motherfucker.
You get what I'm saying?
At least for a charge.
You know, obviously, you got to really prove it, right?
Obviously, we've heard the stories about ditty, so we're not going to be like, oh, my God,
no, how are you going to prove it?
Like, I mean, pretty much what Cassie's described as sex trafficking, pretty much when we're
hearing that, oh, freakoffs, the freak off sounds like sex trafficking, just to be
honest. That's kind of the
damn near definition of what sex trafficking would be
legally almost
defined as.
Other than that,
so you never want to get a sex trafficking charge, because it's just
so hard to beat. And I'm just, I'm talking
just as, you know, obviously I'm to get a lawyer
because I'm not an official lawyer, by the way, clearly.
Sex trafficking in charge is hard to beat. RICO, obviously,
Rico could have sex trafficking underneath, but anything
Rico, they usually do that with gangs more.
usually do that with violence and murders,
but like still,
Rico,
just hard to beat.
Wire fraud.
This is for all the scammers in the world, right?
They can't catch you because you think you finesse Chase.
Well,
some way,
somehow you had to work through a bank,
you're going to jail, right?
Like, you know,
that's how they catch most of the people who,
you know,
maybe they haven't been violent,
but they think they're doing white collar crime.
They even capture a lot of these guys,
even on Wallstream,
a lot of white collar crime.
You'll see the wire fraud.
fraud. What else? I'm trying to think what else. What else? What else? Hmm. There's a few other ones.
Rico, sex trafficking, wire fraud. Okay. I'll think of it later. Anyway, these pictures look like,
oh, these are old. These are old. So this is from March 25th, 2024. This is when the feds appeared on the scene. It said he was taken into
custody, you know, we're going to have to learn more about this. Was he taken into custody
by them showing up on an ounce or, again, we have to believe because we know Diddy's
going to have to go through this case, go through this trial. He's well aware of it, right? I'm not
defending him, chat, for anybody who think of, I'm just, like, you know the guy got, even if
he's guilty, he's not dumb, right? Like, you're not going to be like, this is not like,
oh, my God, I'm running away. You can't. In a lot of these situations, they might have turned
them over. They might have just got a call.
Yo, yeah, we're going to do it tomorrow, but bring that a nigga in or bring that
a nigga downstairs. Who knows? He might be in a penhouse somewhere.
If I'm saying, they're not like fucking, you know what I mean?
In some people's situation, they'll be fucking kicking through the windows. But now that
clearly did he knows that he was on an investigation, I'm pretty sure it was a very
formal type of situation.
Yo, we have a warrant for your client's arrest, and I'm pretty sure it was peaceful, right?
I'm pretty sure it was peaceful.
apparently okay he swooped into a
oh okay so
then he was just arrested and taken into federal custody
in New York Monday night
TMZ has learned sources tell TMZ
that Homeland Security
swooped into a Midtown Hotel
late Monday now you know what's funny
Homeland Security is
like HSI
works
with FBI
and local authorities and then they
also deputize a lot of like NYPD officers.
You know, they do a lot in the Southern District of New York.
And it's funny because when you think of Homeland Security, you're like, God, damn it,
how much fucking is Did he doing that?
When you hear Homeland Security, you're like, God damn, that niggas dick must be something,
you know, it must be, what are you to call it?
A weapon of mass destruction if Homeland Security is, no, Homeland Security is just,
I mean, obviously, they do investigate up to that.
I'm going to see if I get mired on here, bro.
Like, he used to work for HSI, which is Homeland Security.
And they do a lot.
Like, they do a lot of gang bust.
They do a lot of shit like this.
They're not necessarily only trying to prevent terrorists from knocking down a building or two, right?
But anyway, Homeland Security's whooped into a Midtown Hotel late Monday
where Diddy was staying and they arrested him.
We have unconfirmed reports.
The feds are searched in his hotel room.
Okay, yeah, so basically they hit him with an arrest warrant and a search warrant.
Again, we're told Dini was taken into the FBI field office in Manhattan.
It appears that the action was taken in connection with the ongoing criminal investigation
into alleged sex trafficking and other offenses that led to search warrants being issued after being issued
and executed at Dittie's homes in Beverly Hills in Miami.
as you reported, the grand jury has been hearing testimony from various accusers over the last few months.
Anything more to add?
Okay, Did he's attorney did speak?
Let me say, is there anything else?
Okay.
Ooh, here we go.
Another update.
Remember, they were supposed to lock them on tomorrow, but...
Oh, here my boy, Myron.
Just on time, my boy.
Yeah, I'll jump on.
You're streaming a little bit to talk about this.
Okay, okay.
Yeah, yeah.
I'm in discourse.
Just hit me anytime.
All right, we go.
Let me log into my Discord and I'll find you.
If you text me your username and I'll jump on and we'll chop it up.
Yeah, you don't remember the Discord.
Well, I see you on Discord.
I can call you.
So I don't know if you're on the same computer.
Are you?
I'm going to have to be on a different computer when I go live.
Okay, okay, okay, okay.
You know what?
You know what?
You know what?
Let me look at my Discord right now to see where to find you from there.
Okay, perfect.
But yeah, give me a few minutes and I'll jump on and we can talk about this for sure.
Okay, perfect, perfect, perfect.
All right, bro.
Bye.
All right.
Again, Maron Gaines, if you guys don't know, co-host of the Fresh and Fit podcast, but he was a former federal agent did tons of arrest.
He worked for HSI around the border area, but he's very familiar with how these investigations are done, complaints are done, how they work in lieu with the,
the U.S. attorney and basically pretty much how these situations get
handled when they have to take someone into custody.
You know, I think he's taking a few, I don't know if it's like celebrities,
but high profile targets into custody.
So we'll get like some insight from him in a little bit.
Anyway, here we go.
So is the rest of the schedule for Tuesday?
But something happened that caused the feds to move in.
Hold on me take my photo.
I'll do not this too.
I always got this show.
All right. So did he's, so it was scheduled for Tuesday when something happened so they had to move in the day earlier. However, U.S. Attorney Damian Williams, and this is probably interesting, right, says federal agents took him in based on a seal indictment filed by the Southern District of New York. I searched the indictments before I got on here that were all filed in Southern District of New York. And from what I could see, there is no indictment there, which is in line.
with exactly what that U.S. Attorney said that is sealed.
So, again, we're not hearing when he'll be brought into court.
I would imagine that his lawyers wouldn't want him to be,
I don't know where they would hold him.
You know, I don't know where the federal holding facility is,
even though I've heard it.
Supposedly, they'll lock up.
I believe when Casanova was first locked up,
they went through the New York intake system,
which is like they went down to the tombs.
That's like a popular, you know, jail for people in the New York City area.
I think 6-9 did it as well.
No, even though, no, he didn't because actually he did until he started cooperating.
And they got him through the rat hole, you feel me?
Shout to my boy.
But, yeah, so I would imagine that Dittie's attorneys don't want him just fucking sitting in jail, right?
They want to get as quickly as possible to court to initiate what probably is going to have to be a bonding situation.
Also, for anybody who was saying, he was like, why don't he leave?
If you know you're going to get indicted, he's not going to live in Bali, okay?
Again, trust me, I don't care if they got to go kidnap his ass from Bali.
They would have kidnapped his ass from Bali.
He's not getting away, right?
You don't want to act like you're running.
You only want to act like you're planning to run.
So if anything, you want to give the government the least amount of reason that whenever you get arraigned and you make a
bond application, right?
When it's considered, they're not looking at you as a flight risk.
They want to be able to say, hey, Mr. Sean Puffy Combs, knew that he was a subject of a
investigation by the Southern District of New York for this amount of months.
Ever since then, he's been communicating with the government and federal authorities about
his whereabouts any time he was born in a plane where he was going because he looks forward to
the day that he's going to be able to face these charges in court and,
clear his name right like you know that's gonna be like all right bond i don't know who knows five million
dollars right like cool get that nigga ankle monitor and send him to the freak off penthouse back you
get what i'm saying like but that's better than them saying all right this nigga was was
loading up a jet to fly the motherfucking north korea like he definitely not getting out like come on me
this didn't even look like a nigger who would even do good like you know in jail period so i i
I would have to imagine
somebody's the accident like, well?
Yeah, so, you know, I would imagine that
they have communicated with law enforcement
for this exact reason, right?
Like, yo, we weren't trying to run.
None of that shit.
We are definitely trying to cooperate.
We're trying to make sure
we get to a trial that we can either get this dismissed
or we could beat it.
And he's not a flight risk.
And when you think about, you know,
We could Google this now, right?
Federal guidelines for bail consideration, right?
I mean, it's usually the same.
I forgot what they call it.
It's a, they usually consider a few things,
and there's actually a name for that.
In federal cases, they consider these things,
severity of the offense.
Obviously, these are offenses that we believe,
again, not no lawyer,
but we believe that this could be damn near a lot,
life sentence for Diddy.
They're serious and heinous in nature.
If they concern anything about shooting, maybe a murder, we don't know.
But sexual assaults, sex trafficking, these are pretty serious first-degree offenses.
And, yeah, the severity of the offenses are going to be seen as high.
The defendant's criminal history, I don't know what Diddy's criminal.
We could probably Google that, right?
Even though we might not know everything completely.
And I don't know if they really, I mean, obviously, it's something that was expungible, like they don't want to go fuck.
But if he had prior felonies, I don't know if he was.
Is Did he a felon?
Is Did he a felon?
Oh, here we go.
So he was arrested in the lobby.
God damn, my boy was probably going.
Have you I seen the video of Diddy, like, you know, kind of outside?
You know, there's a video of Diddy in New York.
And I think I even posted it yesterday.
It was kind of an odd video because, like, Diddy's just there.
And he's almost there like, it's like a mannequin.
Like, he's just kind of there.
And he's just like a spectacle.
Oh, shit is Diddy?
He's not really reacting to people.
He's not answering their questions.
He's not saying, nah, everything's good.
Brother Love.
He's not doing that normal thing.
He's just kind of there and allowing people to have almost just access to him,
which is, you know, still a little bit shocking.
I guess not here.
I will find it on.
Find on Academics TV.
DJ Academics TV.
Sorry.
Here we go.
Is it this?
No.
Last team.
I know it's on the page somewhere.
If it's not here,
I'm going to go to Twitter with it,
but I think we should have it here.
Okay.
So this is one of them.
Oh, that's crazy.
I thought he's sorry.
Now if you guys don't know that's, I believe that's G-DEP, right?
Interesting story about G-Dep, former bad boy artists.
If I'm not incorrect, was it G-Dep?
G-D-D-D-P, yeah, G-Dep, like in 2013.
Is it 2013?
Or 2010?
I can't remember when.
He basically got away, got away with.
with the murder like 15 years before and he randomly just came out and said,
yo, I got to get this all my conscience.
I clapped the nigga, bro, back in the 90s.
Like, he just literally confessed to murder randomly.
Okay?
This is G. Deb and, by the way, I'm not trying to bring him down or whatever.
He was on the verge of making it big.
But yeah.
In the fall of 1993, a month before his 19th birthday.
So apparently this was when he was 18.
He did a murder, which stayed on his conscience for a very, very long time.
and when did he admit to it let's see I can't remember when he had admitted okay okay
yeah in 2010 in 2010 in 2010 he confessed randomly like I don't even know maybe
was a video when he confessed but he did like a video he was just like yeah I killed
somebody which was kind of like so spooky about the 90s look G-depth um confession
It's so spooky about the 90s that somebody could just fucking do a murder and get away with it,
but he just kind of randomly came out and just...
This night we're looking to get some money, you said.
Yeah.
I rode the bike over...
I rode the bike in the neighborhood for a couple of minutes.
Hey, by the way, I'm not judging this man who knows what was on his conscience
and who knows how his life was being lived.
I don't know what that feels like where you did something and it's just fucking with you so much that, you know, years after.
Remember, this is 1993.
And in 1993, that would have been 17 years afterwards, right?
So he did this at 18, 17th.
He pretty much lived a second life, but it was still on his conscience.
And he admitted.
I just went towards Park Avenue.
And I saw a guy standing.
And then, like he was smoking a cigarette or something like that.
And I just approached him.
I got off the pipe and I approached him.
He didn't seem like he saw me.
So I just approached him.
And then when I approached him, I asked him where the money was.
He didn't, he didn't say anything.
It's like he just, he just really,
they just like you know responded yeah I feel bad you can say the way he's looking and just
confessing you can tell like this is played it in his mind 15,000 times and by the way the only
reason I'm playing this this is one of Diddy's artists a former bad war artist he recently just
got out of jail the video I just play is Diddy meeting up with him and Diddy's you know
dapping him up and um and did he was just like welcome home ironically this guy
confessed and did his jail time, which eventually got commuted, you know, obviously that,
that would have been a cold case pretty much, but he admitted to it. So he did about 10 years.
They commuted his sentence, actually more than 10 years. They commuted his sentence. He did
13 years, actually. They commuted his sentence. And they essentially granted him his freedom.
And it's ironic. The irony here is that Diddy gets arrested today.
for, you know, crimes that he's, you know, he's definitely not admitting to.
But, you know, I remember back then, I don't even know if Diddy spoke on it,
spoke on him, like, admitting to that and then getting charged and confessing and pleading guilty.
But Diddy's in the position where he's potentially going to go to, you know,
prison for things that, you know, obviously he's not confessing to, but, you know, there's a lot of,
there's a lot of smoke there, right?
Anyway, let me just finish.
It's only two more minutes.
Listen to G. Dep, then I get back to it.
Did he think?
Like, you know, like, facially, like, you know, he didn't say anything.
So, you know, I just asked him again where's the money.
He put his hands up.
And then he just, I don't know, he caught eye contact.
Then he, then he just, then he just, they, you know.
He like grabbed the gun and it was kind of like a struggle and I pulled the gun back from him.
And then I fired, I fired three times.
And I didn't realize it was hitting them or anything.
I just, because I didn't see anything.
You know, I just fired.
I fired three times.
And then, then I, after I, I, like, after I,
After I fired the gun, I kind of just ran back to the bicycle that I had on the side.
And I got on it.
He kind of came after me.
And I rode off.
I rode up the block and then around the block.
Then I came back around the block on 112th.
And Park Avenue looked up the block.
Wow, he remembers even the exact street names.
Yeah, this was fucking with him.
Like, you could tell by this is zoned out look as he's doing his confession.
Um, and I saw, like, I saw, uh, you know, I, like a scene, or, I saw like a police, a police car.
I don't know if you were all.
I saw a car with the lights, you know, the lights coming towards me the wrong way, you know, with the wrong way on the block.
And I saw an officer look like was somebody kneeling or was somebody on the floor.
So I figured that's what it was.
And then I just rolled the bike back around the opposite way.
And then I went into my building.
But you, GDEP is home.
And Diddy while in New York looked like that security flanking him here.
Wow.
You know what's just saying?
Home?
Oh, that's crazy.
I thought he's so him already.
There's a war going outside.
So ironic and interesting.
Even the song in the background is a war going on outside.
No man is safe.
Now the other video that was in question that I was talking about was this video here.
I've been seen these videos a lot because D.D. doesn't seem present in terms of
he's not answering people so people are just like recording him it's like he's a spectacle it's
almost like he's a zoo animal like look at him oh my god he's real but he's not like he's not like
answering people like nah maybe i'm innocent girl like obviously you know that that might be a bad look
if he says that anyway but like he's not even he's not even like answering them and like being
very present anyway that's really bad are you guys uh uh uh
Are you, I'm sorry to say no.
Hey, yo, what's so?
Where are you going to go?
Where are you?
No ditty.
Did they say no ditty to ditty?
Man, where's Christian?
Oh, Christian Combs.
This is where you gotta, you gotta live these raps, Christian Combs.
You say anybody who say no ditty, won't get fucked up.
Somebody get Christian Combs?
Where is he?
is he now here's the interesting part about it i do believe that if we go by the civil suits
let me just finish playing this you know well guess who not watch how i won't now one of the
interesting things about this is that you know remember i i i'm telling y'all this is a riko case
now uh a shout to my man and i don't know if i could get him on here
I'm going to hit, I'm going to hit, um, Kodax lawyer.
I'm, I'm going to, give me a second.
I'm going to try to say if I could get him on here because here's the thing, too, as I said about,
if they're going to hit him with a RICO, how, if you're going to hit Diti with the RICO,
hold on one second.
I'm tweeting out his damn link real quick.
I don't know if, I, I don't know if I didn't tweet it out yet.
Sorry.
Oh, so anyway, here's the point I'm trying to say.
So if we're going to assume that there's going to be a racketeer and a RICO charge that's going to be levied against Diddy,
if you're trying to paint a picture to either a grand jury or now clearly to a trial jury,
that Diddy is some mastermind that's had other people do it as bidding, whether, you know, obviously recruiting.
because remember a lot of these escorts and women were, you know,
they were ascertained by other people.
So other people would, hey, I'm going to put you on a private jet.
I'm going to send you there for Diddy to be used in some sexual,
you know what I mean, ritual or fucking I'm freak off.
It's very tough and very hard to say he's the only one you're going to charge.
So what we're going to see is that there's going to be probably some other charges.
right and what I mean other charges other people charged now if we go by a lot of these
civil suits they were trying to throw a good damn lob to say Justin Combs should get charged
as well basically saying he was doing a lot of the same things in term of freakoffs and
sex trafficking women again those claims came from civil suits though but we all know
the investigation of this arise from civil suits.
So it's going to be important to see who gets charged as well.
I don't think that Justin Combs will be charged.
I don't think Chris Combs is going to be charged at all because we didn't really hear his name at all.
Actually, we did hear his name and want to join somebody.
He drugged some girl.
I just don't think he's going to be charged, honestly, personally.
Justin Combs, I think he's a little bit closer to the situation if they were going to investigate it.
I still don't think he gets charged.
Quincy, you know, I think he's, you know, in the clear.
Obviously, if we think about his beautiful daughters, I don't think they, you know, they're good.
But we'll find out soon.
We'll probably find out before, you know, I'm pretty sure if we watch, you know,
the mom of Justin Combe is Mesa Hilton.
That's her name, I believe.
She'll say something shortly.
And, you know, usually the way how the feds work is that, you know,
that they, or I mean, any law enforcement entity, they like to do all their arrests at the same time.
So if Diti's in custody, and let's say he's been in custody for a few hours, they have did a
coordinated effort to get the others in custody if they were arrested other people, right?
So we should probably shortly see, you know, some type of update either from Mesa's page.
And, you know, obviously she's probably going to react to either Did he getting arrested,
or if her son, Justin gets arrested, she's definitely going to be saying something, right?
We probably hope.
So we'll see about that.
Who else could be charged?
I mean, there are certain people
who probably worked with them
that did his bidden, right?
Allegedly.
People who used to, you know,
remember the whole thing about the Cassie thing, right?
One of the big,
and this I was talking about
getting Bradford Cohen on here,
because Bradford Cohen eloquently
put this on the record,
which I thought was smart.
You know, he's a defense attorney that has, you know, did his work in federal and state cases, and he's a brilliant attorney.
He said when the video leaked of Diddy giving Cassie the beats, when that video leaked, he said, hey, I'm not being an asshole.
I know a lot of people are going to be shocked by what I'm saying, but I'm not being an asshole, right?
What he did say was, I think this video might have been leaked.
strategically. Well, what's the strategy? If it was leaked strategically, not by the feds, because
the feds could have leaked it too. They believe Cassie's team may have already had this video,
maybe have even threatened Diddy with the video that probably led to Diddy settling in 24 hours
historically. That's record time, right? But this video and it leaking could probably help drive
the narrative, especially if the prosecutors or the investigators subpoenaed Cassie in for an interview.
And in the interview, it wasn't clear if they were looking at her as just a victim or perhaps a madame.
They were looking at her as Gillane Maxwell to Jeffrey Epstein.
Hey, Cassie, yeah, I know he was abusive with you.
Yeah, he used to give you the beats.
but all of the people, the other victims that were sex trafficked around the time you were there,
we heard you reached out to them.
We heard you used to, you know, sweet talk them and you used to when they were in distress,
you used to calm them down.
That sounds like somebody who's complicit.
Again, I don't know this as a fact.
I don't know this is a fact.
But I'm going off Bradford-Cohen's theory.
It was a brilliant theory, and you got to think really strategically, right?
So how do you, if you're Cassie, how do you clear yourself?
Well, the way you clear yourself, you put the video out of this thing
and giving you the beats.
Hey, whatever y'all think I did, I ain't do it.
If I did get like 15 bitches and 15 long dicknickers, pause,
pause, extra pause of that.
It's because I had to, did he was beat my ass?
So I'm not like a Gileane Maxwell who,
Galane Maxwell was the person who would get the young girls for Epstein and would even tell them, hey, no, maybe you should go top list. Maybe you should do this. Like basically almost coercing them, right? But she, you know, was seen as more of a friendly face because she's a woman, right? But she kind of was doing to the same bullshit, right? So if the feds are looking at this as a possibility, how does Cassie escape that? Because put it like this, if you think about just traditional pimping, the bottom bitch gets the beats too.
Like, let's keep it a big.
The bottom bitch gets the beach, too.
Like, by the way, I'm going to talk.
If you're new to my stream, and I know we do have, like,
it looks like we have about almost 50,000 people in here.
I'm not the guy you come to to here, like, fucking politically correct things.
So we're going to talk, like, I'm not trying to disrespect either woman or nobody,
but we're going to talk a little bit, you know, realistic.
Because that's how investigators are going to be looking at,
at least before they file their charges or nowhere to go.
Okay.
Yeah, maybe he was beating her ass.
because the niggas is a woman beat her and he does all type of shit,
but maybe she was with it.
How do you help convince, you know, maybe not the investigators,
but you put it into the ecosphere that possibly could encourage the narrative
that could affect a grand jury or otherwise you leak the video.
What video leaks?
The video.
You know, again, think about all the videos that could leak.
Didn't 50 cents say?
Didn't 50 cent Cassie say that he supposedly got sent footage about a freak off that Cassie was in and literally hit Diddy up and said, bro.
Hey, niggins think I'm beefing with you like this.
It ain't that serious.
And he basically said he tipped Diddy off that there was a, that video don't leak.
The video of them in whatever freak off don't leak.
right and that video was being sent around what video leaks
is the video of cassie getting beat
you get what I'm saying now apparently
let me play it that you guys know what I'm talking about
alright here you see
he's everywhere
and determination
allegation and everything
has been up to injecting his signature
sark God
chick what kid deal point
I ain't gonna lie Gene deal for in the make up
back
the amount of interviews my boy
boy for the do wait where is the there's a 50 ain't nobody at thoroughly examined
there's a 50 interview where he literally says it let me see if I can find that
all here one guys you boy you for you guys friend we want to be the hot
after the whatever how did you think that did he was coming at you though oh did he
yeah because you know he said some slick shit like was you know you know
Puffy's like
A bitch
What do he say?
To describe puppy in one word
I know it sounds kind of harsh
But I'll explain my
You know my statement
See you know how ugly
Always got like pretty friends
He want to be the hot in the group
He don't make sure he getting all the attention
You want to make sure the niggins want to holler at him
You know
And it's the reality of this situation man
Tell me to tell you
So, he'll tell you himself what happened in Miami.
He's there in Miami.
Well, you know, it's not even overseas.
I don't know who you talk about because he didn't say my name.
Right.
He didn't say your name, so.
Right.
But I feel like that's the way I feel about him.
I feel like he's at the end of the day, whoever's around him will, this is a, the final
notice, the final note.
Because he'll suck the life out of him like everybody else that he's been around.
Man, I don't know.
I don't know.
I know, I know, check this out on the up and up.
The fuck, like, he called, we should kick it on telephone.
Here you go.
After the main shit.
And, matter of fact, they send me the girl pitches.
Like, this is a girl, like, not the shit that's jostle.
Worse, way worse.
Wow.
Are you kidding me, you?
Like, penetration pitches and.
Nah, come on, man.
Yo, yo.
What?
All right, we got Martin Gaines on the line.
Hey, what's up, bro.
Can you hear me?
Yeah, yeah.
I can hear you loud and clear chat as promised.
You know, I have a former federal law enforcement agent, also a friend of mine,
Myron Gaines from the, you know, co-hosts of the Fresh and Fit podcast.
He's here.
I told you I was going to bring him on.
He has additional insight, not only how these investigations are usually conducted,
he could probably give us some more insight on how these, you know,
obviously it's a high-profile arrest, how these cases are presented to,
the U.S. attorney and such forth.
Essentially, you know, I was just talking about a not really unrelated point,
but I was talking about this has been a lot of chess plays happening until this point.
I want to give you some theories that I would love for you to react to,
and then I want to give you to Florida kind of like break it down as you see fit.
So I had said last week, once I've seen two things.
We've seen the subpoena get fired off.
for Daphne Joy, which is 50 cents baby mama,
and Diddy, related to them at some Miami hotels.
Also, simultaneously, we see Diddy go to New York.
We haven't seen Diddy in New York without him being on a press run in years.
We also see that that house he had in Homily Hills in L.A.
It's officially like the realtors are taking care of that.
I said the, well, I don't want to say the end is near, but essentially the end is near.
I felt the decision from the grand jury was going to be very near.
And I said within the month, unfortunately I was right five, six days afterwards.
We're hearing this.
We're getting some details that he was arrested in the lobby of a, you know, an expensive high rise, New York high rise.
And by the way, you know, chat, I'll show you guys this afterwards.
but the U.S. attorneys saying that the indictment,
they plan to unseal in the morning.
Myron, what are your thoughts about all this?
I mean, there's a lot to unpack there, man.
So what do you want to go into in particular as far as this case?
Because this is all, you know, a very complex situation with overall investigation.
What do you want to go into particularly?
Perfect.
So, you know, I keep hearing this a lot that people like,
why didn't he run?
Why didn't blah, blah, blah.
what like in a situation where like just you know go back to your you know your h-scii days
you know i mean and if you guys are monitoring or had a active investigation slash grand jury
proceeding on a high-profile target how would that have taken place and then how would
potentially an arrest look like okay sure so i think the number one thing here to keep note of is
Diddy was cooperating with the authorities, right?
Like his attorneys were pretty much talking to the United States Attorney's Office the whole time, like, you know, trying to, hey, look, he's going to be traveling here, he's going to do this, et cetera.
And I think the reason why he did that was he understood that indictment is imminent.
He's going to get arrested at some point.
And he looks at it like, look, the charges are coming down.
We probably know what they're going to do.
And we can talk about that next.
So he's looking at it like, I need to be out on bonds to fight this case, right?
I don't want to be in jail during the proceedings.
So he wants to be out on bond.
So I think the way his team angled it was they're going to be cooperative.
Anytime you travel, they let him know, et cetera.
Hey, we're intending to do this.
We're intended to do that.
Hey, a matter of fact, I'm going to be in New York so I can be close to you guys because it's
it's HSI New York that did this in the Southern District of New York, which is one of the most aggressive prosecutorial offices in the country.
Hey, by the way, are they, you know, I don't know how they score efficiency, but like it feels like they almost
get the most amount of cases or high profile cases, especially.
Some of the most high profile cases.
They were responsible for inditing the mafia in the 1980s, right?
Well, Paul Costano and these guys back in a day, John Gotti, they went after them.
Rudy Giuliani famously went after them.
They did the 6-9 case.
They did the Casanova case.
A lot of the big hip-hop cases out of New York and indicted out of the Southern District in New York.
So it's a big district and they're one of the most aggressive at USA's offices,
one of the most prestigious.
So he's like, look, I know the indictments are coming down.
I'm going to go ahead and cooperate and I'm going to put myself in New York.
So if you guys have access to me, any questions, et cetera.
And obviously, they indict him and he was right there.
So I think the play from his legal team was, hey, we're going to make a case that when
the indictments do come down, when we go to your initial parents and we try to get bond,
they're going to give you out on bond because you've already shown that you're not a flight risk.
The two biggest things that they look for whenever you're doing your bond hearing are,
are you a danger to the community and are you a flight risk?
Obviously, by him saying, yo, I'm cooperating and I'm doing whatever.
he's going to probably surrender his passport.
He's not going to be a flight risk.
And then as far as like a danger to community,
you know, he can make the argument.
I'm not a danger to the community, et cetera.
So more than likely I predict he's probably going to get bond,
which is why he's been so cooperative in the first place
and him and his legal team have probably been coordinating with the United States attorney's office.
Okay.
All right.
So, okay.
Still a million things on pack.
First of all, we've seen,
we've seen even foreign criminals, El Chapo.
We've seen those people being taken.
into custody, obviously that the level of the risk of, you know, flight risk clearly changes
when you're an international, you know, suspect versus one like Ditty, who, as you said,
is cooperating.
But yeah, if you're a foreign national and no status of the United States, it's an automatic
detention.
Okay.
Every single time.
Automatic detention, you don't get, like, you would need, the only way that you
would get bond as a foreign national with no status of United States is, and the
HSI agent will need to parole you, which wouldn't make sense.
They would never do that.
So because that would mean that you're probably cooperating,
but if you're in jail at some point, like,
it just wouldn't happen nine out of ten times.
So if you're an illegal alien with no status, automatic detention.
Okay.
Remember we're talking about Diddy?
Yeah, he's U.S. citizen, so.
Okay.
And but very high profile guy.
Yeah.
What does a bond hearing even looks like?
We're like, what's a bond package or a bail package that,
and I know we're jumping a gun a little bit because we got to get into the indictment
and what we probably think it is.
So this is going to happen.
You got arrested by HSI in New York,
which for those that are wondering,
I used to be an HSI agent out of Laredo, Texas.
You know,
I've been to the Miami,
to the New York field office a couple of times.
You know,
I'm very familiar with that office.
They're, you know,
obviously a big office.
They do a lot of big cases.
They did,
they were intimately involved in the R. Kelly case.
They actually were the ones
that did the 6-9 case.
So HSI New York is definitely a powerhouse
and so is that a U.S.
Attorney's office.
So I'm not surprised they aggressively pursued this.
But this is what's going to happen.
He got indicted.
he got arrested, right?
They probably got the true bill today
this afternoon sometime.
They went to go pick him up at the hotel.
What's going to happen is he's going to have his initial appearance
in front of a magistrate judge tomorrow, probably in Manhattan.
When he's there,
they're going to unseal the indictment and they're going to hit him with the charges.
I predict this is probably going to be sex trafficking and racketeering
because, and I can talk about why it's going to be racketeering here in a second,
but he's going to go to his initial appearance in front of a magistrate judge.
That magistrate judge is going to assign him to a district judge
because he's been indicted.
So now his case is going to go to a district judge for his initial appearance because it's, you know, mandatory by law that you go see a judge within, you know, 24 to 72 hours of you being arrested.
So he's going to get the charges read to him that are on the indictment.
He's not going to actually enter a plea.
It's an initial appearance only.
They're going to tell him he has the rights to remain silent, blah, blah, blah.
And then they're going to ask, hey, what does the government want to do as far as like his bond, which I'm assuming him and his legal team are probably posturing to try to get him released on a bond tomorrow is what I'm.
I'm assuming, which is why he's been so cooperative and flew up to New York and kind of made
himself available to the Feds because he knew that this indictment was eminent. Okay, do you believe
that that magistrate judge, which, which, you know, is going to be tasked with the initial
appearance, do you think that, you know, again, we're talking high profile case, it's a lot of
man-hours, a lot of money? Do you think that they are prepared to deal with a potential bond
application or a bond, you know, almost initial appearance to listening to bond tomorrow or
it's something that they will probably put off to another date?
I think they'll probably kind of figure it out tomorrow.
I think the whole purpose of him cooperating with the government, the way he has,
was for this very moment so that he can get bond.
And if he doesn't get it on this one, there'll probably be a bond hearing shortly
thereafter, maybe a couple days after, where they just will strictly have a bond hearing
because he's not going to be entitled to what's called a preliminary hearing to establish probable cause
because he's been indicted by a grand jury.
So the next step is going to be the arraignment, which is where he's actually going to formally enter his plea.
And obviously there's going to be a potential bond hearing if they need it.
But I think more than likely he's either A going to get the bond tomorrow or B, there'll be a bond hearing specifically for that
where his attorneys are going to argue on his behalf and say that he's not a fly risk or a danger to community,
which are the two main prerequisites to get yourself bond.
He'll probably surrender his passport if he hasn't already.
And, yeah, but I predict he's probably going to get out on bond, which is why he's been so cooperative with them in the first place.
Okay.
All right.
So let's deal with some, you know, minute details.
And I know you've been there where you're the main case agent and you've gotten a case.
You've presented it.
And I don't know, maybe worked it up, maybe your chain of command.
But eventually they got approved to go to the U.S. attorney's office.
They say, yes, we're going to go with this.
somehow there is either an indictment or is this written up on a complaint and you now have to serve the arrest warrant.
What do you think?
So this will came down via TMZ today.
They said they planned to arrest him yet tomorrow, but something came up.
We don't know what they haven't said.
They had to do it today.
In your experience, what was this like?
Again, you know, obviously you're saying that you believe that there was a presentment today that the true bill of indictment came through.
So they're aware of it.
What do you think could have changed the circumstances?
You just, you know, again, we're spitballed and we don't know everything, but, you know, you're probably the best person we could ask.
I can explain that.
So I guess I could talk about the case agent perspective, then we'll go into the indictment.
So for the audience that's wondering, because they might not understand some of these terms.
So guys, the case agent is the agent or the special agent in this case that's going to be responsible that's running that investigation, right?
He's running the case.
He's coordinating directly with the U.S. attorney, right?
The AUSA, you know, sister to the United States attorney that's doing the case.
And they're kind of working together.
Now, the feds work a lot differently than the state.
And what I mean by this is the special agent and the prosecutor are on the phone like almost every day.
They become like best friends because you don't have the same level of authority, you know, counter to, you know,
know, what people think, right, common to belief what people think is people think, oh, yeah,
feds have all this power, et cetera. The reality is the feds don't have that much power.
We don't have the same authority to do probable cause arrest like staying locals do.
Staying and local finds you on the car, right, and you're drinking, drinking and driving,
you got a DUI or whatever.
They can just go ahead and make that probable cause arrest right there.
They catch you with drugs.
They can make that arrest there.
Feds don't work that way.
They need to call a prosecutor, a federal prosecutor, and say, look, I got X, Y, Z.
I want to go ahead and prosecute this case, which rarely happens.
probable cause arrest. Most cases at the federal level are done by indictment, as you guys are
seeing here. And I can explain that whole process if you want me to. But regardless,
maybe in this case was indicted. So that means that this agent went in with the problem.
You're giving some new information I didn't know. So, so on a. Yeah, this is extensive. So,
you know, stop me wherever you need to. Yeah. Okay. So, so you just explained what most people,
because again, when we hear the feds, it's like the boogeyman, right? So like that's just super
different, right? So for example,
Yeah, if a local police pulls you over this and third and they have probable cause,
they could just arrest you and hit you with the charges when they get to the station,
whatever the cases, right?
But you're saying that the feds don't move like that.
No, they don't.
And the reason why, right?
So I'll give you guys a perfect example.
When I was on the Southwest border, right, someone comes in, tries a smuggle drugs through the port,
customs of border protection arrest them, right?
Detain them because they got the drugs right then and there.
they call HSI. I show up. I seize the drugs. I take the individual. I call the prosecutor. I say, look, we got him here with 10 kilos of coke at the bridge. You know, he's confessed, blah, blah, blah, blah. I'm going to write up a criminal complaint. Are you guys going to accept prosecution? Yeah, we got you. Boom. Okay. So I take him, drop him off at the jail, go back to the office, write up my criminal complaint, send it to the A USA. He sends to the judge next morning I'm there, swear to it, sign it, blah, blah, blah. And then, you know, that was a probable cause arrest in that case. That doesn't happen often at the federal level.
Most of the time you're doing a long-term investigation.
You're working hand in hand with a prosecutor, which is why they're close, like I explained before,
and you're building up a case that might take months, if not years, to build up.
And on top of that, you had to go to the AUSA prior and say, look, do this investigation,
this is the target, this is the organization, blah, blah, blah.
You've got to sell it because AUSAs have a lot of discretion, which cases they take
and which cases they don't take.
They might say, hey, that's not good enough for us.
Go ahead and take it to the state.
We're not going to go ahead and take that.
So probable cause arrests aren't as common at the federal level.
You typically have to go through an AUSA and get indicted after long-term investigation.
That's why the Fed's don't have the same arrest authority as the stay and locals do.
Staying locals can arrest you all day if they see you're drugs or they see that you're drunk or disorderly conduct, whatever the fuck it may be.
They have a lot more power probable cause arrest because district attorney's offices are a lot more flexible than the United States attorney's offices.
Does that make sense?
No, no.
It makes absolute sense.
And by the way, you're giving us information that we would have not known because I think a lot of
of times when we think of law enforcement and we think, you know, obviously we hear about
97% conviction rate when it comes to the feds, but we think pretty much law enforcement is
law enforcement. We're just thinking that's the prosecutor's office. Okay, cool. I see why,
that's precisely why they went so many cases because the AUSAs have such discretion, they don't
take cases unless, like, put it this way. AUSA is not going to indict you 99% of the time
unless they don't think they're, unless they're not sure they're going to win at trial. Like,
when I was used to come in with my grand jury packet to indict somebody, it wasn't
just for indictment of probable cause.
The AUSA was like, I need enough where if we went to trial tomorrow, we would win.
So the feds don't mess around with that because they have such discretion.
That's why they have such high conviction rates is because when they indict you,
they're already ready for trial, ready to go.
So did he's finished?
Yeah, it's a wrap.
Okay, okay.
So let's, you know, again, we don't know for sure, but again, this is the best source
anyone could have it right now.
And by the way, thank you, Mauren.
And by the way, fresh.
What up, man, I guess.
What up, bro?
Yeah, this is my office.
Like, you know, I worked out of the Miami field office, but the New York office, I'm very familiar with how they work.
You know, this is my agency, so I know exactly how the way it worked.
This was, you know, a human trafficking 15 case.
So, you know.
Okay.
So here's the question I have.
So I want you to kind of walk me through.
Okay, you were a case agent, right?
And at what point do you pass it over to the U.S. attorney's office?
And so how much of the work here is there like an agent or maybe a couple of agents doing versus, okay, this is when we definitely know this is in the U.S. attorney's hands and they're making these plays.
So you break it down from at least externally what we've seen.
So this is how I think.
This is what I, you know, speculate the investigation started to some degree.
When Cassie first came out and said that she was being abused by him, et cetera, right?
and they might have got tips and everything else like this from before, right from the tip line or whatever.
What I think more than likely happened was they started talking to a couple of people, going out, doing a couple knocking talks.
Hey, this seems a little weird.
You know, these women keep coming forward and complaining about, you know, nefarious sexual activity with Diddy from dating back from the 90s, whatever.
This is a little weird.
And at that point, you know, especially if you're dealing with someone high profile, after the second or third or fourth interview where you might have a good witness or two, you're going to the United States Attorney's Office early on, right?
And you're saying, look, this is the target, this is who he is, this is what we think we can build, etc.
We talk to these people, whatever.
And I think in a case like this, they more than likely had the U.S. Attorney's Office ear early on.
And, you know, I've always said this, the Fed's in the United States Attorney's Office, right?
They like clout.
They like the ability to prosecute high-profile individuals.
It's going to hit the news.
It's going to be a big W for them, a big press release.
So I'm assuming once they figured out who the guy was, right, right, did he?
They probably were working with the United States and attorney's office fairly early on this as well.
what I predict.
Hmm.
Okay.
Given the nature of who the individual was.
And also keep in mind, there was a successful prosecution with R. Kelly prior to this.
So then, and some of, if I'm not mistaken, some of the AUSA that were on that case were also
involved in this R. Kelly case.
All right.
So are involved in this D.D.K.E. case that were involved in R. Kelly case.
Sorry.
Yeah.
So, so let me ask you this question, right?
And you mentioned your prediction.
And I guess you could, you could expound on your prediction for charges.
and I would love to hear you explain that before.
But in following up to that,
I also want you to, you know, answer the question of,
okay, if, if, because you mentioned, you know,
racketeering.
And usually when people are in a racket,
it's more than one.
It's just not a singular individual.
And maybe I'm wrong.
But do you believe that this indictment solely falls
on Sean Diddy Combs
or maybe there are three, four,
five, six, a dozen other
people, maybe not charged with everything
but the kind of ancillary people
who the prosecutor is going to try
to dance along maybe in a trial
to say, hey, these were the people
that were doing his bidding, but
he was making a call. What do you think?
Yeah, so
the reason why they're going to have to use the racketeering
statute, right, is
because a lot of these crimes
happened a long time of go.
Right. Like some of these crimes are beyond the statute of limitations. So in order for the prosecutors to kind of bring in some of those allegations that happened in the 90s or maybe even the 80s or early 2000s or whatever, they're going to need to go ahead and prove that he was committing these crimes for a period of time, right, racketeering activity, right? And the criminal organization is ongoing or the criminal enterprise is ongoing. So that is why they're going to have to do this under the auspice of RICO so that they can go
head and say, look, we're going to bring in all these other crimes, right, that were done
decades ago because he's been doing it for a while. So sex trafficking is considered a crime
that falls under the RICO Act, right? There's, you know, there's drug trafficking, there's
violence, witness intimidation, there's, you know, extortion, you know, all these different
types of crimes that they typically had there historically to go out to organized crime like the
mafia, whatever. As long as they can prove that he's still committing these crimes to some
degree, they can bring in all those
allegations from prior, but they need to do it under the
RICO statute to be able to bring them in so they get around
this whole statute of limitations problem.
Oh, wow. Yeah, I spoke about that before too.
Could you, um, so, so sex trafficking, and I've heard a few
you know, like, you know, us YouTubers on here, you know,
obviously 99.9 and you're obviously the 0.1% that has
worked in law enforcement. Like, we're the like, like,
get old lawyers or we're going off like what we either know from
either our experience dealing with the criminal justice system or just kind of like looking at
these things a lot.
Could you explain sex trafficking?
Because I've heard like, for example, like Wack 100 said, he said, yo, well, if you fly a girl
out and you fuck her and if she alleges that there's an abuse there, well, the person crossed
state lines, this and third, it's sex trafficking.
And I'm like, damn, that's kind of like a very loose and bro.
broad, you know, uh, um, interpretation of what sex trafficking could be.
What is sex trafficking? Um, and, and, and where would a, you know, a federal, uh, authority
start to look at it in? So I'm going to just kind of give the more practical agent side of it,
right? So the thing with sex trafficking, and this is very contrary to what people think,
it's not as common as people think it is, right? What people always conflate sex trafficking with is
human smuggling. Bringing in
illegal aliens into United States
for some or a fee,
those individuals are brought
into the United States. Their families
are being extorted, etc. That's human
smuggling. Now, does it lead to human trafficking later on
when they get into United States and they're forced to
work, jobs, or whatever may be? Of course.
But people often conflate
human smuggling with human trafficking wars or two
completely different crimes. One is, you know,
AUSC 1324, the other one is a far more
serious crime that's 18 U.S.
which is the criminal code versus the immigration
code. So that's number one. Number two, as far as sex trafficking goes, it's actually
fairly hard to prove. A lot of the times when people think that they got a sex trafficking case,
and I know this because I've been on so many of these different raids, is when's up happening
is you bust the prostitution ring, right? You thought, oh, yeah, we got, we had these girls
are being trafficked, whatever, you talk to them and they all love their pimp, they don't want to
cooperate, they don't want to say that they were being held or whatever. You know, some of them
are lying to protect them, some of them were trafficked or whatever. But the point is that it's very
difficult to get witnesses because sometimes they don't want to necessarily cooperate.
So what ends up happening is you just end up getting everyone arrested for solicitation charges,
right?
Ends up being just a prostitution ring bust.
Now, the way to get around that, though, right, which is how the feds come in a lot of
the times is if the girls are under 18, it's an automatic human trafficking charge.
Wow.
So that's where they're going to get them is some of these girls, from what I understand,
were under 18 at the time when Diddy was messing with them and bringing them around in different
States.
Okay.
I think they're going to get them.
I mean, I'll have to look at the indictment to see, but this is my prediction.
Okay.
Let me interject in an ad.
So on one of the particular civil cases that he has is that there was a young woman who
was 17 that was supposedly, you know, she met someone that worked for his label.
That person said, hey, I think Diddy would like you.
They called Diddy.
Did he spoke to the girl.
spoke to the person
and then within a matter of hours
the girl got on a private jet
to fly to Diddy
and allegedly was around him
by the way this girl
I'll post it here I'll send you a link
if you want to show it on it you know your stream
or you could even Google 17 year old
Diddy
there's multiple
there's multiple like
articles about it her face is blurred out
she was seen
sitting on his lap.
Okay.
There's a New York post.
I'll post it in the chat here.
I don't know if whoever.
Okay.
Yeah.
Because Bill's on the computer so he could do it.
All right.
So Bill's,
you could just click.
Just click from the chat.
It's a chat between me and I'm iron.
And it's a New York posting.
It says,
Sean Diddy Combs accused of drugging and gang R-worded,
a 17-year-old in a new suit.
There's photos of this girl sitting on his lap.
Obviously, she's not shown for obvious.
reason she was 17 at the time.
Yeah. Her lawsuit against him says she was gang, R-worded, but was also very important.
She was 17. Here's the important part. I think she was in, I believe, let me make sure,
Detroit, I believe, and then he was either in New York, and let me just make sure, chat. I'm sorry.
Yes, the woman says she met Pierre, who was an executive at Bad Boys Entertainment.
So she met one of his workers in Detroit at a lounge.
And then essentially he called Sean Dittie Combs on the phone and convinced the teen to fly to New York City.
Before leaving the lounge, they said the worker took her to the bathroom where he smoked crack with her.
And apparently had her have sex with him first.
Then he put her in a private jet from Pontiac.
Michigan. She landed in
Teterboro, New Jersey,
which this is where Jay-Z and
everybody else. Everybody who got a private jet
who goes to New York lands in Jersey at
Teterboro. That's fact.
And yeah, they drove to a
studio and she has
pictures to prove she's with him.
Would that be considered
as sex trafficking?
Yeah, that's a kind of dry human
trafficking right there at the federal level because
she's not 18. He moved
there in between states. That affects interstate
commerce. So that's, that's where they're going to get them. And, you know, and I know some of the
audience here might be shocked by me saying that human trafficking isn't as prevalent as people think,
but it really isn't. You know, it's really the human smuggling that is the extremely common
thing that people tend to conflate because they're two completely different crimes. But the big way,
and I know this from, you know, being on human trafficking task forces and working with these guys
closely, a lot of the times when they do these busts, what ends up happening is it's prostitution
ring and they don't want to cooperate against the pimp. They're not really being abused. They're doing it
willingly in their of age. However, if they catch a girl there that's underage, then it morphs
into human trafficking automatically because that woman can't consent. That's how they get the nexus.
If the girl lied about her age, does that matter? Doesn't matter. Doesn't matter. So if she's 17
and she was being, and there was a pimp and she was being prostituted to automatic human trafficking
charge. And the feds will take that almost always. And the two biggest agencies that
investigate human trafficking are Homeland Security Investigation, HSI and the FBI.
Okay. Also, what about this?
In different states, there's different ages of consent.
Yeah.
So on a state level, I believe, and we could Google it for New York, New York Age of Consent.
Might be 17.
That is 17.
Now, that's statewide.
Obviously, the national age of consent federally is 18.
could he have an argument to say
well
she came here
willingly
and the age of consent in New York is 17
hmm
yeah I make her
I wouldn't be surprised if his legal team doesn't try it
you know
but they're they're going to say hey
federally it's it's 18
so we'll see we'll see what happens
um
and I think that's where he's going to have to pay his
defense seemed to the big bucks to make that argument in court for him.
Hmm. Wow. Wow. Wow. Wow. Okay. So, okay. So, all right, we get sex trafficking. So, so I think
everybody who's spoken about this and I've spoken to you, I've spoken to Bradford Cohen.
Yo, I got to get you with Bradford Cohen. Like, I'm telling you, like, he's, he's, he's an
invaluable mind that I've, everything he's predicted when it comes to these proceedings have always
been correct. And I think you and him, you guys are like, it would be like a power.
couple pause. Anyway. Yeah, sure. But wait, she came from Michigan, you said, right? Yes,
she came from Detroit, Michigan. Her consent, a 16 of Michigan? Okay. All right. I was just looking
to see what the age of consent is in Michigan. But sorry, what was the next thing you wanted to
hit? Okay. So I guess we're looking at the litany of charges he could face. It appears that
sex trafficking is going to be on the bill, right? Um, there's been rumors about, well, the
1999 shooting, the club shooting, that supposedly, you know, the woman who was shot.
in the face and who believes that Diddy
was the one who pulled the trigger, but New York
State
did not charge Diddy with that crime.
Instead, they blame it on shine.
That particular situation, we're hearing about
the Tupac situation.
We're hearing about maybe other
and I had said this
earlier, but I wouldn't get your take on it.
Remember the first person when they did the raid
that was arrested, the only person
that was, you know, arrested, not attained,
was supposed to be.
the drug mule.
Do you see maybe, and we hear
a lot of drugs. Do we see maybe
some drug charges
kind of mixed into it? It kind of
gives it some color.
You know, unfortunately, I'm not trying to like,
you know, just content is out, but it's just like
it kind of
makes it seem like, hey,
it's not only sex trafficking, this is a
drug-fueled environment.
And then maybe you could add some violence in
with, you know, either.
You put to pat up the racketeering, right?
So when you're hitting people with RICO, right?
Like you have certain crimes in there that you want to show to establish that it's a criminal enterprise and they're committing crimes and furtherance of the organization, right?
So, you know, like I said, there's a couple different crimes that fall under the racketeering, right?
Vehicle theft, extortion, murder, kidnapping, drug trafficking, etc.
So what I predict is, right, we don't know the indictment yet.
We'll see it tomorrow probably when it's unsealed when he goes in front of the judge.
They might put that in there to kind of.
a pad that this is a component to the to the to the criminal organization you know because some of
these women that were that are victims you know complained and said oh yeah I was under the influence
of drugs they were readily available to me etc so they can use that to kind of substantial and prop
up this RICO charge because the reason why they're using the RICO is because the RICO allows
them to bring in all these other cases in that might have been kind of fallen by the wayside due to
statute of limitations RICO allows them to bring it back in
Hmm.
It's kind of like the glue that holds everything together, if that makes sense.
Okay.
Do you think that there will be any specific charges of, you know, sexual assaults?
Yeah.
Yeah.
I mean, for sure.
Because the thing is, is that they've been, they've had this grand jury convened for a very long time.
I remember reading about this originally, like, almost two to three months ago, that they started doing these grand jury things.
So that tells me the fact that they're indicting him now.
Is that unusual?
Is that unusual?
Like, again, we have no idea about federal grand juries.
It feels like they've presented this case for two months.
Okay, let me explain how grand jury works to the federal level.
Give me one second.
Hold on.
So, because a lot of people, because, okay.
So the grand jury is nothing more than a group of your peers that sent a room and deliberate on cases based on probable cause, right?
So not to be confused with a trial jury, right, where it's like, you know, 12, 6 or 12, whatever that may be, right?
12 people.
So a grand jury, right?
The AUSA convene, and they probably, they typically serve for, you know, three months, six months, whatever may be.
And they'll sit there and the grand jury typically convenes once a week, depending on how busy the United States attorney's offices, how often they're indicted in cases, whatever may be.
So what's up happening is the AUSA comes in with their case agent.
and the AUSA asks the case agent questions, right,
and the case agent presents evidence to the case.
Now, keep in mind, I want to make this very clear.
It's just to establish probable cause, guys.
Probable cause is not that high of a threshold, right?
But like I said before, when you're indicting,
the AUSA pretty much is ready to go to trial.
So it's probable cause just to get the indictment,
but obviously the AUSA is looking long term to win a trial.
So you go in there, and I've testified literally hundreds of times,
you go in there, they sit you down,
they swear you in
and they ask you questions, right?
The U.S.A. Ask you questions on the case.
You explain the case.
Then they open it up for a Q&A
for the grand jury to ask you questions.
You answer any questions in there
about the case, anything that wasn't clear.
You walk out the grand jury room,
you and the AUSA,
you give them some time to deliberate.
You know, depending on how complex the case is,
that will dictate how long it takes them to deliberate
and then you get something called
the true bill of indictment after the fact.
That true bill of indictment is filed with the clerk
and then you go ahead and you get an arrest warrant
from the judge.
and that's to answer your question that you mentioned before,
hey, why did they pick him up tonight versus tomorrow?
What I'm assuming is,
since they had the grand jury convening, right,
and they knew that he was going to be indicted today,
I guarantee they had probably agents watching him the whole time,
and they saw he was at the hotel lobby.
They're like, bro, we got eyes on him.
It's safe to do it.
We technically have an arrest warrant for him now,
and in the arrest warrant, if you look at any federal arrest warrant,
it says at the bottom, you are hereby commanded to arrest XYZ, right?
So if you got him in plain sight and it's,
It's safe to affect the arrest.
You kind of have to arrest them because you've been commanded by a magistrate judge now that you have that arrest warrant or a district judge depending on whatever it is.
But regardless, you got an arrest warrant from the judge.
So they probably had eyes on him the whole time.
They saw he was in a hotel lobby.
Arrest war was signed by the judge.
They just picked them up right then and there.
That's what I predict why they picked them up this evening.
So you're not thinking that maybe, you know, even though he seems like he has to be.
cooperative. You don't think that maybe, I don't know, he was like, oh, I got to go back to
Miami and maybe like he hit like his plane guy like, hey, let's go to my, let's go back to
Miami because I don't know if he would know when the, the, the indictment will be coming
down and they're like, no, no, fuck that. We're not going to wait till he gets on another
plane. That could have been a reason too. I mean, I'm thinking, you know, typically the most
simple answer tends to be the answer. What I'm predicting is they probably have been having him,
they've had him under surveillance for a few days now, especially knowing that
the grand jury convening and was going to indict him today,
kind of to see if he was going to run or see what would happen.
And at this point, with the way he was a...
Phone tapped or no.
What was that?
Do you think that maybe they have his phone tag?
Like, what's the surveillance like at this point?
Like, I use 6-9 as an example.
Basically, like, 6-9 said, like, I remember him explained to me in depth.
He said, yo, I knew what it was.
Every time I went outside, there was always a car that drove right by.
It was always unmarked.
There was always like this one.
one car up there.
Like it was basically,
he said he kind of knew,
but not really knew
that he was being
definitely heavily surveilled.
And also,
you know,
essentially his phones
were also being tapped as well.
Do you think they tap his phone
just for his purpose or?
No.
No,
I'm pretty certain that they did,
because here's a thing.
So another common misconception,
people think that tapping a phone
is very easy.
Getting a federal Title III,
which is what it means
to get live,
communication guys is extremely fucking difficult.
And I can tell you guys, because I've written an affidavit and gotten a title three before,
it's very fucking hard to get one because here's a thing.
When you write search warrants, right, a phone tap is the most intrusive, almost one of the most
intrusive techniques that you can use.
So typically the more intrusive to search, the more probable cause you need to conduct said
search.
And I've said this before, I'll say it again, you need more probable cause to listen to someone's
phone than to fucking arrest them.
And the reason why is because you're not only infringing on that individual's privacy, right,
or violating the Fourth Amendment to a degree while you're doing it legally.
You're also listening into the private conversations of other individuals that may or may not be subjects of investigation.
So when you're listening to their phone, it's one of the highest standards of getting a search warrant because you're listening in.
And it has to go through a bunch of different people.
A district judge has to sign it.
It needs to go through something called OEO at the U.S. Department of Justice.
it's very difficult to get a wiretap.
So what I predict is, since this crime was a crime of things that occurred years ago,
it wouldn't make sense.
And I actually doubt that they would have the probable calls required to get a phone line tap
to actually listen to stuff because I don't know if you want me to go into this,
but to get an actual Title III, you need dirty phone calls, you need informants,
you need a pen register, which this is all, you know,
if you really want me to go into this, how a phone tap works, I can.
because I've done it, but I'm 99% sure that they didn't do any Title III intercepts on this investigation
because this is a more historical investigation where you're interviewing witnesses of crimes that occurred in the past,
which is why they're using the racketeering statute because they're trying to bring in these crimes
to kind of save them from statute of limitations problems.
Wow.
Hey, hey, again, I'm so thankful to have you on here is like invaluable information.
I'll say this.
What they could have been doing, though, instead of a phone tap, right?
because I want to be very clear here.
There's different ways to exploit telephones from a law enforcement perspective, right?
There's different thresholds.
There's something called a ping warrant, right?
Which I've done this a million times when I would follow drug traffickers around,
where you're able to track the phone, right, and get an update, you know, it's up to you how you want to do it,
but you can get it 30 minutes, hour, et cetera, and you basically know where the guy is going, right?
Now, with that said, they would have to prove that the telephone and his travel was involved
in some type of criminal activity.
So for drug traffickers, it's easy because you could be like, look, this guy's going to be having
a pattern of behavior where he's going to be picking up drugs from individuals and meeting a stash
house, et cetera.
We need to know where he's going, right?
Or you can use this to put a tracker on a vehicle too, where you're, hey, he's involved
in this type of crime.
I need to know where he's going, et cetera.
So they could do what's called a ping warrant on him to know where he's going at all
times.
That might not be needed, though, because obviously his defense team was cooperating with
him.
So, you know, that could be a play as well, but I kind of doubt it in this situation since he was cooperating.
Then you have something called a pen register.
And a pen register, aka a trap and trace, is where you, so they basically will get every single person calling you, right, and every single phone call that you make.
Now, it doesn't show the contents of the conversation of, or what's being said, but it just shows frequency.
So I'll give an example.
Let's say I'm watching a drug trafficker, and I know that he's involved in dealing cocaine or meth.
methamphetamine, whatever, right? And I see that he calls this one for certain phone number the most.
I'm going to do a subpoena on that phone number. Identify who that individual is. And I find out,
oh, this guy has a criminal history for trafficking drugs, boom. And they start to identify the
organization, right? And then that's how you kind of build it out. That's another way to exploit the
telephones. I doubt that they're doing that, though, because this isn't a drug trafficking investigation.
He's not actively involved in the crimes anymore. If anything, he's probably, you know, trying to avoid it.
So I doubt that they did a pen register too. I think in this case, they just had good
old-fashioned, you know, eye surveillance.
His legal team was cooperating, and then this is a historical case anyway.
So this is strictly based on witness testimony.
It's going to be a witness testimony heavy investigation.
Okay.
Now, again, you know, and I feel like I'm almost dick crying and pause, but you're the perfect
person to have on at this moment, but I do have to ask this question because, you know,
again, I keep saying Bradford Cohen, he's also said, he's also like kind of,
analyze this point, but I want to hear your analysis of it. Yeah. So it made the news,
it made TMZ that they, one of the last things, and you tell me where you think this came from.
Do you think this came from the U.S. Attorney's Office or the grand jury? But there was subpoena sent out
to Miami hotels that had to do with the whereabouts and also activity of not only Diddy,
but 50 cents baby mama
Daphne Joy
Does that make like number one
I want you to analyze that
But then second of all
Does that make it
Almost seem like Daphne Joy
Might be either
Potentially a target
Or maybe she's someone
That's cooperating
That they're just validating
What the fuck she's told them
Because that's okay
Cool
So I can answer that
And then the other thing I want to say too
Because some people are saying
They always tap the phones
I also want to be clear here
That a Title III wire intercept
to listen to phones through the regular court system is much different than a FISA wiretap
where you're basically doing a national security grounds.
If you're doing a FISA phone wire the phone tap, obviously the threshold is not as high as a
regular Title III because you have national security implications, so you're able to get it
much easier.
So if you're a spy or trying to do anything against the United States that affects national
security, they're going to be able to wiretap your phone way easier.
Now, to answer your question as far as subpoenas go, so here's the thing.
So every agency operates differently here.
When it comes to HSI, HSI has something called admin subpoena power.
And what that means is you can go into a business or you can go ahead and serve a phone company or whatever may be.
And you can say, look, I need information on X, Y, Z, and you serve them a subpoena on, you know, maybe it's immigration case, a customs case, or drug case, whatever may be.
They have different statutes that they can use to gain information via subpoena.
Then you also have something called a grand jury subpoena.
I'll give you an example of what the two mean, right?
So let's say I have a target of investigation and they have a Google account, right?
Okay.
And I want to figure out who is the subscriber to that Google account.
I send an administrative subpoena to Google to tell me who the user is on that account.
Google will furnish me the information because I gave them a legal document.
However, after 30, 60, 90 days, they will notify the subscriber.
Look, the feds asked us about your account.
and they can go ahead and disclose that to their customer, right?
Banks do this.
Phone companies will do this, et cetera, right?
Now, if I hand them a grand jury subpoena, now they can't say shit, right?
So think of it as a grand jury subpoena as a more powerful way to get information, right?
It's a little bit more of a pain and ask to get one, but you typically want to use grand jury subpoenas, especially for banks.
Because if you give a bank an admin subpoena, some of them might not honor it, or they'll say, well, we're going to notify our, our,
account holder, like, within a month or whatever.
Obviously, you don't want them to find out that they're the subject of investigation.
So you want to give them a grand jury subpoena.
Admin subpoenas are typically reserved for phone companies.
Phone companies typically will, you know, they won't tell the subscriber that,
you know, they'll just give you the phone number who belongs to address, that type of shit, basic stuff.
So with all that said, the fact that we know that there were subpoenas sent to these hotels leads me to believe that they probably
served them with administrative subpoenas, right?
Which is, you know, they work, but you deal with the issues where it's not necessarily kept to
the same level of secrecy as a grand jury subpoena.
Because if you go ahead and you talk about the grand jury subpoena being served on you,
well, now you can go to jail for that.
Really?
Does that make sense?
No, no, no, no.
I hear you.
I said I had no idea you could potentially if you, you know, bring that to light.
You could be facing arrest.
Wow.
So, okay.
Cipena, yes.
For admin, no.
And only some agencies have admin subpoena power.
I know DEA has it, HSI has it, FBI has it.
I don't think ATF has it.
They got to do everything through grand jury subpoena.
And it depends on the agency and their administrative powers.
But yeah, giving an admin subpoena will get you the information sometimes,
but you have to deal with the risk.
As a case age, you've got to make this decision.
It's more of a pain and that's to get a grand jury subpoena, but you'll be protected.
However, you can do an admin subpoena and get it quickly and maybe potentially deal with them disclosing it to
the subscriber. That's why I would only use admin subpoenas
for phone stuff. I would never use it
for anything else because a company like a hotel
could potentially disclose
that after a period of time.
Wow. Okay, so
are you in the belief
and I guess this is what I was trying to get to?
So,
it was interesting that Daphne Joy's name was kind of
tied to Ditty in that
particular situation. Do you think that
that means
that she's either a
potential witness or a potential
person being investigated.
And what's this, you said that's Diddy, like, not Diddy, it's
Big Mama.
A 50 cents baby mama, right?
She used to have a relationship with Diddy, if I'm not mistaken.
Yes.
Let me, um, I want to read the exact,
I want to read you the exact thing that we saw it at.
Okay, okay, here we go. So this is,
and by the way, this was 831, which is obviously August 31st,
2024. I want to read you this and then you can,
interpreted. It says the federal authorities
investigating Diddy to potentially
get a criminal indictment
against the music mogul or chugging along.
Issuing a new
grand jury subpoena
related to a hotel in Florida.
According to new legal docs obtained
by TMZ, which you obviously have to know
they have their sources. They're the first.
They're a grand jury subpoena. Okay.
Yeah, yeah. TMZ's
the first one also figured out that
Diddy's in custody. You know,
they have a source in the Southern District.
trust me.
Yeah, they got...
Federal prosecutors from the Southern District of New York
got a subpoena requiring the fancy Miami Hotel
to cough up documents and other evidence related to Diddy.
Here's where we get a little further.
Diddy and his ex-Dapney Joy, which is 50 cents X,
or 50 cents baby mama, are both named in the subpoena.
The subpoena calls for the hotel to hand over reservation records
involving Diddy and Daphne
and other associates of Bad Boy Entertainment CEO.
The subpoena names the period of January 1st, 2008, to present,
asking for check-ins and checkout dates, room numbers, guest preferences,
requests, billing information, and also room service.
Federal prosecutors are also requesting emails and mail and address and phone numbers,
along with forms of payments such as cash and credit cards.
Okay.
They also ask for computer IP address, loggings of individuals,
as well as copies of their identification of vehicle information.
What's more, the feds inquired about surveillance footage at the hotel,
the new subpoena was only issued a couple weeks ago.
So it looked like, you know, they found out about it afterwards, clearly.
So it looks like the authorities are still hard at work on the Diddy probe.
Yeah.
So I can answer that.
That's just like, you know, that's what you will call like kind of a catch-all subpoena where you're not just going to subpoena every room that was under his name, but you're going to subpoena all the rooms that were under associates, girlfriends, um, employees, etc.
So that you kind of have a broad scale and you know exactly, um, every room that was rented.
And the probably, the reason why they probably are doing that is because they probably heard testimony from one of the witnesses that said, hey, I was assaulted at this hotel during this time, blah, blah, blah.
So they're like, all right, cool, for us to cover our bases so we can corroborate, right?
Because the thing is what witness testimony is you need to be able to corroborate it with actual real facts, right?
So if one of the witnesses says, hey, I was sexually assaulted at this hotel on this, you know, honor about this day or month or year, right?
What they're going to do is they're going to say, okay, cool, we need to be able to confirm that.
So they're going to go back at those hotel records show that did he did indeed have a room at this hotel at that specified period of time.
And what that will do is that will beef up that witness.
is credibility in court. So your whole job, whenever you're an agent, right, and you're doing
these cases is when you have a witness, you need to be able to independently corroborate everything
they tell you through outside pieces of evidence that kind of stand on their own. And hotel
reservations is a great way to do that. That's why I'm assuming they probably went ahead and did the
grand jury subpoenas. And they did it through a grand jury subpoena to make sure that it can come into court.
So I think them putting her on the grand jury subpoenas is just to make sure that they get everything
and they don't miss any rooms.
Okay.
Because if,
the various activity did occur,
right,
if Did he has half a brain,
he's not going to put it under his name.
He's going to put it under the people
that work for him or people that were with him.
That's wild.
Okay,
so I'm going to ask you a very difficult question,
which,
which again,
you may not be able to answer with facts at this moment
because this is super preliminary,
but,
you know,
50s had accused Daphne joy
of being, like,
a sex worker,
you know?
Hor.
He says,
says a little sex worker that,
like,
used to say.
Yeah.
Um, here's the thing.
You know, again, going off what Bradford Cohen said,
he feels like maybe Cassie's team leaked that footage of Did he beating her?
That maybe potentially the feds couldn't look at, you know, her to be like,
hey, well, okay, I know he was abusive to you,
but look like you were the person who was hitting up all the escorts and flying the girls in.
Did he didn't do that?
You did that.
So maybe you're a co-conspirator.
When you hear Daphne Joy's name being mentioned in a subpoena, is it possible that there could be maybe women, maybe managers, maybe assistants that get charged along with Diddy or at least were investigated to say, hey, this guy didn't do it by himself.
You guys helped.
You put the girls in your rooms.
They weren't staying in Diddy's room.
They stayed under your name.
in rooms under your name. Is that possible?
Yeah, absolutely. And they're going to use that as a bargaining chip to ensure that all of them cooperate against Diddy.
Because obviously, so Diddy is going to be looked at as like kind of the head of the organization and maybe his assistant is the number two.
So they're going to do everything in their power to ensure that they get successful prosecution against him.
So I wouldn't be surprised at all if they haven't already either A brought her in or B made her a target in the investigation to some degree where she's cooperating or they're letting her know that you can be charged too.
so they're definitely going to have these people
ready to go and testify in the situation.
You, can you imagine how 50 Cent feels about this?
His baby mama is helping Diddy do his dirt, bro.
That's the messed up shit, bro.
That's your baby mama.
Wow.
Well, first, here's the thing, though.
If I'm 50, we have to remember the timeline of things.
So 50 goes on his rant after it's being known
that she's mentioned in a lawsuit.
what does she do
she actually accuses
50 cent of our word
in her
yep let's be clear
what 50 does
okay
he files a lawsuit
at first she didn't delete it
then she deletes the post
supposedly
and I can Google it
I think 50 is not going forward
with the lawsuit
particularly for defamation
which we all know
if anybody know
knows 50 cent history. If you lie about him, he's going for that money. But here's the bigger
plight that 50 might have to play. And I guess this is where I would ask Martin. Well, if she's
either a witness or a potential part of this Diti investigation slash indictment, I think
what Ditty and most men would find the biggest win is not suing your baby mama who's broke
without you paying her for defamation. The best thing would be,
showing to family court. Hey, maybe I deserve custody.
Damn.
My baby mama is a sex worker who's named in this indictment federally.
And is that a play?
Yeah, no, for sure.
I mean, you know, we all know that it's a lot harder for men to get custody of their children in family court.
But showing that she's being a subject of or indicted in a federal sex trafficking case is absolutely going to swing it in the fire.
father's favor, especially someone like Diddy who has the resources to take care of the kid.
So, yeah.
I mean, that's definitely a play.
For 50.
Wow.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Listen, so they're saying tomorrow, you know, I'm wondering what this indict.
So I also threw this into the air.
I want you to react to it.
So if you listen to some of the other lawsuits, they tried to say like even, you know, a few lawsuits.
They were like, oh, the apple didn't fall too far from the tree.
But they were trying to bring in Justin Combs into it.
Is it possible?
And what do you think the odds are that any maybe additional indicted people end up being family as opposed to, you know, I could see like maybe a worker like, hey, your job was to, you know, get the bitches here or whatever, whatever.
But if his sons, even one of them, I don't think, you know, even though, you know, Christian Combs has, it's a civil.
case, but if any of them gets caught up in the criminal case, how does that look?
I mean, it's possible if they, if they assisted their father in any way.
I mean, some of these charges seem to be kind of old, so they might have been children when
it went down.
But, you know, it's definitely possible that his kids can get wrapped up in the indictment
as well.
What I predict is more than likely Diddy and probably some of his closest associates were indicted
in this one.
You know, we'll have to see if any of them are taking.
taking into custody. But obviously he was the main guy that they were focused on getting,
you know, arrested right away. So, you know, we'll only know until tomorrow. I mean, he's
going to have initial appearance in front of a magistrate tomorrow morning at some point,
depending on whenever they have the, wherever they do the initial appearances or whatever time
they do on. But typically, a lot of places it's in the morning on a district court.
I have a question. Yeah. What if Diddy's, well, this is what I've kind of heard about, but
what if Diddy's son
invited girls over to the crib
that were underage
and when they were over there
maybe after a couple days
things happened
would they be considered
accomplices at that point?
Yeah.
Yeah,
if they're inviting
underage girls over?
Because I know a girl
I know a girl that talks about
being there
for a couple days.
She's over the age though
but I'm just saying like
Oh, then that's gonna be a lot of girls
were not.
Yeah, I mean
if the,
if,
The thing is with the feds in human trafficking, when the kid is under 18, it's automatic.
It's like a slam dunk.
It's easy.
Once they're of age, then it becomes tougher because now you've got to prove certain things.
But what if these kids are underage too?
Like, is that okay?
Oh, you're saying like his kids being underage and helping him?
Yes.
Oh.
That's a good question.
So would he get in trouble for that?
Yeah.
Would they get in trouble with the kids if they're underage too as well?
I mean, there's probably a state charge for that, like child neglect or something like
that, but at a federal level, I don't think the kids, if they're underage, like, they're not,
the feds really stay away from prosecuting juveniles.
Okay.
They try their best not to.
It's very difficult to prosecute a juvenile, at the federal level, at least.
Wow.
Wow.
This is, you know, it's clear, you know, it's clear Cassie's a-
New York tomorrow and, like, go sit in the courtroom if you can.
His initial appearance.
He should.
Well, here's the thing.
So you tell me.
So in this is a sealed case.
Is it possibly that is it going to be in an open courtroom?
Like we don't know.
Like it is.
So everything in federal court is open unless it's like a FISA court.
No, it's going to be open.
We just got to figure out I'm going to look right now on Pacer and see obviously the case is sealed right now.
But they're going to unseal it.
It's just a matter of like figuring out when they do initial appearance.
I looked on Pacer.
The case isn't there.
which, which I'm guessing if it's, if the initial, if the initial indictment isn't there,
you just can't find the case.
But I'm pretty sure it'll appear in the morning.
But, but there isn't a case that originates in the last like week for day.
You can you could dispel this, this myth, bro?
They're saying that we went to a ditty party, which we did not.
Please tell them, bro.
Oh, me?
Hell not.
They get a fuck.
No, no, no.
No, no.
And I'm going to be honest with you.
was like, this is where we're going to get like so much more information from this indictment.
All right.
But by the way, and still continuing off what you're saying fresh, but I also want to ask,
Myron is like, this and, you know, we see all the time in like these gang or sometimes,
you know, recal cases with, you know, gangs, obviously.
We see maybe sometimes an indictment, then we see a supersedean indictment.
You know, sometimes they'll bring more shit into it.
Do we think that whatever indictment that gets unsealed tomorrow,
that's it what he's facing, like, right?
Or are they still maybe trying to cook up something
that they could try to hit him with
or whatever we see on sealed tomorrow,
that's going to be the mountain that he has to climb?
Yeah, no.
They can absolutely do a superseding indictment.
They did it for R. Kelly.
Did they?
for the yeah they did they did they did a superseding indictment from I think later on and for the audience that's wondering a superseding indictment guys is nothing more than um you get him indicted right by the grand jury the first time and then you can come back and I know six nine they did a superseding indictment let's say during the course of the investigation they added the niggins who kidnapped them exactly so you can come back and you can do a superseding indictment and you can do a subpoenaed end up again you add more charges or add more um uh targets
Hey, this is going to sound like a ridiculous question.
How, like, ballparkney on this, you know, me,
classic pocket watcher, listen, I'm the best when it comes to pocket watch.
I love doing it.
What are we thinking of?
Like, I look at the raids.
We got to think the manpower.
We're convened a grand jury for like three months.
This is Diddy.
What do you think the feds are in in terms, obviously, like,
we're talking about budget here and resources.
but how much you think they have put behind this case so far?
A couple million easily, bro.
Really?
I mean, to do a wiretap, to give you guys kind of an idea,
to do a wiretap for a month, right, cost about $50,000.
Really?
Damn.
And that's just a wiretap, right?
But it's very expensive to run an investigation between, you know, surveillance,
doing warrants, going out and interviewing a lot of these witnesses
that probably aren't in New York City.
You have to go out to other places to interview them.
And obviously with a case like this as a case agent,
I want to make sure that I'm out there to do some of these interviews.
Yeah, they've spent doing surveillance, tracking his assets.
That's the other thing, too, is they're probably going to try to identify someone like this.
They're going to identify his real assets for forfeiture, right?
What they can and can't take.
Doing the search warrants where they did a multiple search warrants in Miami and they did one in L.A.
at the same time simultaneous search warrants.
the amount of coordinating between two different field offices to do it.
Actually, three field offices, because New York ran the investigation.
You have to send a collateral case to Miami.
Then you've got to send a collateral case to L.A.
So off-rip, I already know that they got three open investigations on Diddy in three different jurisdictions
and three different field offices.
And that's three different AUSA's offices that are dealing with it as well.
Because you have to get search warrants in those jurisdictions, which means you have to go
through the United States' attorneys offices in those different jurisdictions.
You can't write a judge can't give you a search warrant in the Southern District of New York
for a house that's in the Southern District of Florida.
You need to go to a judge in the Southern District of Florida
to get that warrant signed.
So that means more than likely a Miami agent
had to swear out the affidavit down here
unless the case agent flew down.
But he probably did.
So, yeah, man, millions of dollars.
There's probably a lot of flights and shit, right?
What was that, sorry?
I said it's probably a lot of flights and shit, right?
Wow.
Oh, yeah, for a case like this,
they were probably flying all over the country
to interview witnesses and everything like this.
Because this case is what I would call, like,
like more of a historical case.
So it's going to be heavily reliant upon witness testimony,
which means you've got to track these motherfuckers down,
find out where they're at,
interview them,
do multiple interviews,
make sure you get the story straight.
You know,
you're preparing them and everything else like that.
So,
you know,
it's,
it's going to be tough.
And then obviously they're doing,
they've had the grand jury convened for months now
for this particular investigation,
bringing witnesses in,
right?
Because we know that they've had this grand jury
opened out for a few months.
And they,
and I assume that was,
predominantly to get a lot of these witnesses and to give their testimony so that they can get a true bill of indictment.
Hey, humor me for a second.
And I'm going to be a little bit into the conspiracy theory lane, but I'll just ask a question that I've seen people ask before.
What is the possibility that, you know, okay, Diddy could possibly, you know, okay, he's taken into custody.
But he could probably wiggle and squeeze his way out of this by saying, hey, I got a bigger fish for you out of fry.
Hey, have you heard about my boy Sean Carter?
Jay-Z, jigger man, or I'm not saying that him, but anybody, like just somebody else that day.
I could be like, I could throw somebody else under the bus for you to get me out of the fuck this shit.
Hey, you ever heard of Clive Dave?
Like, do you think that possibly the feds will be down to say, hey, Diddy, I think you could give us a bigger fish?
or are we saying, nah, did he's a big fish enough?
It will look crazy if they gave him a deal to give up somebody else.
Sure.
And I can explain this because this is kind of a more nuanced question when it comes to informants and, you know, hierarchy and stuff like that.
So typically when you open up a case, right, you open up a case under what's called a file title, right?
It's going to be your main target and then at all, right, which means basically him and whoever else is involved.
Guaranteed this case is probably Sean Combs at all.
He's the main guy.
and then everyone falls underneath him, right?
If you look at the 6-9 case, it was,
was the top guy?
Oh, yeah, no, no, actually, you're right, you're right.
Yeah, it was, yeah, yeah.
His real name, I forget his real name, Jamel or something like that.
Mel murder was his name, but the case title and 6-9's case was Mel Murder.
So this is how it works when it comes to informant.
So I'll give you guys kind of a thing for your audience here.
If you're going to cooperate with the government,
if you're going to cooperate, you're going to be an informant, et cetera,
you better not be the fucking top guy,
Because more than likely when you're the top guy, they're not going to cut you a deal because you're the file title, you're the main dude, unless you have some crazy fucking person that you're going to give up, maybe it's a dirty cop or dirty off, dirty agents, some shit like that, not a dirty politician.
It's very unlikely that you're going to get time off when you're the file title.
Now, what I will say is, and this is why 6'9 got such a great deal, 6'9 was what I would call like the sweet spot, right?
He was in a position of power, but he wasn't so high up where he couldn't necessarily work a deal, but he was also not so low.
where he didn't know the inner workings of the gang.
Since he was the rapper and the guy that made the money,
he was right smack dab in the middle where he was rubbing elbows with all the top dudes
so he knew what was going on at the uprest salon.
But at the same time, he knew the guys on the lower level who was able to give information on them.
That's why he was able to give information on, you know, was it Kuda?
Right, Kuda B?
And get time off despite him giving an order for him to go shoot at Chief Keefe.
And he was also able to give information on the guys that were above him.
And that knocked off his sentence significantly because he was in the first.
perfect position since he dealt with the money.
And this is typically what ends up happening whenever you're doing criminal investigation.
The guys that deal with the money almost always are some of the best informants because
they're dealing with all different components of the organization because when you're the
financier, you've got to deal with everybody.
So he was in that great spot to give people above him and below him.
But when you're the top guy, it's very difficult to get a deal and get cooperation points
because you're the file title unless you're able to give like some extraordinary target,
you know, a corrupt individual who's in a position of public trust,
it's going to be very difficult for you to get time off.
Wow.
And by the way, chat, you guys see as posted on DJ Academics TV,
the Instagram and the Twitter account says USA Damien Williams,
which is the U.S. attorney.
He said earlier this evening, federal agents arrested Sean Combs based on a sealed
indictment far about the Southern District of New York.
We expect to move to unsealed the indictment in the morning and we'll have more.
more to say at that time.
By the way, here's the thing.
I don't know if you've seen this,
and shout to my boy, Aiden.
I know Aiden's probably hit my phone right now,
but he's live right now with Sneko,
I think this is Convieve,
it's a cuff him and Fuzi.
And Fuzi supposedly said that one of his boys
went to a Diddy party,
and they invited him to Diddy's room
where, I guess, Fuzi's friend,
claim that, and I'm sorry to be bringing
other people's names into this,
but it says,
Trigger Trey.
AKA Tray Songs
Was straddling
And sitting on Diddy's lap
Making out with him
Let me just play this real quick
I think you guys should be able to hear
I could say something about a Diddy party right now
But I don't know the rules of the game
If I'm allowed to say it
Say it
You'll be okay
Um
One of my boys
The social media influencer
This was early back in like
2018
What's one of your boys
I'm not gonna expose him
Because he says some viable shit
But he was out of Diddy party
And they invited him to Diddy's room
he walks in, Trey songs was sitting on Diddy's lap making out with him and they asked him if he wanted to join.
What the fuck?
No, in no way.
They're all gay.
They're all undercover gays.
I promise you that.
Yo, that's crazy.
I promise you that.
That is crazy.
I could say something.
Wait, wait, wait.
That is crazy, bro.
Oh, my God.
Yeah, what the fuck?
I don't know what the hell is going on.
Not trick of Trey, man.
No, tricket, bro.
Okay.
So how do you draw the line?
and I want to keep your investigator hat on.
How do you draw the line between, okay, this is industry?
Because here's the thing.
There's been a lot of, you know, it's so funny that half of these niggas love ditty parties.
And then you'll hear something like, oh, we just never seen that, whatever.
But it's like, diddy party is like a spectacle.
It's always been in hip-hop.
If you're an investigator, how do you draw the line between, oh, okay, this is just,
just some harmless fun shit or maybe not harmless fun shit but shit we shouldn't you know
spend time or expend our energy into our resources trying to like hunt down versus this is
the true crime that's happening here like how do you pick that out because it appears that he was
you know he was non-stop like he was on some take that take that shit yeah no that's a good
question i think i think the biggest thing right and and i'll tell you this from
me wearing that hat like you asked before
put up, keep your investigator hat on.
And this is going to sound very
fucked up, but I would
only go after shit that matter from a
prosecutorial standpoint, what I can actually prove.
Right? And some people might say, oh, well, that's messed up, man.
But the reality is,
at the federal level, you have a higher
threshold to prove a case
and get prosecution and prove it
guilty beyond a reasonable doubt. Like, the feds don't lose
for a reason because they take their time and they
go after the things that they can actually prove.
So in this situation, you know,
some dudes, you know, doing some questionable activities, et cetera,
is that going to be as sexy to an AUSA a lot of the times?
Probably not.
But if you got a female victim who's underage and she's saying that, hey, I was assaulted
and I was GR'd, right, by a group of men, well, that's going to be a lot easier to
sell to the U.S. Attorney's Office for prosecution.
And at the end of the day, guys, right, getting your case accepted by the AUSA's office
for prosecution is not as easy to do as people think it is because they have a lot of
discretion on what they take and what they don't take.
So you need to go after the things that are tangible, the things that you can prove,
and the things that is going to get their attention.
You, act, ain't the way you believe that, bro.
What?
Do you believe that?
Believe what?
Trace off in that?
No way, bro.
You don't believe that, do you?
I mean, I'm not getting charged, but I think I do have the right to be silent.
Anything, you know, I'm going to just, I'm going to just.
Yeah.
No, no.
The only reason why, by the way, I want to expound before anybody saying, say some weird shit, like, oh, I can't say.
No.
I'm going to be honest with you.
Sexually, I've heard many things about many people in this industry.
Some, and a lot of them happen to be sex symbols.
So there's, you know, I never want to throw nobody under the bus
because I don't never want nobody to do that to me.
But Trace Songs is a very, very, like, there are conversations about him.
I won't say illegal, but conversations about him into different things.
And I'm not saying he's homosexual.
I'm not saying anything else.
What I'm saying is that when I hear sexually explorative, like, conversations,
and it mentions Trey songs or Diddy,
I'm not going to be like this is the first time I've ever heard it.
So I can't jump out and be like, oh, I don't believe.
I don't know what to believe.
Truth be told.
Okay.
Yeah.
Real quick, I just want to.
tell my people we got like 13k on YouTube
guys come on over uh on Twitch
Twitch that TV slash FreshFrew we're trying to build that thing up as you all know
FreshFay podcast we're having a discussion with
Ak obviously on this situation which I'm asking some really
good questions here. Um you're like really making me kind of go back in time like okay
what would we do in this situation? Um
but I think it's very important for the audience to know
um like my prediction here is that
they wouldn't have pursued this case so aggressively and done
the multiple state search warrants. Um,
you know, seize all the items, convene the grand jury.
I predict that they're probably going to have anywhere between 10 to 30 different witnesses.
They wouldn't have done all this and then go ahead and use the RICO statute,
which I predict is what we're going to see in a grand jury indictment tomorrow,
had they not been sure that they got this guy dead to rights.
You know, I predict that he's going to have to probably take a plea deal.
I know that he's liquidated a lot of his assets so that he can go ahead and fight this case
because not only does he have this criminal case,
but he also has a multitude of civil cases going against him.
I think this Danny D. Kane chick just literally just did a civil case against him recently for sexual assault.
By the way, I also, and I don't want, you know, I'm hoping, because this is like the high price you pay of being in media.
Yeah.
There is two individuals that sent over documents to me, and I'm not going to publish them or give them any light, but other than this potential mention right here,
they have served Diddy two other individuals with notice to file loss.
It's like a, hey, we're going to file a lawsuit, but we can start settling.
And there's people, there's two individuals currently who are at that point.
And, you know, he has about like 20 cases now, like on a civil level.
And everyone's going to come because they notice now, especially now that he's gotten arrested.
like I would not be surprised if he doesn't get served with a few more of these because what they're going to look at it like okay
he's not a position to fight these cases because he's he's going to obviously allocate most of his resources to his criminal defense team
so he's going to be more than likely willing to kind of play ball and give us what we want a million here two million here
blah blah blah so I definitely predict that he's going to um you know more even more people are going to kind of come out the woodwork and try to sue him civilly
so they get a quick payout because he's not going to have the time or the ability or even
resources to fight this stuff in court from in a civil case okay let me give you two scenarios of
first scenario if you're dd at this point and obviously this goes into you know criminal law so you know
obviously you have your experience there but like maybe not be your forte is it something where you
might be like hey listen for all the civil cases you guys get pushed to the the back burner
everything focuses on the on the criminal and at worst if it gets to be too overwhelming as long as we
potentially beat or at least try to neutralize as much as possible the criminal elements
remember these are civil cases you could always file bankruptcy yeah um so you're asking me
like as a former investigator like what would we focus on the criminal case
Well, that's why I said.
I'm asking you to get into almost, you know, maybe a defense attorney or a civil defense attorney had, like a strategist's hat.
If you're ditty, what do you do?
Do you be like, hey, fuck the civil cases.
Let's focus on.
Right far to the criminal defense case.
I would allocate all my resources to that.
Because if you go to jail, you're fucked, right?
And he's looking at very serious time here, guys.
Like he could die in prison if he's convicted of the stuff.
I know they gave R. Kelly 30.
Oh, okay, okay.
Oh, by the way, could you break that down?
Because that was a question being asked to me a lot.
What is he facing?
And I said essentially a life sentence.
I'll Google's age now.
You could tell me, I don't know if you know of the top of your head,
what some of these things that we've predicted, like, hold in terms of potential penalty.
But D.D. Age, he's currently 54 years of age.
He's going to turn 55.
in literally two weeks.
So two weeks from now,
or actually two and a half weeks,
he's going to be 55.
No, no, no, actually, I'm wrong, I'm wrong.
Whoa, definitely wrong.
It's a month, month and two weeks.
I'm sorry.
Yeah.
Yeah, I predict that he's going to be facing
a significant amount of time here
where you can die in prison, man, easily.
Really?
Yeah, I mean, they gave...
Over 10?
Let's go ballpark.
I know we're spitballing here and I know you love to be wrong.
I predict if he's found guilty.
Let's, okay, let's go with two scenarios.
Let's go, he goes to trial.
Yes.
He goes to trial.
Now, for those that are unaware, when you go to trial, 95% of cases, right, almost always plead out.
You almost never go to trial.
But if you go to trial and you force the government to prepare for a trial,
you're going to probably deal with the higher end of whatever sentence, you know,
the charges that you're getting hit with come with.
So if he goes to trial and loses, there's a,
very high likelihood he'll get easily somewhere
between 20 to 40 years, right?
Wow. If he goes to trial
for this. If it's what I'm thinking,
racketeering, sex trafficking, etc.,
yes, you know,
low end, 15,
higher end, 40, easily, right? If you goes
to trial. If he pleads guilty,
10th to 30 in that range.
If he pleads guilty.
And cooperates.
Wow.
I'm looking at some
these things. Hold on.
And for him to get any less time than 10,
he'd have to give up
a fucking dirty NYPD officer
or a public official or somebody big
for him to get less time.
Because he's the main target.
So anytime you're the main target of investigation,
it's very difficult for you to get time reduced
because you get hit with a sentencing enhancement
called leader organizer of the organization.
What about Jay-Z?
I mean, he would have to give like
significant stuff that leads to an actual indictment.
So you'd have to, like, real evidence.
From what we know, in the federal, and by the way, correct me, you can jump in any time,
you know, you're more well-vers than me.
When it comes to federal, you know, charges and going through the federal process, they have
these mandatory minimums that's unlike any other state where the only only, the only
only way, at least from my knowledge, they could go below would be if you have usually a
5K1 letter. And that's the, that's the snitch scarlet letter, which means proper, proper letter, yep.
Yes, a queen for a day, whatever the case is. Six-nine had a five-K-one letter that allowed the
judge to go beyond because six-nine was facing, you know, if we're thinking about consecutive
on some of these things, he was facing like 46 years.
Let's explain what a proffer is and a 5K is, right?
So I've done a couple, I've done a million of these, right?
So a proffer for you guys that are wondering, it's also known as a safety valve and drug
investigations.
Basically, the individual's typically been charged or whatever may be, and they have information
that can be beneficial to your investigation that can, you know, lead to other arrests,
whatever.
You bring the individual in, they sign a proffer letter with their defense attorney,
and what happens is they start, they can give you information where it can incriminate them,
but it can't be used against them.
So they can totally tell you whatever they,
need to tell you unless it's like a very, very serious
crime of violence or whatever may be, but
most of the time, everything is kind of, you know,
on the table, you're protected, you get
almost full immunity for a day.
And you're able to kind of just say whatever you got to say.
By the way, it's called queen for a day, usually
like, you know, on a lamest terms
type of thing. Some people call it queen for a day,
king for a day. That's also another term for it.
But it's, you know, 5K proper,
safety valve, all generally the same thing with little
nuance differences. You come in, you sit with the
agent and the prosecutor, and then you're
there with your defense attorney, and you provide this
information you sign a private letter. However, the deal goes out the window if you do one of two things.
A, you lie, right? That will mean that it's defunct. And then they can actually charge you for
those crimes. And then B, you need to provide substantial assistance. They use the term substantial
assistance to the government in the course of the investigation. I'll just spell it out for you guys.
You pretty much need to help them get other arrests and put other people in jail. So,
can did he get a 5k letter and a proffer if he has information on other individuals absolutely but the government's got to agree to even do it so they got he's got to have information on something that they give a shit about where they feel that it's worthy to give him a proffer because if they give him a proffer he can kind of say things and they can't do anything about it.
Hey by the way uh I wanted to throw this to you um I got to see if he authorized me to kind of you know I'm not
necessarily fully docks in him here but uh um okay this is my man and i don't know if you want me
to say his name but um you know he's he's you guys will probably know who is this is six nine
and by me he's a chat nigga too like this is my guy i think he's in a discord you i treat my boy right man
um this is six nine head security during when everything happened he says yo bro um i was there when
all the trucks were surveilling us they followed us
everywhere. He said they basically stalked us. By the way, keep in mind, this is the time where
the feds had picked six nine up first. They pulled them into a meeting. They say, hey, listen,
we have information that you might be targeted and you might be possibly attacked by other members
of the gang. Do you want us to give you protection? And that was almost like a soft way of trying
to see me. So here's the thing. I actually did a whole talk on this. Go ahead. On, on,
on, uh, on, on, on my fed reaction. And actually, I'll give it to even. So, oh, and by the way,
the last thing, and I thought over to you have the last thing he said, he said, um, he said,
um, he said, I was during the, I was there during the hits and everything. And he says,
he knows for a fact, they tapped his phone to. Um, all right. Go ahead. So let's go
ahead and go through this, right? So I actually know this very intimately, right? Because
at the time, right, when I was working for the agency, I had a Chinese organized crime case
and I went up to New York and I actually met with some of the agents from the HSI New York office case,
HSI New York, and this was right after they had picked up 6-9. And I kind of figured this out from
talking to them. And then also, I worked in the HSI New Haven office and I knew agents there as well.
So here's a story with this situation.
6-9 was going to go to the casinos in Connecticut.
For those that are unaware, we got Foxwoods and Mohegan, right?
Which is over on Eastern Connecticut, right?
And at the time, the feds were listening to, or HSI, they were listening to, if I'm not mistaken, Mel Murder's phone or Jim Jones.
They were listening to Mel Murder.
Yeah, I think it was Mel Murder who spoke to Jim Jones.
Yes, go ahead.
There you go.
So they were listening to Mel Murder's phone.
And from, and I know this from doing Title III's, one of the things that you must, one of the things that you must,
must do if you hear this on a title three.
If you hear violence going to occur,
you have to notify the individuals whose life is threatened
if you listen to it on the phone.
Now, obviously, this sucks because now you're kind of disclosing
that you might be having a wiretap, right?
So you have to kind of go about it in a creative way
to not disclose it.
So what happened?
Hold on, wait, hold on.
So, and by the way, that infamous call,
it was a conversation.
And I won't play it here, you know,
not to board the audience.
But the conversation, Jim Jones, I believe,
told Mel murder, you have to supervise.
So, so as a federal agent, how do you know that means kill?
Because super violate means what?
Yeah, I mean, yeah, you superviolet, you already know.
You're listening to that on the wiretap.
You're like, okay, this is a threat against his life.
Because at this point, Sixth I was kind of on the outs with them.
I think he had just done.
All the way out.
He just did a breakfast club interview saying that he's by himself.
He re-recorded lyrics saying he don't need nobody.
Yes.
Yes.
so he said he fired his whole crew etc
now what a lot of people don't know was
he was actually planning to go to Connecticut
right and go gamble at the casinos
now from an agent's perspective
this is a fucking nightmare right
because on one end
you're listening to Melmurter's phone
the main target of your investigation
and you literally heard a credible threat
against Takashi's life
so you have to go notify him
so what do they do they go tell him look bro
there's a threat against your life
I doubt that they told him that we're on a wiretapping
you the other shit
They're like, look, we got information that there's a threat on your life.
We need you to do X, Y, Z.
6.9, being the rambunctious person, he says, no, fuck that shit.
I'm not going to, I don't need job protection.
Like, fuck that.
I'm a rapper.
Like, I can't be seen with y'all.
This is a career ender.
Fuck that.
Right.
And obviously, he had a plan to go to Connecticut to gamble at the casino.
Now, from an agent perspective, there's two things you can do.
A, you find a way to get him arrested to protect himself from himself.
Or B, right?
You let him go to Connecticut.
And you have to maintain surveillance.
on him the whole time to make sure he doesn't get fucking killed.
Well, for those that are unaware, Connecticut,
Mohegan, and Foxwoods, it's on
sovereign Native American territory.
So now...
Wow, what does that mean?
So, it's run by the tribal police.
They have their own, like, law enforcement there.
Does the Fed supersede that?
Well, this is where it gets this.
So this is a thing.
You can go in there, of course.
You can, obviously, you have your federal agent, but you now have to notify the
tribal police that you're going to be,
there, you're going to be conducting surveillance, et cetera, and kind of the situation.
Feds don't like to notify the state and locals if they don't need to, especially on a high-profile
case like this.
Now, what makes this even more of a nightmare is the New York field office now has to go into
what's called a different area of responsibility.
Mohegan is going to be considered, Mohegan's son and Foxwood, et cetera, that's going to be
covered by HSI New Haven and HSI Hartford.
Well, I'll tell you all right now, those are two small field offices, maybe 20, 30 agents
total in the state.
right they're not going to be able to effectively cover this guy on surveillance and you got to take hSI new york agents and follow him as well so that's a fucking logistical nightmare to not only follow 6-9 all the way to connecticut and make sure that he's safe but now you got to notify the tribal police and let them know yo uh you know we're going to be in your a war doing surveillance on this individual blah blah blah they're like man fuck this shit this is a nightmare and if something happens god forbid there is a shootout some bloods or anything else like that show up follow him to the to the to the to the
casino and there's a shooting and anyone gets hurt and the feds knew about it bro that's a
fucking PR nightmare so they're like you know what fuck this shit we're just gonna arrest them
that's why if you look at the indictment it's kind of rushed when they went ahead and picked up
six nine all these other guys i think they kind of picked them up to um well obviously he was involved
in recriminal activity but i think that their strategy was to arrest them on yeah to avoid
them off they have to save them from himself hmm hey that's my problem
So, okay. Wow.
Yeah, you got some instant here.
No, no.
We love the insight.
I want to ask you this question.
And I think this is probably on the minds of everybody watching
and, you know, to the tens of thousands watching you
and even watching me.
And by the way, if you guys don't know, I'm live, you know,
with my guys from Fresh and Fish.
Shouts my man, Fresh.
And also, of course, shout to Myron Gaines.
If you guys don't know, Marron Gaines is a former.
Law enforcement officer that worked with the federal government
in the exact roles of the agents who are now investigating
and subsequently have arrested Sean P. Diddy Combs tonight?
What do you think tonight?
Because here's the thing we think of Diddy as to take that,
take that toothpick in the mouth, boozy.
Like, yo, he got the Star Island crib.
He got the $60 million dollar crib in motherfucking, um,
uh, L.A.
he has the private jet.
What is tonight like?
And again, I don't know if you're familiar with like the intake system necessarily in New York,
but like what is it like having somebody who, you know, the media is clamoring to no details,
but he's going to be probably spending, I would hope, or not hope,
but I would probably guess he's going to spend a night tonight in jail.
What's tonight like as an agent?
what's tonight like for him?
What conditions is he in?
Is he actually in a cell?
Is he handcuffed?
Or is he chilling in a room just kind of eating, you know what I mean?
Eating, you know, a potato chips and just kind of watching this while his lawyers are kind of hammering out of details.
What's tonight like for it?
This is what I think.
Okay, so this is what happened.
I guarantee you this will happen.
He gets arrested, right?
Either by the case agent or people that are watching him on surveillance, they take him to the New York HSI office, bring him into the interview room.
the case inj walks in, hey look, you know, these are your rights, blah, blah, blah.
Do you want to talk?
More than likely, I'm willing to bet he's going to say, no, I'm not talking without an attorney present.
At that point, you know, the case it could kind of decide if he wants to let the attorney come in and they can have that discussion or he says, you know what, fuck it, we're going to book him in.
They probably took him to one of the federal facilities.
I'm thinking, I think there's one in Brooklyn, if I'm not mistaken, FDC Brooklyn or something like that.
Drop them off there.
They're probably going to put him in protective custody for obvious reasons.
he's going to be by himself.
The case agent is going to probably get all his stuff together and be in court tomorrow.
Is he in cuffs?
I'm sorry to cut you off because like these details matter because sometimes we think, like, for example, when we've seen Trump, right?
Like there's no proof that Trump actually got put in cuffs, right?
He takes like, it's almost like a selfie, like it's a mugshot.
Like, like what's happening is, did he getting treated like the rest of these motherfucking citizens in New York?
Is he getting cuffed in the front?
Is he get cuffed in the back?
Is he getting put in a car?
Is he getting put in a paddy wagon?
Is he just getting put in a plane?
In an unmarked car?
Like, what do you think this is looking like?
What's the privilege like for a billionaire?
I'll tell you exactly how it has went down.
So they arrested him at the lobby.
Hey, look, man, we got a warrant for your arrest, et cetera.
Cuffs?
You know, probably cuffed them in the front, walk him out quietly.
Okay.
Right?
They're going to have an unmarked parked out there ready to go.
They put them in the back of the car, drive them over to the New York office in New York City.
for HSI
You know, obviously I'm
And I hate to cut you up
But I like to get to the nitty gritties
Okay, we know ditties being flanked
By security, the same third
Are they showing up with a little bit of force
Because you never know
You might have two arms
They're telling security fuck off
We got an arrest warrant for him right here
Get the fuck out here
Okay
So security can't do shit
So security can follow
There is, it's gonna be a stand down
Let's do this quietly
or this could be embarrassing.
Exactly, right?
And I'm assuming that's how you would go about it
if you want him to cooperate and talk to you.
That's why I'm saying like me, right?
If I'm the case agent,
I'm going to have my guys approach nice and quiet.
Hey, look, bro.
Because they're in plain clothes.
Keep in mind, these are special agents.
These are federal agents.
They're in plain fucking clothes.
Go out to him.
Look, man, we got a warrant for your arrest.
HSI.
Boom.
Look, let's just do this quietly.
We'll cuff you in the front.
Or you just walk out with us.
We'll cuff you right by the car.
Tell the security stand down.
Put him in the vehicle.
Case agent is probably either there on scene when he's
getting arrested, right, to see if they can get any spontaneous utterances, which is spontaneous
utterance, is where they say something, right?
Spontaneously, that can be used in court, right, without the fourth, without the Miranda rights
being read, which the Miranda rights is you have the rights of main sound, blah, blah, blah,
all this other shit, which you have to read to them when they're being arrested.
So they might make a spontaneous utterance, whatever, oh, fuck, man, they got me some other
bullshit like that, you can use that, right?
So they put them in the car, Casey is probably there, ask them questions, hey, blah, blah,
wait, wait, wait, hold on.
I know y'all hate with me cut them off
Wait, you could use a spontaneous
utterance without reading the Miranda rights?
Yeah, so like when you arrest somebody
And this happens all the time
When I was on the job
You arrest somebody right
And they're like fuck I knew this fucking asshole
Got me jammed up
Or oh fuck this fucking dude lied to me
Like whatever
Like when you get him picked up
You can use that
Because he said a spontaneous utterance
And you don't ask him no questions
Wow
I don't think that's that's well known
Oh wow that's
That's very interesting.
Okay.
You can, I've, dude, I've gotten people all the time with that where you're going to go arrest them and they'll make some comments like this fucking asshole sent me up.
Like, fuck, they snitch on me.
Like, like, you can use that.
Yeah, you can use that.
You can absolutely use that, man.
Yeah.
And then, and then, you know, and then obviously you read them his rights after the fact before you ask any questions, but you can absolutely use spontaneous utterances when they're being arrested.
So as the case agent, you'd want to be there when that happens or you send two of your guys that you really trust to affect the arrest and then you ask him, hey, did he say,
anything when you pick them up. So they probably bring them out to the car. They want them to
cooperate, right? And a lot of the time, federal agents are going to be really cool with you
because they want to get a statement, right? They're not going to fucking throw you to the floor
and also the other bullshit. They're going to do it nice and quietly, not try to embarrass you,
right? Their job is to take away your freedom, not your dignity, right? Especially if they
want to get a statement from you. So they put you in the car, Ksage is probably there,
reads them as Ms. Miranda real quick, ask them some questions, you know, maybe make some small talk,
whatever may be. Then they get them back to the office. Hey, you want to talk. No, I want a lawyer.
no problem, we're going to start, you know, getting you ready for the U.S. Marshals, right? Because
the way it works in the federal system is when you have someone arrested federally, right,
sometimes you, and we're really getting in the weeds here, but I'll explain it anyway.
So some, the U.S. Marshals a lot of times have contracts with local jails to hold bodies for them
that are federal custody. Now, in a place like New York City, which is big, they might not
necessarily need that. So you might, you might just take them right to the federal detention center
right and there's going to be marshals there that will book them fingerprint them put them into ncic
all that other stuff right and then they'll put them in there and then the next morning right
sometimes they'll be an arrangement with the marshals or the agent himself you got to go pick
them up and then take them to court um in front of the magistrate but in this case a big city like
that more than likely they probably have a streamlined system the marshals probably bring them
to the to the courthouse for you and then you're just there for the initial appearance okay
Two questions.
Go ahead, Fras.
Real quick.
So our guy is here, David Green,
his real estate expert.
So we're thinking about buying Dittie's mansion.
It's for sale right now, bro.
It's on the market right now for sale, brother.
What you want?
Nica, you won't buy this house or not?
Well, okay.
All right.
I got to get like a notepad like, like, Maron,
because you just brought up another point,
which I think it's a great point to bring up.
So, by the way, there was an erroneous.
I think it's erroneous.
lawsuit filed and even a there was a what he called again it was a fuck it was a order that was
actually signed by a judge basically it was like an injunctive order like like basically
uh yo saying that hey his properties are subject to maybe the the um worth of what he has that
could be the subject of a civil suit and some inmate, which I think this is bullshit,
but this inmate filed two things.
He filed a lawsuit against Diddy, which, by the way, he got a, you got a, uh, you guys
know what I'm talking about or not because I could bring it up.
Inmate.
I'm not familiar with this.
Yes.
So an inmate got a default judgment, right, of $100 million in Michigan.
Some random inmate.
So he got a $100 million judgment in Michigan.
Obviously, now his lawyer, like I guess his lawyers didn't know about it.
Somehow they finested where they convinced the court that it was served properly.
Did he never heard of it?
Now did these lawyers say they're going to contest it?
But not only did they get the default judgment, which obviously did these lawyers,
they're going to go to vacate, they went to go get like an injunctive order from that judge to say,
his property, the homely hills one that he's trying to sell for like 60 or 70 million,
cannot be sold because that will be the subject of compensation,
barring the result of this case, which the guy already got a judgment for,
which is $100 million.
So basically saying until further proceedings,
they wanted the judge to block that sale or any potential sale.
I'm not familiar with that.
I know you said you had two questions, though, from before.
I know Fresh literally detracted from what you were trying to ask.
What was the two questions you were asking?
Yeah, I should have wrote it down.
Okay, okay.
I was describing to how the marshals take the guy,
how the feds would pick him up, try to get an interview,
direct off to the marshals,
and then you said you had two questions,
and Fresh totally derailed everything.
by that fucking...
No, no, no, but he's asking
a good question, too.
Okay.
So, I think...
This real estate question.
What the hell?
Nothing to do with the marshals, man.
My boy.
My boy.
I forgot the private airport.
We never seen him in cuffs.
We never seen him treated,
even like how we've seen his sons
or maybe like the workers
that it's crib being treated.
And a lot of people think
this is billionaire privilege.
So I guess it goes to two questions.
How certain are you tonight
that Diddy is actually in a jail cell?
A thousand percent.
He's probably martial custody right now we speak
or he's talking about the feds
if he's cooperating.
So you think a hundred,
100% he is in some jail cell in New York City like any other inmate.
Guaranteed.
I mean, hell, we might even be able to, I mean, I don't know, BOP, no, the BOP website
might not have it.
But yeah, he's definitely either, A, cooperating and talking about the feds right now,
or B, he's in a jail cell in New York City somewhere, probably maybe FDC, Brooklyn
or some shit like that or in Manhattan, depending on wherever the marshals have their contract
with withholding federal prisoners.
Okay, and by the way, I'm looking that up as we speak.
I don't know if I'll be able to find it.
I will ask you this.
And by the way, I just looked it up and says no records found.
He hasn't been committed to Bureau of Prisons.
Yeah, he's in martial custody.
Okay.
I looked up through the...
After you've been sentenced.
Yeah, I looked up through the New York City Department of Corrections,
usually even if they're in...
So the popular intake place in New York is what's called the tombs,
especially Manhattan.
And usually you would see that person in there and we figure out where they go from.
from there.
Even federal, right?
Because they probably have a contract
with the marshals.
Yes, because Kastanova used to be able to
at a certain point.
I'm not saying initially.
At a certain point,
you could be able to find him through there,
but we can't find anything with Diddy yet.
Second of all, here's the second question.
You spoke about how the arrest probably went down.
Now, you being an agent
and kind of like mapping out these things,
Did he,
did he's obviously cooperated at certain extent?
He comes to a New York City high rise.
what level of force do you go in with?
Because the level of force we saw in Miami and even L.A.
It looked like they were ready for.
And, you know, obviously they defended that.
We seen Ditties baby mama said, hey, why did you need all that?
Why did you have the gun to, you know, my son's head of this and third?
And basically they said, well, we hear there's a lot of weapons.
And we had to, whatever, whatever.
in this situation, you're playing the arrest.
How much force are you going in with?
And how do you determine?
And the reason why is because if you want them to cooperate and talk to you,
you can't go in and like, you know, fuck them up and expect them to talk to you.
So like for the arrest, you're going to go in very, you know, very quietly, very covertly,
especially someone like this that has a public image.
You don't want to embarrass them.
You want to kind of like, hey, man, we're going to do your side.
We're not going to cuff you up in front of everybody, right?
Maybe they did.
Who knows?
it depends on how the interaction went,
but if I'm the case agent and I want to get cooperation,
I'm not going to go in there and arrest the guy crazy
because that could really mess things up.
Now, as far as the search warrant goes,
because you said that they went and used.
So, okay, let me explain this,
because people, so people kind of understand,
when you're conducting a search warrant, right,
and you're looking for evidence of a crime in a house, right?
Depending on the individual,
that's going to kind of dictate
how you proceed with doing the search warrant.
Now, when you're doing a search warrant,
search warrant. The number one thing that you need to do is you need to clear the house first,
then you get agents in there to actually search, right? So first you got to do the sweep.
Make sure there's nobody in there. Anybody that is in there, you zip time, get them the hell out
the house, make sure it's completely safe. Then you bring the agents in that are a part of the
investigative team to do it. But the people that are going to go in and clear the house is, in this
case, it was the SRT special response team, right? That's their SWAT team. So if I'm the case agent,
I'm not going to do the, you know, I prefer to let the SRT to handle it, clear the house,
big structure like that, make sure it's safe.
Then I send the guys in my group that are helping me with this investigation and know what to look for.
Then they go in and start searching it.
So it's two different teams of agents kind of that are dealing with the search warrant.
So first is the clearing from the tactical side.
Once that's done, then you get the actual agents that are involved in the case and have a stake in a case to go in and actually search.
So, you know, that's just kind of how search warrants are done, right?
And then if you know that the individual might have guns in a house, there's going to be certain people there or whatever may be, you know, you're going to actually, you know, you're going to operate with a
certain level of, you know, um, carefulness to make sure that no one's hurt. But after it's clear,
you're good to go. So that's why it's up happening. It's always where you want to use a strong
use of force to kind of like disincentivize anyone to do anything stupid. If you're going there with
the SRT team, they're going to be like, oh yeah, fuck that. I'm not going to fight these guys.
So, uh, it was reported on TMZ that not only did they arrest them, but they also went in
and they are executing a search. Well, they didn't say search for him, but they're searching
the hotel room he was in.
What do you think they're,
do they really believe that maybe he has some
incriminating evidence in his hotel room
or is that the standard procedure?
Yeah, I mean, you know,
they probably got a consent to search, right?
Since he's at that hotel,
I doubt that they actually cut paper
on a search warrant to go in there.
They probably said,
hey, look, man, up in your room,
do you need anything
that you need to get with you,
personal belongings, whatever?
He might have said, yeah, I do.
They escort him up there.
You know, maybe they ask him,
Hey, do you mind if we search?
Make sure it's safe.
Like, no one's in here hiding.
And they could go ahead and do a search.
So, you know, I'm assuming it's a consent to search or search incidents,
arrest bringing them up there to get any belongings you might want.
Wow.
So in the morning, this indictment is going to be, you know, at least.
It'll be unskilled.
Then we'll see exactly what he's looking at.
I predict it's going to be sex trafficking with racketeering.
But they can add other stuff.
We'll see what happens.
Is it a possibility that he gets out tomorrow?
yeah yeah I think it's a possibility
I think he's him and his legal team have planned for this
I think that's why they've been cooperating with the feds
actually as a matter of fact I'll take it a step further
I think that's why he is he's even in New York right now
we know that he spends most of his time as Miami
his main home is here
you know so I think a whole part of him even being in New York
in the first place
was he knew that these charges were going to come down
there was probably some type of you know communication
between the AUSA and his defense team
and he said you know
I'm going to make it easier for y'all. I'm here.
And this is all to lead up to this arrest so that he can go ahead and argue in court and say,
look, I've been nothing but cooperative.
The feds have known where I was the whole time.
My legal team has been in close communication with the United States Attorney's Office.
I am not a flight risk.
I'm not a danger to society.
I want to be out on bond fighting this case.
And I think he's going to have a good chance of getting bond.
All right.
So two things.
I'll give you all you guys update if you guys don't know.
So one of his, you know, I'll call.
I'll call her a girlfriend.
I'll be nice today.
Young Miami, Carisha.
Uh-oh.
She hit me up.
She said, hey, we should have a conversation.
She said she wants to talk about everything,
no holds bar about her career,
everything I've said about her.
I've had a lot of commentary about what I thought about her music career
and maybe some sacrifices that she made for a music career
because she wanted to be.
in a relationship with a guy who could be seen as a sugar daddy, right?
City Girls.
We were going to plan a time to do a Carisha Please episode, which, you know,
I talked to Frick's about.
First was like, I can sure are you good?
I said, listen, I've walked into the lines then many times.
I have no problems.
By the way, you know, to her credit, she said, all right, you know,
we're going to touch back up on this.
I'm still waiting for the date.
I'm down to show up any time.
she did do an interview though or did do a episode of her show where you know she did it with her homosexual
best friend um um saucy santana and he asked her some questions about this whole thing and what she
basically said was say listen i don't know too much or anything blah blah blah this and third
however there is a huge overlap with her and Diddy in the last I want to say three years to be generous
is it possible that maybe this indictment comes out and is just all legacy things that has
nothing to do with anything that happened in the last couple of years or do you think they
still try to tie at least some recent stuff into what he was doing in terms of
of his behavior.
Yeah, I could definitely answer that.
Real quick, I just want to tell my audience this.
Guys, we're going to switch on over to Twitch.
So come on over to Twitch.
Switch.
com slash Fresh and Fit podcast.
We're going to go on Twitch.
We're on YouTube right now and Rumble,
but come on over to Twitch, guys,
if you're watching on YouTube.
We'll drop the link in there.
We're going to switch right now, but I'll answer this question.
So the question is, are there going to be recent events
with potentially young Miami or any other co-conspirators
or any other witnesses in this indictment?
I think so, yeah, for sure.
They're going to have something in there recent
that at least kind of a lot.
lines with the statute of limitations because they're going to need to prove that the criminal
activity is still going on. That's a very important part of RICO is establishing that it's an
ongoing criminal enterprise. If you look at any RICO indictment, right, whether you look at the
6-9-1, you look at the Casanova one, et cetera, the first paragraph almost always is them talking
about the organization being defined as a criminal enterprise, right? So whether it was a
nitrate Gangsta Bloods or the Gorillostone Bloods from the Casanova situation, they're going to
define Diddy's organization as an enterprise first, then they're going to show, look, this is
the enterprise.
They've been doing this since the 80s or the 90s, and then they're going to start displaying
all the racketeering activities or criminal activities that have been going on since then,
all the way up until now.
And then there'll be something probably recent within the last five to 10 years in the
indictment that's the most recent.
But that's the whole, they're going to definitely have something in there that's
somewhat recent so that they can establish that this has been a pattern of criminal activity.
Okay. We're jumping ahead a little bit ahead of here, but, you know, obviously, again, for anybody who's watching, we are, this is pretty much not ground zero, but moment zero. If we hear about the arrest, we don't know what's in the indictment. We're going to hear about that in the morning. We'll have a fully unsealed indictment. We hope that we could break down. So we're just going off what we think. At what point when a suspect is taken into custody,
does conversation about maybe a potential plea start?
It can be immediately, depending on the individual, how much they're cooperating,
how much their defense team is involved in a situation like this,
where it seems that Ditties had defense from the beginning,
and they've been coordinating with the prosecution in the AUSA.
These are conversations that could be had almost immediately,
especially if the person's cooperative.
I mean, you know, when you see people being charged with something called an information
versus an indictment, nine out of ten times, that's because they've already kind of ironed out a plea deal and the person is cooperating with the government, which is why they got hit with the information versus a formal indictment.
But I predict that there's already been talks of them potentially playing out to something.
So we'll only see, right?
But we'll see how fast the case kind of moves along in PACER.
But I wouldn't be surprised if there wasn't a deal already worked out of him pleading to something.
Really. So you don't think this is going to be a long, knock-em-down type of case where they're like, hey, let's spend the first three months hammering out discovery. Let's then angle towards what we're going to do. Let's possible take some additional time. Let's figure out a trial date. You don't think it's going to be that slow.
Well, here's the thing. So good question.
If he gets Bond, they're going to drag their feet, right?
If he gets Bond, there's no reason to make it a, you know, a speedy trial.
You know, they need to do that because he's out and he's free.
So there's no need to do that.
But if he doesn't get Bond, which I don't, I do think he'll get Bond.
House arrest or no house arrest?
They're going to, what was that?
So, okay, let's say he gets Bond.
What does that look like?
He could go and be like, hey, listen, I was flying around the United States and I still came.
here for the indictment and I turned myself in, I want to be able to travel for work.
Okay?
I'll have an ankle monitor on, but I could travel for work.
Do you think that's a possibility or they're like, yo, fuck out of here.
You're going to stay your house, your ass in a penthouse or that goddamn Star Island spot in Miami.
Yeah.
Does you have to stay in New York?
Sorry.
I think it's very probable that he'll get, you know, access to be able to travel for work,
given the nature of his work and being a businessman and a musician, I don't think that they would.
Maybe they'll put them on an ankle monitor.
Maybe they'll give them house arrest if it's really strict.
But I don't foresee them saying like, no, you can't travel, especially since his defense team has been so cooperative.
I think the whole strategy for them was being cooperative from the beginning because they knew this was coming.
So they're going to say, look, we've been brought cooperative with y'all.
We tell you guys everywhere traveling.
You guys have the flight logs.
We tell you guys we're going ahead of time.
Like, obviously he's a businessman.
He's got to generate money.
etc.
You know, let him travel.
And I think the judge might say,
and the AUSA is probably not going to object to that.
Probably not going to object.
Real quick,
Hyped train level 5 on Twitch.
I just gave away 10 to 10.
Up on the top.
We're going to go right now.
So academics, man.
Let's get it.
Yeah, come on over to Twitch, guys.
We're transitioning.
No more live streaming on YouTube,
so we're slowly doing it.
But does that answer that, though, act?
Like, that's what I predict is going to happen with that.
Do you say, like, you know,
obviously we're talking about cooperating.
And obviously that's different from like, you know, snitching or whatever.
But, you know, just, hey, we're accommodating the investigation.
We're trying to help because we are quote unquote seemingly innocent.
Do you see this get to a point where maybe, you know, Dittie's legal team takes the angle that, hey,
my client has been, you know, attacked and, I mean it, more combative.
Like, hey, the AUSA's.
are targeted my client because of erroneous false civil lawsuits filed by money hungry people
who I've worked with who have just not done well in life.
And the AUSA believes these stuff and they're prosecuting on a very, they're using malintent
to try to get at me.
And maybe it's just not as, you know, okay, handshaky where, okay, you're working with
the AUSA and their office to.
I think what happened is.
That's a really good question.
So basically the question is like, how long are they going to play ball for and kind of be nice?
Yeah.
What I predict here is if he gets bond, they're going to.
So here's the thing, right?
So obviously there's going to be the discovery process, right, where the government is going to turn everything over to Diddy's legal team that they got.
Is there a time limit on that?
He doesn't know what they have yet.
Is there a time limit on that?
I'm sorry?
Typically, it's within a couple of, you know, the discovery process, it's an ever-fever.
flowing situation because as the investigation is ongoing, things come up.
You know, it's up to the AUSA to get that stuff out immediately.
But the evidence that they have that led to the indictment, they're going to hand that over
probably tomorrow, right?
It's probably on a thumb drive.
AUSA is probably ready to go to court tomorrow.
Give it to the defense attorney.
Here you go.
Here's a thumb drive of all the stuff.
Go through it, right?
So what I predict is after Diddy gets that bond, because they got to play nice with the government
so that they can get this bond.
once he's out and he's
on bond
and the defense has the
discovery
that's where I think okay
now it's kind of an adversarial
situation now let's go through this
discovery see what they got try to find holes
in this and then that's when they're going to really start
formulating their game plan once they have the discovery
and see what the feds actually have on Diddy
but I think they'll play ball
until he gets the bond and then from that point it's going to
be a little bit more of a cold war type situation
okay and again
forgive me for some of the questions I'm asking because they might just seem left field.
He's a good question.
At what point, if I'm Diddy and now I need to be prepared with my legal team,
at what point could I probably identify, oh, this person in my organization or this
former person I used to be cool is a snitch?
Who's the cooperatives?
Would that be probably abundantly clear off of the indictment,
being on sealed or do you have to wait for discovery to be like wait the only person that would
know this was the engineer who was in the studio so that person must be snitching or that might be
discovery or maybe you could read the complaint be like how to fuck they know that shit no good
question um so indictments are almost always more broadly written than criminal complaints are and
for the audience just so they kind of know um a criminal complaint in his affidavit written by
the special agent which literally outlines the case that and the the the whole that the
the facts that lead to probable cause.
They're far more detailed than indictments are, right?
And just so you guys know, a criminal complaint, you still have to indict the individual.
So the criminal complaint typically is done with a probable cause.
Like the example I gave earlier, I catch someone at the border.
He has a, you know, customs caught him with 10 kilos of coke.
I respond to the scene.
Obviously, we have the evidence right there.
I read up a criminal complaint, arrest him, and then within two weeks, we have to indict them.
In indictment, you kind of skip that whole affidavit thing, and then you just go right to the grand jury, indict it.
And then you get an arrest warrant, go get him, right?
So everyone has to be indicted at some point at the federal level if you're going to be criminally charged.
So, shit, what was it?
The question is, how do we find the snitches?
Because we know their cooperants.
Thank you.
Yeah.
Okay.
So with affidavit, that's why I was explaining this.
In affidavit, it's a lot easier to identify cooperators and informants because the agent himself is outlining the probable cause in his affidavit.
And a lot of the times it's very difficult for you to shield that.
You have to disclose informants to some degree unless you got an overwhelming amount of evidence where you didn't even need to put the informant stuff in.
But typically the informant stuff is what leads to probable cause.
So the affidavit will be able to reveal it.
Now, in this case with the indictment, the indictments are typically more broadly written.
So he could go ahead and read it, right, and kind of connect some dots here or there.
But it's not going to be as easy to tell with an indictment.
However, when they get the discovery, all of the HSI reports are going to be in there.
then that's when he'll be able to know
who is who and who said what,
et cetera,
because when they get those reports,
because the agents have to disclose
all the RIs, HSI calls them RIs,
reports of investigation,
that's where Diddy and his team
will be able to read those
HSI reports and they'll see all the witness interviews
and they'll know who is who
and that's going to come from the discovery.
This is going to be very, very interesting.
So he'll know who turned on him
within the first month or so easily.
Wow.
But what you do think he's going to get some type of, at least initial bond?
Yeah, I predict he'll get bond.
I do predict he'll get bond.
I think his legal team is going to fight like hell for it.
It might be an actometer like you mentioned where he can't leave his house or
whatever, but I don't think they're going to put him in jail.
And then another argument they're probably going to make is his life is in danger,
safety issues.
He's a celebrity.
You know, it's going to cause stress to the jail to the jail, to the jail,
to put him in private custody the whole time.
It just works out better for everyone to have him just be on house arrest or to be out on bond.
And I think he has a very good chance of doing that.
Speaking of which, you know, but I think if he doesn't get it tomorrow, he'll probably have an official bond hearing within a few days.
And I think at that bond hearing, assuming he doesn't get out tomorrow, he'll be able to get out.
Speaking of which, back in November, right?
The NYPD claimed they had no knowledge of any.
This was after, I think, someone erroneously said that,
oh, the NYPDs investigated.
They came out and said,
we have no knowledge of any investigation going on against Ditty.
Clearly, the NYPD, I would imagine.
And you could tell me that, if you know,
they probably work a little bit in line with the Southern District of New York
and Homeland Security and FBI or whoever.
else. Do you think that has lied
to the public? Because they said they
had no investigation.
Two months later,
yeah, the investigation
started. And like
two months after that, so four months after
Dittie's houses
get raided.
You think they lied?
Technically no. And I'll tell you why.
And I guess I'll explain this whole concept.
So
when you do criminal investigations,
there's a state level and there's a federal level.
right? And NYPD is going to have detectives assigned to federal agencies under task forces. And these
detectives are going to be deputized as what's called a TFO or task force officer. And what
that basically means is, let's say I'm a NYPD detective, right? And I have state authority. But I get
assigned to a Joint Terrorism Task Force, FBI Task Force, right? I get a set of FBI credentials
I am now not only a state detective,
but now I am effectively a federal agent.
So I have all the same authorities as the FBI special agent.
I have the authorities to conduct investigations federally.
I can carry my firearm on planes.
I can travel interstate because I'm working with the FBI as a task force officer.
So not only can I do a traffic stop if I fucking wanted to and put on a uniform
and charge you for state charges, I can also conduct federal investigations, right?
Same thing with the EA, same thing with HSI.
So HSI has task force.
officers that are from NYPD, from New York State Police, from hell, fire mart, like, for all
different places, right?
And these guys have not only customs authority, right, which HSI gives them, because HSI is legacy
U.S. customs and immigration.
They also have their state authority.
So what, and I say all this is say, the highest levels of brass, right, know, and at the
NYPD, know that they have detectives that work on these federal law enforcement task force.
But they're not privy to all the investigations that they're involved in, right, for obviously security purposes.
So the only person a lot of times that knows what that detective is involved in is probably maybe his direct chain of command, right?
His sergeant that's over him or his lieutenant will know he's assigned to the FBI JTTF or Joint Terrorism Task Force.
He's involved with this stuff.
Sometimes they might not even know everything that he's involved in.
because that detective is reporting to an FBI Special Agent, Supervisory Special Agent,
and that's effectively his supervisor over at the FBI.
His other supervisor over at the NYPD kind of just signs his time cards and shit like that,
but he might not necessarily know what he's doing.
Because when you're on the Federal Task Force, the rules kind of change.
So in a way, the NYPD isn't lying by saying we don't have an active investigation,
because that is true.
There's an active investigation at the feds, but the Browns,
a lot of times doesn't even know this stuff. Does that make sense?
No, absolutely, absolutely. And I guess a joint question. And I'm throwing a lot, I'm throwing a lot at you.
I appreciate you. A lot of people have these questions. So it's the first time I think, because there ain't nobody on YouTube that's done the shit that I've done, not to sound cocky or anything like that. But, you know, when it comes to the federal stuff, I know exactly how every agency works. Because I've worked with all of them. Very closely. Pause.
Level 8, hype train on Twitch right now. Let's go, baby.
All right.
We let.
We definitely lit.
Hey, you can't beat me, bro.
Black is Pranther, you can't beat me.
Okay.
So.
All right.
Sorry.
So, I'm just trying to think here.
So if we're dealing with, so, so two things come to mind.
And I want you to try to compare it.
I don't know how much you're well versed in these other cases.
We obviously seen the R. Kelly situation.
Yep.
we also seen Harvey Weinstein.
So Harvey Weinstein, I believe he had either got one case, like, overturned or dismissed.
I don't know if it was in New York.
But what happened is they came back with another grand jury indictment for his ass.
It's like almost they're like, no, no, no, nigger.
You're not getting out of this one.
You're going to spend the rest of your life in jail.
You know, obviously for, you know, for obvious reasons, we get why these are.
heinous crimes. These are crimes that
the public has a significant interest
in. They're making
sure that these individuals, if we think about
R. Kelly, he was charged
in just multiple precincts and districts
and places in the country where he's serving
multiple times. He won't be out
for a very long time. Harvey Weinstein
is a person who,
based on how he was charged and even
criminally convicted, at least initially,
he was never supposed to get out. And even
when he had maybe a slight victory,
the Southern District of New York,
they indicted him again, I believe, like very shortly.
I think they're about a, um,
I'm hitting him with the arraignment and the unsealing of the new indictment.
But basically,
they're trying to tell him, you're never getting out.
Do you, how much do you think, you know,
obviously we talked about the amount of money they spent in terms of the ditty
situation and how they investigated it?
How much do you think that they're,
they're hell bent on saying,
Diddy, you're fucking done.
You're going to just spend the rest of your time in jail,
hide in the honey bun.
You know what I mean?
Like, you're done, gang.
Like, it's over.
Like, because they definitely felt that way about Harvey Weinstein.
And by the way, I don't think this is the black or white thing.
I think they're just like, yo, this is a matter of public interest.
People want to see this motherfucking jail.
We're a failure if we allow this person to beat us at all.
Yeah.
I mean, you know, they're always, these are cases that kind of like, you know,
tug at the heartstrings, right?
So people are going to be like, oh, yeah, sex trafficking, et cetera, or, you know, crimes against women,
they're always going to be looked at pretty seriously.
And then as far as like R. Kelly goes, he was actually, I just double checked it.
He actually got indicted by the Eastern District of New York, which is also, they're also very aggressive
because they compete with the Southern District of New York.
They're based out of Brooklyn.
I've worked with them before as well.
They're also a good United States Attorney's Office.
but yeah man I mean at the federal level especially when they come after you for
for anything especially like a human trafficking case or a RICO or any of this other stuff
they're looking to put you away for a very long time you know these are very serious charges
the fact that they convene the grand jury for as long as they did the fact that they did this
investigation as long as they did the fact that they're using racketeering to bring in some of these
charges from the fucking 90s and early 2000s um I think that
that goes to show how serious they are as far as like pursuing this investigation.
So they're looking at it like, look, Diddy, we got you so that's a right.
You're going to have to come to the table and plead guilty to something here that's still going to give you a significant amount of time.
By the way, for people who are wondering with the cases I reference, so, you know, Harvey Weinstein, you know, historical creep.
he was initially found guilty of, you know, he had an R word conviction,
but it got overturned by the New York Court of Appeal.
The reason being is that they said that his trial was unfair because there were women
who testified about their dealings with him,
but some of the dealings that they were testifying to,
were never criminally charged or never, you know,
you know, I'm litigated in any court of law.
So they believe that that gave a unfair advantage to the prosecutor.
So they threw out his conviction.
And, you know, I mean, minor can speak to this after I'm done.
Like, hey, a lot of times if you get, you know, the appeal court throws your shit out,
like throws out of conviction.
It takes money to convict this shit.
They might be like, all right, fuck it.
You know, at least you serve some time.
Whatever.
they convened a grand jury for Harvey Weinstein mid-August,
and they got a goddamn another indictment for his ass by the end of August.
So, again, that shows that they're determined to make sure,
at least, by the way, he has other convictions.
But in New York, they want people to know we're not letting this fucking creep
off the goddamn hook.
And I'm wondering how they're going to treat Diddy related to the aspect.
Yeah, no, I think they're going to go harder.
And the fact that it's federal is going to be even worse.
And keep in mind, the whole Weinstein thing was only state.
Yep.
So that was them just aggressively pursuing them at the state level, right?
So at the federal level, it's a rap man.
And like I said before, like going out, whenever they go after famous people or people to have status or whatever may be, they know that these individuals have the capability of paying for a good defense team.
They have the resources, et cetera.
So they're going to cross their T's and dot their eyes a lot of the times, especially at the federal level.
So, um, so yeah, no, I mean, this, this situation with Did he, and I mean, we, me and you predicted this a couple months back when I remember when we first spoke about this when he first got ready back like, like, what, March or something. Like, I literally predicted, you know, last quarter of the year or early 2025, look for the indictment. They're going to come. They're going to arrest him. And boom, here we are, right? Um, mid-September and he's getting arrested sooner than I even predicted. But, um, but yeah, man, it's just, uh, they're, they're absolutely going to make a, make a, um, an example out of him in this situation. Anytime you.
you got a celebrity or a rapper or something like that, Southern District of New York, they love these big,
high-profile cases. I mean, here my, this is the district, this is the U.S. Attorney's Office
that famously prosecuted La Costa Nostra, right, when they were untouchable at the time. You know,
Rudy Giuliani famously, you know, and was one of the first prosecutors to successfully use RICO.
The Southern District in New York is what kind of pioneered that. So this is an office that has a lot of
prestige, has a lot of image. HSI, New York, from the agency standpoint,
that's one of our busiest field offices, man.
They're a very proud office.
For a funny story, the agent that was in charge of,
of HSI, New York, when 6 and I got arrested,
used to be the special agent in the charge of Puerto Rico,
which was the busiest field office in the country.
So they're a very go-getter active office,
HSI, New York, and then you combine that with a very go-getter active
United States Attorney's Office,
which, like I told you before, some of the historical cases they've done,
you know yeah it's not looking good for diddy man this is probably the worst u.s.
attorney's office to take your case and one of the worst agencies to be investigating you for
sure okay i might sound a little bit cynical but what is the potential chance of maybe did he
going in either with his lawyer or however it is and says hey listen keep my kids out of it
keep any any woman i've dealt with out of it hey listen just put it all on me not saying he's
admitting guilt, but he tries to protect other people, you know, because I'm, you know, I'm,
right now monitoring everyone's socials. I'm trying to see, is there, is anyone going to comment on
this? Are they in custody? We don't know. And, um, and I'm, I'm looking kind of at his sons a little bit
too, right? Like, you know, not necessarily, though I think that they were with all the fuckery that
he was in, but, you know, of recent times, we hear the stories that he was sharing women with
his kids, you know what I mean?
Which is like,
goddamn, you know what I mean?
Like, if you and your son
got to smash the same girl,
fuck it, right?
Yeah, that's definitely on some
weird or shit.
Yeah, I mean, it's the possibility
to say, it's like, imagine we're
in a car, right? And I'm like the criminal
of the bunch and I'm like, nah, it's my
guns. All three guns is my guns.
Don't charge nobody. Do you think
Did he is
a person to be like, yo, listen,
whatever it is, put it on me, leave my sons alone.
I mean, the thing is, is that he could do that,
but, like, the feds are going to be the ones to decide what they do and don't do.
Like, you know, you don't have as much, like, wiggle room and levers to kind of dictate these terms with them.
Like, they're going to prosecute who they want to prosecute, right?
So that's kind of what it is.
I predict that, you know, he's their main guy.
So he's who they want to go after.
He's going to have to give up someone incredibly famous.
famous and powerful for them to even give them any type of, you know, give them a break on this case.
Which, by the way, we're level 11 hype train guys, Twitch.tv.tv slash Freshway podcast.
Open up a tab while you're watching academics if you don't mind.
Yeah, please, please, please, please.
Yo, go support my guys.
If you don't know, man, my guy's fresh and fit, my boys.
And, of course, support my man, Myron, you know, a guy who's just super talented,
multifaceted, not only when it comes to Dayton, obviously,
but he is a wizard when it comes to speaking about
I believe politics and also
anything that constitutes the law so
wow you know we've talked about it's a bunch bro
we've talked about it's a bunch
you this guy in Twitch right
Black is Prater it's trying to outdo me
I just give I just get 90 subs
on Twitch right yeah he give 100 subs
but you know what I'm doing right now
I want to get 50 subs right now on stream
150 subs
on Twitch.
Oh shit.
Wait, wait, hold on.
Y'all having a sub-battle?
Yes, bro.
Yo, bro, it's black for black.
My black for black for black.
He's black too and black too.
I'm all black in, bro.
Watch it.
Watch it.
Yeah, because now we're transitioning right now
from YouTube Live show him to Twitch,
so that's kind of what it is.
But no, I mean, now, I used to breed this stuff, bro.
Like, I was, I was an agent for, you know, seven years,
and I did all types of investigations.
Like, I truly used to love this shit.
So the reason why I know so much is because I would like purposely like work with other agencies.
I was always fascinated to see how, you know, how the DEA works versus the FBI or how the FBI works differently than ATF.
You know, how FBI agents right there, 302s versus DEA agents right there are DEA 6s, right?
So I was always very interested in how different agencies work and working with different agencies and kind of leveraging and using different agencies strengths, right?
I used to do something called OSEDF cases,
organized crime, drug enforcement task forces cases, right?
Where you would work with other agencies and you would get a special designated
congressional number for your case, right, from the Department of Justice,
and you would get more funding where you can, you know, do a big case like this,
which I don't anticipate that this is an OSEDF case on this Diddy case.
But I think the 6-9 case was an OSF, and I think also the Casanova case was an OSF.
But yeah, but yeah, man, so this stuff is something that I literally lived in brief for a very long time.
I had like the number one arrest in 2016
When I was in on the southwest border
One of the busiest offices in Laredo, Texas
So when it comes to this stuff man
Like I could talk all day
Any question that you got when it comes to whether
How cases are done at a federal level
Even at a state level or prosecutors
All this other stuff man like
This is what I used to do
Or how to exploit phones
Tadle 3s, pen register, tracing traps
Pink warrants
All this shit
Yeah no
This is this is so fascinating
Just based on
you know who I'm going to be honest with you like I think in hip hop wise we all believe that
this is Mr. Untouchable you know this is Mr. Untouchable right let me ask you a question and
I'm I'm really treading into the into the weeds right here it's cool you could be like act
don't get into a cynical land because this is definitely cynical land some people would
believe this.
And again, I'm warning you.
I'm warning your audience. I'm warning my audience.
This is cynicism, you know,
just up front.
So if we think about
the election year of 2008,
Diddy was probably
the most important person.
He started the
vote-to-die movement.
Yeah.
For Obama.
Yeah, of course.
That replicated itself in 2012.
2016.
you know, he was important, but, you know, he, you know, he didn't do too much, but still, obviously,
that was when we saw Donald Trump take office in 2016, and then obviously the subsequent election,
we saw then Joe Biden take office.
This sounds crazy for me to say, because, like, I'm a rational person most of the time.
But do you think that maybe Diddy could have?
you know, could have maybe leverage this ongoing federal shit
by maybe being either a little bit more involved
or maybe offering up his services to like,
yo, hey, listen, yo, Biden, at least Biden at the time.
Yo, I'm going to go hard for the,
to get this black community to, you know,
put their vote down for the Democratic Party.
And maybe not, I'm not saying it's going to indemnify him
of his crimes, but maybe the timing would be a little bit different, right?
because that would be crazy, right?
Like if the number one black person that's like,
yo, we're going Biden and subsequently Harris,
if that person is fucking getting indicted,
that looks crazy, right?
Do you think that could potentially have changed anything?
Or do you believe that maybe, you know,
the advisors for these people just knew down the pipeline?
Hey, Ditties fucked.
Don't touch him.
Don't go near him because I'm going to be honest.
It's been a little bit alarming.
he just hasn't been in front of any of these movements.
And we're talking before the lawsuit.
No, that's a good question.
I think the important thing here,
so instead of,
I'm going to answer your question,
but I'm also going to give the audience something to kind of think about.
So I want everybody to everybody to know,
like when it comes to the federal level, right,
every United States attorney's office,
special agent in charge, etc.
They want to be able to go to Congress at the end of the year
and be like, yo, my agency did X, Y, Z.
We arrested this many people.
We took this much drugs,
the street. We seized this much money from illicit activity, etc. They want to be able to go
and lobby to get more money for the next fiscal year to continue to have their agency operate, right?
And the only way they do that is by showing stats. Law enforcement is dictated by stats, right? And
same thing with the United States attorney's offices. How many cases did you take on? How many cases did you
prosecute? How many cases did you get the guys to plead guilty, right? Very important. What's the
conviction, right? Right. Now, with that said, knowing that everything is driven by stats,
and, you know, an affluence and your ability to, you know, arrest big targets and everything else like that.
I think if anything, Did he posturing himself from a political standpoint and saying, oh, yeah, I'm going to go ahead and align myself with Biden or whatever, I don't think it would have protected him that much.
I think if anything, the more clout and fame you have and the higher up you are, it puts a bigger target on you for the feds to come after you.
Because they want to be able to get those headlines and be like, yeah, we were the office that successfully indicted X, XYZ, or did.
X, you know, one, two, three, whatever it may be. Now, and I know people have their conspiracy
theories and everything else like that, which I totally understand and respect, right? But what I will say
is, ask yourself this question, does the government benefit and get clout from putting this guy
behind bars and prosecuting them? If the answer is yes, more than likely, they're going to actually
go for it. That's why they went after Trump. That's why they went after Hunter Biden on the other side.
That's why if you look at this assassin that they got right, that tried to kill Trump yesterday,
they're going to, I think the FBI is going to try to go after him and build a federal case.
Right now he's being held in state custody, but I predict that they're going to try to build a federal case in the next 72 hours.
And the reason why is because the FBI has a lot of egg on their face right now from the failed prosecutions of Trump, from the failed Matthew Crook's investigation from Butler, Pennsylvania, where they still can't find a motive, whatever.
So they're going to try to make an example of this guy.
And if it allows them to get more clout, more notoriety and kind of repair the public distrust for the federal government,
right now, they're going to try to do it because it will benefit them and allow them to be able to get more funding in the future.
So you always got to ask, what's the bottom line?
What's their incentive to get this done?
And if the answer is they get more clout, more fame, more notoriety,
and they're able to obviously use that to lobby for more funding in the future,
then they are probably going to do it.
Now, does that mean that there aren't corrupt agents that don't do bullshit?
Of course there are.
Absolutely, there are, that are politically motivated?
Of course.
But I think that agencies are always going to do what's in their best interest to get more money
and to get more notoriety.
And a lot of times that means taking down the biggest people that they can
are unraveling the biggest conspiracy.
that they can. Okay. I'm, I'm still having my tinfoil hat on and it's fine if you're like,
it's good to question it, man, because a lot of it is bullshit. I agree with you. Now, I've heard this
from so many people. Like, this is a, this is a point that I've heard so many times. They said,
by the way, I think Reggie Wright even said this. They said, Diddy is not a type of person that will
tolerate being in a jail cell for the rest of his life.
And they said if it ever came down to it, and I think you know where I'm going,
he might seek certain type of alternative measures to, for lack of better term,
he ain't staying in that cell alive.
You tell me when you arrest, you know, anyone, a suspect who's probably facing
in significant time, maybe the majority of the life,
if they're convicted.
Because we're still wondering how to fuck
did that happen to Epstein.
Like, I thought, like, that shit was still great.
It's still crazy to me.
Yeah.
Is it a situation where they're definitely making sure,
you know, A, you're going to be,
wherever he's at now, you're watched 24-7.
You're, we got to make sure
everything's on the up and up.
I think for now
they won't have to cross that bridge
because I do genuinely believe he's going to get bond
I'd be shocked if he didn't get it
I do genuinely think that they're going to give him bond
even if it's a house arrest
I just with a level of cooperation
that his defense team is exhibited
with working with the prosecution
I would be shocked if the AUSA
kind of like double cross the attorney
and said now fuck that we're going to push for him to be held
because the thing is is like these attorneys
they know each other man
that a lot of the time they went to the
same law schools. They've worked together maybe at ADA's office or a private law firm, right? And then,
you know, they went on to different things. So these attorneys all know each other. They're all
part of the bar. So what I predict is, is there's probably maybe an agreement that was made. Look,
bro, he's going to cooperate. He's not going to give you guys a hard time. You know, we're going to
let you guys know what's going on. The arrest will be simple and smooth. You will have no issues.
We'll cooperate. But do me a solid. Let my guy get out on bond. Okay. AUSA says, look, all right,
we'll play ball. We're not going to object to him.
him being out on bond, that's fine.
And that's really it, because if the government doesn't object to him being out on bond,
because it depends is going to say, Your Honor, I want my client to be out on bond,
he's not a danger to community, he has children, he has a business, he has employees, blah,
blah, blah, blah, blah.
He said they're going to kind of list out their case as to why he needs to be out.
The government is not going to object to that.
That's strong for the judge, because he's going to look at it like, okay, government,
you're not objecting to him being released on bond?
Nope, government doesn't have any objections.
Cool.
They're going to probably release him.
That's what I predict is going to happen.
Hey, okay, so TMZ has a bunch of photos of Diddy literally walking around as, you know, as early as 8 p.m. Eastern time.
And he's walking around. He's taking pictures. He's posing with people. He's with his son.
Yeah. Do you believe the feds were like, you know, just keeping a close eye on him if they're going to arrest him pretty much like maybe an hour afterwards?
it's like, you know, if he's taking a stroll in New York City,
because it says just a couple hours before Diddy got busted,
he was confidently strolled around New York City with his son, King Combs,
even stopped to greet some fans, take some selfies.
Yep.
What does the feds do then?
They're like, yo, he's leaving the hotel.
He's just walking around.
What do you do?
No, I mean, you know, he's a famous guy.
They've probably observed this multiple times while doing surveillance on him
that he kind of just walks around and is living his life.
I will notice, I will say that I've noticed that since Diddy's kind of like had these looming charges on him,
he's done a very good job of like maintaining, um, public, how do I say this, seeming pretty positive publicly.
Being outside. Being outside, being pretty positive, taking pictures with fans, not being like, you know,
negative or hateful or angry or, you know, full of despair. I'm sure it probably weighs on him when he goes home.
But I think he's done a good job of publicly seeming like he's fine and cheerful.
So I think the agents are probably used to that at this.
point that he's kind of been kind of keeping up this thing on this facade going for the past few months while he was um
because if i was his lawyer i'll tell him to like look happy when you're outside just so it looks good
on the case that's what i would say if was his lawyer i'll tell you this though he's probably
gonna have one of the deepest sleeps that he's had in months anytime that you know that you're
going to get indicted with criminals they knock out right away after they're arrested it's interesting
damn yeah i can't tell how many times it happens because they're stressed for months knowing
that they're going to get arrested by the fed so when they finally do get arrested that first night
they pass out man it's actually interesting yeah
They didn't know. I even know that.
Yeah.
Wow.
Yeah, they pass out on the car a lot of times while you're driving into jail.
Yo, yo, I can't see, yo, I got to see Diddy in Cuffs.
I don't believe this shit is.
Like, again, and it's not because, you know, I don't, like, I'm, I know I asked a couple cynical questions, but.
Like, Diddy just seems like above this shit.
I'm going to be honest with you.
Like, he's just.
It's crazy.
Like, we've never seen a guy this powerful in hip-hop.
Think about all the most powerful guys in hip-hop that we've seen arrested.
Shugnight, this is, like, Shugnight got knocked out by a barber.
Like, he lost pretty much death row.
Like, he was not the same guy, didn't have power, influence, didn't even have respect at that point,
no disrespect to him or his son.
I know his son watching me from time of time.
But Shugnight was a former shell of himself.
R. Kelly.
Prestige was pretty much in the dirt.
Like, you know, he wasn't doing these big toys.
We all know him for having a lot of talent
But we weren't seeing this guy
Like we were seeing him like pop up it
He was getting a lot of love in Chicago
Like he was doing like these shows
Like we would see like these older women
Like say we don't care what fuck we love them
But but culturally was still shamed
And he was kind of almost ostracized
So by the time he did get arrested
There's no one like oh my God like you know
It's kind of like all right good
I'm just trying to think of powerful people
like chat you guys could help me name because we're only a shock and I imagine this happened to the
movie industry with Harvey Weinstein as well right because nobody thought Harvey Weinstein could ever
be you know arrested and then it happened uh who else I mean uh it's you know it's always like
and this is what the feds like to do man they like to go after people that are untouchable right
so um on that surprise that Diddy was a targeted this investigation obviously they put a lot of money
and resource in it because of who he is and how he is and how he's
how big he is and how intouchable he is.
The one thing I will say, though, that's kind of surprised me is I have not seen anyone
come out to Diddy's defense and say he's innocent or say that they support him or anything.
I haven't seen anyone publicly do that, which is very strange.
Well, academics.
Question for your brother.
We know that music industry is very political, right?
And in the industry, I'm sure Diddy has informed people, like some dirt on them.
I guarantee you, like, he has maybe, like, video of them doing some stuff behind the scenes
or maybe like hear some rumors about people.
She has a lot of things he could expose about people in the industry, right?
You think he's going to say that now that he's getting being locked up?
What do you think?
You know, that is a good question.
Here's the thing.
If you have a video of motherfucking, like, no disrespect to him, like, why kill Cyrus sucking your cock?
Nobody gives a fuck.
Like, whether it's true or not, right?
Just based on who we're talking about, right?
Like, your ditty, that's why I kill Cyrus.
And again, I'm not throwing him under the bus.
I don't think he's gay as all, but still, like, okay, think about Tray's songs.
Okay, we don't give a fuck.
So the only, the only person he could have something on that we would give a fuck.
And I guess, you know, I was going to ask mine this too, is like, there's this Jay-Z element that everyone has been skating around, right?
And it's very interesting, right?
Because we just seen Foxy Brown commented about this.
You know, she put like the, the startled-eyed emojis.
Then she says, shit about to get really crazy.
Now, she's more synonymous with, you know, her time or her, you know,
you know, her association with Jay, you know, as, you know,
maybe you can say little Kim is more associated with her, you know,
Tom or association with Diddy.
And when you hear Foxy say this, you start to come.
of like think like what was up now obviously you know I don't want to get into some of the weeds
here and I know I've done it before but they do say things about Jay-Z except I do think
Jay-Z is just way more shrewd I've heard this from a few people in the game and you know
it kind of goes to myrins point about continued you know behavior they said hey nobody's
same Jay-Z was as wild a boy as Diddy, but they said for any fuck shit that Jay-Z ever did,
he cleaned his act up over 10 years ago.
So he's just ain't been the same person.
And when you're not doing those actions continually, you know, it kind of probably
doesn't stoke the same fire under investigators to come get you when literally they would
only be investigating stuff that's, you know, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the,
the more we go in time when you get further from that behavior.
It's not like, yo, Diddy was still throwing parties last year.
Like, literally.
Diddy was throwing parties last year.
Like, he didn't give a fuck.
You know what I mean?
Like, people were telling him, yo, Diddy went to the breakfast club?
They literally said Diddy, your 50-something.
When are you going to slow down?
And he said, age ain't nothing but a number.
I feel young.
He said he was basically giving niggis reasons why he still felt he could have all these crazy freakoffs.
You know, bro, it appears that Jay may have retired from any fuckery if he did do it.
He was performing in a club live in Miami, right, bro?
Mm-hmm.
Guess what happened?
After the club, there's an after party.
Guess where's that?
This was like a couple months ago.
Mm.
Did he still living in the same lifestyle?
So it was like, I get what you're saying, 100%.
So.
Oh, boy, man.
Sad shit, man.
Sad, sad, sad shit.
Now, I'm going to be honest with you.
I expect Jay-Z to go and hide it.
And what I mean, hiding, not actual hiding.
I do think, you know, with recently, we're talking about the Super Bowl,
Wayne, Drake, Kendrick.
I think that Diddy is, no, not Diddy, I mean,
Jay-Z is going to, again, just be absent of comment and conversation.
So he's not hiding, literally.
but he knows when the block is hot
and he knows when to fucking switch it up
and I think the block is hot now
because after Diddy
there ain't no other bigger wig to get than him
and it's time for him to go again
we ain't, yo by the way, ever since
and by the way, I want to give Jay Z credit
I'm not saying Jay Z was guilty of anything
but Jay Z definitely knew the right time
to stop doing Made in America
rock nation brunches
all the fuck shit that y'all used to
associate him with
he's not saying those were fuck shit
but it's like all those public things
he knew when to scale it back and lay low
Diddy just never knew when to lay low
yeah I mean he's been womanizing for a long ass time man
and that's and the thing also with Diddy
that people don't know is like he's had serious problem
with like drugs and alcohol
and obviously that clouds your judgment you do stupid ass shit
and uh
you know now he's kind of dealing with it
With the consequences of it, man.
I mean, a dude's been on top
and ownership since the 90s, 30 years plus.
By the way.
Miami, you heard stories about his parties for days, bro.
Everyone knows the livestock in Miami.
And he's been living there, bro.
It's, it's part of the culture.
And by the way, I interviewed Hitmaker.
Shout to my man, Hitmaker.
And he said something very interesting,
not only about Diddy, but he said about Drake.
He says,
Drake needs to learn from Ditty and Jay.
because Drake is like 38 now
and you know when Kendrick says
watch the party that you got to stop the party after a while
like if you don't stop the party and keep until 50
you see where ditty's at
at some point we ain't say get married and had kids
but just exit stage left I'm gonna catch you niggis later
okay I'm gonna catch all y'all niggies later
um obviously I don't think
and I hope
Drake don't have any type of issues compared to these other people we're talking about.
But, you know, what do you think about, you know, maybe some of the behavior?
And, you know, obviously, fresh nose and sees when it comes to, like,
if you've been around these celebrity rappers or people who have money and a lot of power,
they, shit, it kind of all kind of rolls into these sexual escapades and these wild parties
and these other things.
is that a valid thing where it's like, yo,
you got to check out out of that system or that game
or else you might get fucked.
I'll say this.
I've been to quite a few parties.
Drake's parties are always fun,
and the girls speak faulted about Drake all the time.
They're like, Drake is respectful, he's nice,
he makes sure everything's paid for, open bar.
Yo, I'm not really saying this for Drake,
because here's the thing.
the I'm pretty sure the bitches at
and I'm saying bitches respectfully
if there's such a thing
the bitches at Diddy Party in the 90s
were speaking respectfully
till it got disrespectful
you feel me?
Like again
we have to realize the time we're in
right?
It's like yeah
like I'm pretty sure
the people who are suiting them in the 90s
maybe in the 90s
they were like oh no this is normal
then they later
to your point
yeah you open yourself up to like
cases because
I'm not going to like
people's opinions can change
they might need some money
they might say you know what fuck this guy
I don't like him more so you're right
this can change over time
so yeah you're right
hosting these parties
could open you up to like
not only that you're like drunk and fucked up
like when Diddy was beating
beating Cassie in that video
like he was drunk at the time
you think it was all that's a rock
yeah he was drunk as hell
like when he attacked her at the hotel
and then we all saw that footage
he was drunk as hell
that's what you do crazy shit
like that when you're when you're drunk and high man
this is why I thank God that I don't drink or do drugs
bro yeah real talk man that shit will set you up for failure
man you know act
keep it a bean yeah
a drink held a party and invite of you
will you pull up don't get out bro
no no of course I will yeah no I would
no part yeah you're going right
yeah yeah here's thing I think
I think my commentary about the Drake thing
is this
hmm
and it's gonna be a little bit nuanced
I know my audience is gonna hate me for saying
this because they want me just to be like,
yo, monsters are monsters.
What I think is that hip hop culture glorifies and allows certain shit
that is sometimes super gray area.
And the more you indulge in some of those things that you might think,
like, again, you know, I'm not trying to jump on no fucking sword for this guy,
Diddy, but like, I don't know if Diddy thought what he was doing was like super evil or he thought that, oh, that's what we do. I'm just kind of a little bit extreme.
A lot of this stuff was consensual with these bitches. I have no, no doubt. A lot of it was.
Yo, you know what I really is at with some people that are highest status? It's almost like they get bored of regular fun and excitement. And that was up the ante. So, for example, in his case, I don't know if it was in malintent or not. But for him, it's like, yo, fuck this shit. I'm done doing a reg.
I don't get,
bitches and get,
and have fun and do drugs.
Dude,
it's almost like,
you have to up the ante each time
and it's like,
it doesn't end until it's too late.
My personal thought is this.
I don't think Did he probably cognizantly
realized that what he did over the years
were super evil until maybe a year or two ago
when he realized that,
and he probably got people hitting him up saying,
hey, yo,
remember what you did back then?
Like,
yeah,
that shit was fucked up.
I'm about to sue you.
And that's when he started being brother love.
I think that's when he realized.
I think all he thought he was was a crazy party animal
that was doing what everybody else was doing, right?
Yo, I'm having these wild parties, like, you know,
and by the way, it's also him thinking, again, I could be wrong.
This is the mean, like, projecting what I think he might be, you know, going through a thing.
I think he thought, you know, him pushing the boundary a little bit more every time was normal.
Right?
So it's like, all right, tonight we have a party.
Everybody's fucked up.
All right, shit.
People go on their own accord and they do whatever.
Now I'm like, all right, well, what if I have rooms for y'all to go do it in?
Then he's like, shit, what about if I, I bet, how about if I just bring over the bitch?
I'm going to bring over some prostitutes.
Oh, shit.
All right, man.
Matter of fact, and like, keep pushing it to the point where, like, obviously now when we look at it,
the shit's just clearly disgusting and just out of balance.
But when I hear the story,
a ditty, a guy who was, you know, like he was basically this young guy
getting into the industry who got fired,
then got another opportunity and then made his way.
I don't think he was, actually, let me stop,
because I watched one document.
They say he was beating bitches from college.
Yeah, my bad, never mind that.
I was trying to, I was trying to, because I know how people could sometimes start
pushing the limit pushing the limit pushing the limit and by the time you've done it over 20 years
you've just pushed a limit a lot I don't know about the sex stuff but because I was just always
heard did he's gay I'm just keeping the deal with you that's the only thing like the moment the
the moment I knew I was in this I was in quote quote the music industry is when people told me
hey you can never repeat this but we all think did he's gay and I was like what the fuck do you
mean we all think is dude he's gay like yeah he's gay like yo he tried to fuck him he
I'm like, no, he didn't.
They're like, don't ever say this, but we all think so.
That's what I realized I was in the industry, quote, unquote.
But we got to ask, freak mill.
Right?
Yo, but in reality, that's the point.
It's like, bro, I think one thing we can say,
Diddy has been always abusive, right?
Because they got stories of Diddy just beating a chick.
They said Diddy beat up a bitch.
like in front of the whole school in college.
This is before you had money before anything.
I think it's sexual deviancy.
You know, this is probably the wrong venue to speak about this,
but it goes into when you have an insatiable appetite for sex, right?
You know, I think for the normal man, okay, cool,
you would love to have multiple women or different women.
Then it might get to a point you're like, well,
maybe I can have different women at the same time.
I want to have threesomes.
Maybe you want to do an orgy.
Did he got to another level where he said,
fuck my dick,
he were working.
I want to see another man dick fucking my chick.
He got too far, brother.
That's what I can say.
I mean, yeah,
I mean,
it always happens where,
you know,
when is,
you know,
how much is enough?
And like,
the more you're involved in it,
the more,
the more you do it,
the more,
the easier it is to get bored,
the easier it is to get bored,
the more stimuli you need
to get that same level.
It's like a drug,
man.
So, yeah,
sexual deviancy
always progresses.
doesn't stay stagnant. It gets worse and worse and worse because you need more and more to get
you know, off. So yeah, I wouldn't be surprised if you didn't start getting into this weirdo
stuff from like just doing whatever. And here's the thing. Your celebrity A list, you got some of the
hottest chicks that you've in the world. You had J. Lowe at one point. You not have some of these
bad chicks. You know, every, you could get any woman that you want. I guess you would look at it.
like, it's a game. Let me see if I could get a dude now. I don't fucking know. Like, you know,
people, the sexual degeneracy never stops evolving. You just keeps getting worse and worse and
worse.
You, if he did the crime man, lock him up though, bro.
For real, though.
Road talk, lock him up, bro.
That's some weird or shit.
Well, here's the thing.
I don't think it's if he did the crime.
I think it's very clear that he potentially committed some crimes, right?
Like, we see more video giving a woman the beats, right?
Now, the punishment for that, and, you know, not saying whether rightly or wrongly,
the punishment for that wouldn't be spending the right.
rest of his life in jail, I think.
But the punishment for sex trafficking, if that's what the crime is, which I think that's
where we're trying to either process that.
Because even like Meyer said, Marum is like, yo, I think some of these girls were down
with it.
Okay.
Well, that becomes multifaceted.
Are they down with it?
Or did he coerce them with money, lifestyle?
Did he chorus them with, hey, this is, you know, like, I think one woman who,
who filed a lawsuit, who said he controlled our financial future,
so we had to do this shit.
Or were they down with it?
Like, yo, I, you know, salute to my boy, Vlad.
But Vlad said he interviewed a few people who knew Cass and they said,
yo, you know, and again, these feel like wrong conversations to have,
to have, because especially us even discussing us, like, we're not bad people.
Like, we're not trying to, like, be on the wrong side of history.
But, like, Vlad said that he spoke to some people who said,
Hey, with all due respect, Cassie love that shit.
Like, you know, like she was into it.
Not, no, not granted, did he beat her out?
Did he do all the type of stuff to her?
Yes.
But they were saying that was one of her kinks.
And I think when we try to look at it with an independent, you know, vision,
that's the most egregious part of it.
Yo, you're doing these freakoffs forcing these innocent women into some shit that they
never wanted to do that they were not having fun like you did it without their will and then
when you hear other things like nah some of them was into that shit you're like it makes us almost
sit back that we got to just like all right let's look at the evidence that the police is going to have
and obviously you know we're going to do that tomorrow morning um at least to some extent but
you almost not you don't really know what to think right it'll be interesting if if cassie
ends up being a witness in this investigation from the criminal perspective which i i know for
of fact she more than likely at least led investigators to other witnesses, because she was with him for so long.
So she was probably a key cooperator in this criminal investigation where, you know, she might have led the feds to other individuals that Diddy might have sexually abused during the course of their relationship.
So it'd be interesting to see if like, you know, her involvement in the criminal case and how deeply she was involved.
Maybe she might have put in other people.
She might, you know, be someone that's going to testify herself.
we'll see obviously when the indictment is rolled out tomorrow but we'll know for sure once Diddy gets his discovery and he reads those R-O-I's how deep it goes.
Yeah, I just wonder for all of the people that went to Diddy's parties, right, that aren't talking right now, I can think of one person that we all know, Kevin Hart, you think he's like sweating right now? Like he's like worried or some of these people, other people that went to his parties or not really?
No, I do believe that the level of craziness he got to, he kept that to a certain amount of people.
I do believe that some silence or some lack of comment is always indicative of maybe a particular culture or a lifestyle that may be, you know, again, we're in 2024 and there's a few lawsuits that he has that are in the 90s.
Like I always said that, you know, again, never defending these people, but just speaking, just honestly how shit looks like, even say like Bill Cosby.
Yo, do you think that Bill Cosby was the only nigga putting Quaylosing women's drinks or Spanish, whatever the fuck he said he was doing?
You think that wasn't a culture?
You think he's the only one.
Like, they got him and they be like, all right, well, we got everybody from, what was it, at the 70s?
All right, we got everybody who did this.
I think there's a culture that was existing
that maybe he was one of the more famous people
who went crazy with it
but there are definitely people who skated by
that who probably just shut the fuck up laid low
or moved to Bali.
So again, I think a lot of people
who are staying quiet on the ditty stuff
were probably like, yo,
that's how we used to always party.
Like, you know what I mean?
Like, bro, like, if you've watched
D.E.T.
Some of the some of the freak nick shit
Like you know as we talk about consent
None of that shit sounds like consent
Niggas is swiping credit card through bitch's ass crack
You know what I mean? They got five niggas palm in the ass cheek
A scantily clad or dressed women walking down the street like
You know again it becomes a very
Dicey situation
I mean none of this absolves ditty
But all I'm saying is that
I think you know
people are going to go down by saying
nah did he was the only one
I don't think so man I think a lot of them
will freak he ain't the only
freaky ass thing from the motherfucking
90s
hmm hmm well
maybe we'll find out soon but
he's the biggest catch right now so
yeah absolutely
all right nigga
it's two am here in Miami
um well act any other things you got
for uh for me or anything like that bro
I'd be happy to answer any last few
Because we got to stream tomorrow too.
We're going to probably try to do like a little sub-a-thon.
Okay.
Hey.
Are you going to TwitchCon?
Um, I don't know.
But I definitely know that in the morning I will be on for whenever this indictment will be on sealed.
That's a fact.
So either, you know me, first of all, like, I'll just be on.
So it's either I'm not getting off a stream tonight or when I get off stream tonight,
I'm going to try to use every research possible to figure out when this thing will be,
I'm presented in court because that indictment is...
Do this, bro.
Just go on Southern District of New York right now, the website,
and then look for initial appearances,
and it should tell you when they have initial appearance typically.
Okay, okay, okay, okay.
I'll go on there.
Maybe that'll help you save you some time,
so that way you can get some rest and wake up when they...
When they initial appearance.
I mean, bro, if I were you, I would see when it is,
and, like, bro, you should just go to the court and be, like, right there.
It's open court.
Like, you literally just go to the courtroom,
and you can sit there, sit there and see there.
initial appearance. It's not going to be long. It's going to be like 20 minutes at most, but
he'll even host. No, I would. I would for this. Now, this is, this is the joint. This is the joint.
court. You're right there. You're not that far from the city. The only thing about, and I think you
know this, you just can't film in federal court. I've never seen federal court. Yeah, you can. No, you can. They'll
get pissed off of you if you try and do that. But you could be there and, like, take notes and shit like that,
and you'll be fine. Mm. Do you think an initial appearance, he's like the only person showing up or
they're going to have like a lineup of a defendants.
They'll have other people, but it's the middle of the week.
So I don't predict that there's going to be many other defendants that will be there for their initial appearance.
So it'll probably be just him and maybe a couple other.
But yeah, I mean, it's not that busy.
Damn.
I remember when I was in Laredo, Texas, we'd have 100 motherfuckers in the courtroom sometimes that got arrested the day before.
Really?
Bro, I'd be at an initial appearance for hours, bro.
That's how busy we were on the Southwest border.
People getting arrested federally.
Crazy shit, man.
Yo, this is like so unexpected.
Like I think we're all waiting for this, but like the time.
And usually we hear about also indictments, like, you know, announcements of indictments.
Like, usually comes to a press release is entered.
And it comes in early in the day.
We would be able to, you know, the media is going to dissect it.
This one came like, this is after like 8 p.m.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
I mean, and that's why like for me, I looked at when I found out that,
they arrested him and not like that that tells me like they had eyes on him they had the arrest warrant in hand that it just made the executive decision to pick them her right there yeah wow wow
um all right um listen if if you guys are available tomorrow you know i'm i'm gonna definitely be live on you're gonna be on night probably around 7 p.m. are you gonna be on?
Trusting we could talk about this case. Trust and believe i'll be on it at that time okay so yeah
hold up hold on push gone nigger.
TwitchCon?
What's TwitchCon?
I don't even know what it is.
It's a...
Friday to Sunday.
Yeah, Friday to San Diego.
San Diego.
Come on us, bro.
Space is going to be there.
Suzuki as well.
Pulling up.
Let's go, man.
I ain't going to lie.
This is like a dittitha.
Nica, you can stream that shit from there.
Me and you could literally stream it together there.
Pause.
Oh, yeah, no, no.
Yeah, I want to do some shit with you, IRL.
And also, like, kind of like this type of shit.
We're like, we're...
Man there, bro.
So you can literally.
literally we could stream it to your shit and our shit too.
Like we can,
we have all that with the backpack.
So you can literally,
we could cover the ditty stuff from San Diego,
man.
It's not a problem.
All right.
All right.
Let's talk a lot about it.
Yeah.
We could do some.
You were supposed to be here in Miami like months ago.
He ain't going to.
He didn't going on.
I've been just kind of like working.
Like,
yo,
I was telling fresh,
I'm like,
yo,
at the end of the year,
I'm taking like the biggest.
I feel like I've been like,
especially anytime bullshit comes up,
whether it has to do with me or some other
shit, bro, I just work through it, bro.
Like, I just never, I'm never the guy who would be like, all right, I'll see you.
You know, like, doctor disrespect got in trouble and you just like, all right, man,
I'll be back like in three months.
Like, I'm the person who just like, all right, cool.
So if I was doing four days a week, all right, now I'm doing five, six days a week.
Like, I just work a little bit harder.
But, you know, it's been all right.
It's been all right.
It was a pleasure, bro.
We'll see you tomorrow.
I definitely, definitely.
I appreciate you guys for coming on here and really helping.
dissect some of this stuff, all right?
No, for sure, man.
This is, like I said, I love this stuff.
It helps me kind of relive my old life.
Thank you, bro.
Like as a friend of ours, man.
Go support him as well.
On Twitch, Rumble and YouTube.
And yeah, man.
Yeah, man.
He's on there.
So, act, thank you, man.
We'll close out on our end here, man.
And I'll definitely talk with you tomorrow.
We're going to be live on tomorrow night.
So, all right, definitely.
All right, bro.
So, yeah.
We can talk about the Trump thing, too, if you want.
Oh, yeah, we got to do that.
Yeah, that's the crazy.
This shit came up.
I had a whole lot of topics.
I'll get to it after you guys get off.
But I appreciate you guys on.
All right, brother.
We'll talk with you tomorrow.
Peace.
All right.
I think we did a good job.
You know, salute to Myron.
Slupt to Fresh.
I think we did a great job of kind of breaking down as much details as we know.
You know, tonight's stream was originally to talk about, like, I think I had like a little topic list.
And I think.
only thing with Diddy was just kind of expounded a little bit on the the Danity Kane, you know, lawsuit.
But like we clearly, I mean, 100% clearly got bumped to talk about what's more important, which is this indictment, which we've been covering this Diddy case for a long time.
This was kind of unexpected.
Okay.
Let me see if while I have you all here, by the way, if you're following on, if you're following on, if you're following,
or watching on my YouTube, please just make an account,
hit the subscribe button, hit the follow button if you're watching on Twitch,
hit the subscribe or follow button if you're watching on Rumble,
or even if you're watching on Facebook.
I appreciate you guys for everything.
I'm still going to get into a few other topics just because,
yeah, we spent four hours on ditty.
Pause.
We spent four hours on ditty.
Anything else did I miss?
Let me read a couple donations before we get off in a ditty situation.
Okay.
All right.
Daff Parks, thank you for the $2 Canadian.
He says he deserves it.
He's talking about ditty.
He said, but why my low-key sad?
That's a great question.
And there is a little bit sadness, I think, genuinely, that hip-hop fans are going to feel
because this is one of our greats.
And hearing the rumors and hearing the allegations is one thing.
But then seeing criminal charges and now knowing that he's in custody.
And I'm telling you, I'm sitting here with y'all.
And I'm like, I don't think he's like in custody.
Like I'm thinking this is like rich niggottet attention where he's like,
yo, he's in his penhouse having a bubble bath right now.
Like, you know what I mean?
Having like 20 concubines, young Miami on the way.
Nothing has changed.
It's no way he's in cuffs in like some cell that looks crazy.
No, no way, right?
Like, it's like no, I can't even believe it even now.
So I understand why, you know, you have a mix bag of emotions.
Mani, thank you for the, for the 10.
He says, they will grant him bail.
Puff is not R. Kelly.
That nigga is too damn rich.
He got the best lawyers.
I do think he has the best lawyers.
But I think his bail is going to be more on that he was cooperating over the whole time,
not present himself as a flight risk.
And I think that helped his case.
E, NYC, 83, thank him for five.
It says grand jury had questions in New York City for years they want to answer to.
Sure, the grand jury was well informed act to make that decision.
Okay, so basically saying whatever decision they made, they knew what it was.
Wow.
Lord Hybert, thank you for the 100 bucks.
I appreciate you so, so, so, so much.
He said, the sad part is that ditties going down for holes and drugs.
I'll stop it with that comment there.
I'll read the rest in a second,
but does it feel like every great man goes down for like hoes?
Maybe not drugs, but like hose ego,
but drugs sometimes is in there, right?
He also continues by saying,
Are Kelly's in prison for hos?
I see why Fitti went celibate.
Did Fithi go celibet or did he use his cap?
Young Bam Bam, thank you for the two.
I don't know why your name reminded me of,
and this is not a great memory.
Africa, Bamba.
I'm like Bam Bam.
I'm like Bam Bam.
I'm like, Bamana.
I'm like, oh, hell no.
Somebody go tell, what was my man's name again?
Hassan.
Watch out.
Okay, so Democrats' distraction.
They shot Trump.
Suppression.
Okay.
Lord Hyber with another $100.
He said,
Ack.
The chat niggies is begging me to ask you.
turn off slow mode i did this for y'all chat so big me up ditty go have freakoffs in federal prison
damn and he says free ditty in 2045 so that would be uh 21 years from now okay all right take
off slow mode for a second let everybody cook up uh super fly reactions thank you for the two he says
no ditty right in front of ditty yeah that was that video uh this video right here where diddy was
clearly you know
can I find it again
can I find it again
you basically said no
ditty to ditty just standing there
I can't find it
whatever
uh
Daff Park says genuine question
and I think he's trolling
said why are freakoffs illegal
um
freakoffs aren't illegal
if you want to have orgies
threesomes
whatever you want
you have to have a willing
participants and I guess
maybe those participants said
they were willing then again I'm not going to
put that on them but clearly
we're having people who said that they didn't
they say they were coerced they say they were forced
they say they were you know so that that's why
these freakoffs are not good
Skip Flanagan thinking for the 20 says you
thank you for being
what is that thank you for being you
okay appreciate you
state of the art visual says the waiting room on club
house exposing everything else, uh, everything already.
These rich ass niggas do.
Okay.
Daff Park says,
when is Kat Williams closing a portal?
Damn.
Well.
Cheers Club Media says feels like Puff pissed off someone powerful.
I mean,
there is like a work in theory that maybe not pissed off someone powerful,
but like once he fell out of favor with Diageo,
which is a liquor brand that, you know,
Saras.
and De Leon was like tied to.
They didn't have much more need for him.
And maybe that's why this happened.
I don't know if I fully believe that,
but it's something you can think about.
Dave Park says, well, rich guy rich says,
answer the question, why didn't Did he decide not to leave the country for a country
that doesn't have extradition?
Rich my rich guy rich.
I think we said this before.
It's impossible.
that he was going to just ditch the country without being arrested already.
Like, again, this is a grand jury process isn't the only way he could arrest someone.
And if they felt like someone was going to run, they would just arrest him already.
And again, if you try to leave the country, they were probably monitoring him or surveilling them to a certain extent.
And by the way, the mere fact that, you know, they went and did a search after the arrest,
it means that, like, they were keeping an eye on him.
They weren't going to just let him go to another country.
that part says abuse of power like Weinstein though they know okay lady Chan says always love your breakdowns
your breakdowns um and your work rate love you okay hey thank you uh whoa geez 10 10 he says academics
beg please see please forgive cariboo when you get to the topic she know not what she has done
going against big act i i will actually speak about that um
before I get off today, so I appreciate you.
State of the Art.
He also said, State and waiting room on Clubhousebook about this last week.
Okay, great.
Perfect, perfect, perfect, perfect.
Now, again, I did have a bunch of other topics,
and I know a lot of you guys want more on the ditty situation.
I think we exhausted this.
I don't think there's any stone that was on turn.
Trust me, I am looking for it,
because I want to make sure you guys are always in a loop.
Also, keep in mind, tomorrow,
schedule is going to be at the exact moment this indictment is on sealed we're going to be live so
whenever this indictment is on sealed you know we already tapped into the federal government
court system so when they unsealed the indictment and we get the indictment we're instantly live right
but until then we can't we can't do anything until he showed him to court and when he show up to
court he's going to be able to you know he's going to see the indictment in front of him um
One second.
Yeah, I'm just seeing if there's anything more with the ditty thing.
If not, I just wanted to get to some of these topics.
Okay?
Wow, I took four hours to talk about that.
Well, you know, what is like this?
Okay.
Let me hit these topics real quick, chat.
Please, bear with me.
Please don't leave.
If you're watching this, please make sure you hit the follow button on whatever platform you're watching.
Please, please, please.
Let me...
Okay.
All right.
So first and foremost,
I think I want to start by saying this.
Remember last stream,
and I didn't stream for two days,
but I told you Kanye West
invited me to China, right?
And his invitation to China, first and foremost,
I was thinking about it.
I was thinking about it.
Now, this is before I found out that, you know,
see I thought I was a special home right I thought he just invited me because you know
Travis Scott manager hit me and said act yay says he needs you he wants you to come stream his
first concert in 16 years in China and I said me but of course you know just like as I tell you
with rappers you if you're a media personality or you're anyone who's in this game
work your way to the point where you're not these people's bitch in the sense of whenever they
snap their fingers, you're moved because you'll be very disappointed. Now, I'm glad that I'm at that
point, and I do like Kanye West, and of course, I do want to do an, I want to have an opportunity
to either stream maybe an event of his or maybe like interview and whatever the case.
Like, I like Kanye, you know, even though he has his fault. But a couple of things came to mind,
and I did not go to China people. I'm going to tell you why. The reason why I didn't go to China,
and this is before I knew that he invited like 10 other people.
It's like, yo, you ever invite, you ever see a girl show up to your crib
or show up to like some event?
And she think you only invited her.
You invited every bitch in your phone.
Yeah.
So that would have been me.
But here's the thing.
The reality is this.
Kanye West and shout to John Monopoly, who's his manager,
and shout to, you know, David Stromberg, which is Travis Scott manager and everybody else.
Kanye is an absolute wreck, right?
And from somebody, and I've talked to other streamers, including Aiden and other people, like, for us to fly fucking...
Matter of fact, hold on, let me see.
Let me see if I call Aiden.
Is Aiden around?
Because we can talk about this one.
Don't worry, chat.
I know, y'all hate when I get on the call with people because I just stray off the point.
I know, I know, I know.
But Aiden was also invited.
He was also invited.
Is he still alive, or do you get off?
Don't tell me you got off, my brother.
he didn't get off did he oh he did get off fuck
he got off it's cool okay so yeah he invited
Aiden he invited Kai he invited me invited Joe Buddy
invited everybody and before I even knew it I was thinking about going
but they said they wanted me to come there to stream here's a problem
logistics wise it was a problem first of all me being on a plane for 12
hours is crazy like I have severe like I don't know if it's claustophobia
or just plain phobia at this point me being on a
plane for like, I think the flight is 15 hours from JFK to, um, to China.
And then I would have to make it to a place called Hainan.
I don't know.
What, haiku or haiku China.
Like, what the fuck?
I don't even know what the hell that is.
Anyway, the reason why a lot of streamers didn't go, um, with all due respect to his managers,
Kanye is too sporadic for people to make these big commitments to.
A lot of the streamers and a lot of,
of the people of influence told me this to act.
Yo, the same reason you ain't go is why we ain't going.
I said, why?
They said, we all felt like we would have probably took that time to go,
spent a day in travel, wasted our time,
and we would have got there like we've got to other places
and invited us to before.
And then he cancels the performance or he's just like,
I don't feel like doing it no more.
Or he's like, oh, no, I'm just only dropping merch
or whatever the case is.
Or, oh, everybody got to go to easy.com.
And that's already a thing.
People think Kanye is unreliable.
The second thing is that when I heard that Kanye wanted me to stream
and I said, well, okay, that would be a good stream,
except we're in fucking China.
How to fuck do you stream in China when they blocked every place
that I want to stream at?
Can I stream from YouTube in China?
Nope.
China blocked it.
Can I stream on Twitch in China?
Nope.
China blocked it.
Can I stream from Rumble, Facebook?
Nope.
China don't fuck with none of it.
So basically I was like
Well why the hell would I go?
China don't make it easy for you to stream from
I know people saying VPN but god damn it
If I got to do all that it's like come the fuck on bro
Come the fuck on so I was just like
This is already a logistics nightmare
I don't know what the internet's gonna be like there
I don't know what anything
All I got told from Kanye's team
Yo we'll pay for your flight and travel please just come to China
And I'm like yo what?
Then people are
tell me, oh, yo, you got to get a visa when you get, I'm like, bro, I'm, I'm, I'm sorry.
Like, with all due respect to, to, to, to, to, to, to, to, to, if you want us to come to
China, the day after, don't tell us a day before, right?
Like, it's also respect, right?
If Kanye had any ounce of respect for me, for Kai, for Aiden, for Joe Budden, you wouldn't,
You knew about your performance supposedly weeks in advance.
Like, you booked it.
Why would you think that these media personalities that do all of your music,
why would it be fair for us to drop everything we got going on
and fly 15 hours across the world?
And with no logistical help, not knowing what we're going into,
just to make you happy.
So, you know, I wish Kanye would contemplate that part of the,
the equation and apparently that's why none of the streamers or none of the people who we invited to supposedly
document the moment went so Kanye we love you but you could definitely absolutely do better brother okay
and I don't think that's us being big-headed I just think it is what is if you wanted how it looked
apparently they said Kanye this is a stadium and Kanye had them import a rice feel in the middle of the
stadium look at that's supposedly rice
Okay, then this was Kanye showing up there.
Where's the Bianca girl, Bianca Sensori?
Okay.
Then, hold on, I had a few more.
Then this was Kanye performing for 40,000 people.
So this is the full performance.
Not full performance, but the actual performance.
It does look dope.
They got my niggas walking in the rice field, bro.
They got my boys just in a rice field.
feels just cooling that's it
I guess when you're Kanye
you could do that right
um this is another
video from it
now this look AI ain't no way
Kanye dance like this
no fucking way
okay
and I think this is the last part
well not last part
but you know this was the
vision or the view
did look visually
appealing
right
apparently he got showed a lot of love I was told that his concert was a success so you know
even though people like me doubted that it would go down at all and possibly that affected why I
didn't go yeah clearly it went down without a hitch and you know I got to say
congratulations to Kanye um by the way they said
was a new restriction in haiku
China since Kanye's arrival
taxis had to play his music
I didn't know that like a fucking
place could just like tell their taxis
what to play. Adidas stores
stores are closed
as long as he's there
wow
and some cars even have a fuck
Adidas written on them like this car
right here
the city revolves around the rapper
yay
Wow, this is him at the hotel.
Wow.
Yeah, I guess they do love that nigga.
Okay.
Now, salute to Kanye, but, you know, now you know why me or other influencers could go.
I do want to react to this video real quick.
Did y'all see this chat?
Hey, that nigga for tickets.
Hold on, no, this has been a viral video.
They said, yo, damn, Loki feel bad.
Academic starts to get sad on stream after realizing Drake might be a fake friend that's using him.
Let me play a show.
a slight bit of this and then I'll react to it.
The concert.
He ain't, 21 Savage had to get you him.
Get you to them.
Act, this shit like that.
He didn't see it.
He didn't see it.
He didn't see it.
Now, act, you see everything else you said to him.
Now, a sudden, he didn't see it.
Act, he's treating you like, like, like, like, how when a thoughts in a DM,
go, I ain't trying to link to tonight.
Keeping the book.
That don't make him a fuck, nigger, though.
Like that, that does, though.
Act, that does, because when he needs you, he'll send you DMs,
he'll play on.
buddy buddy with you but he really don't fuck what you say that's my niggas a
drink like this because he's a fuck nigga how you've shown a mad love you don't
show you no love you think Drake shows you love how what's he do to show you love
I got exclusive info I'm like that's my love I'm on the end of push up what do you do
with that exclusive info you say to the world you gas it up 10 times more he's
used you as a free a billboard free promo show you love is your act I'm in the city
Here's 10 tickets
of my show
Backstage, pull up.
Yo, act,
pull up to the...
I got the OVie.
He said ice spice the jet
before he said you won.
Hack, you're the biggest media.
Nah, nah,
AJ did have some bars, man.
Hey, chat.
And let me ask you all the question.
Do you think AJ should start streaming?
I think AJ had been doing,
been putting a lot of work.
And he got some viral clips.
Him versus OT7 Quani.
You know,
you know, that's a lot of T7quanty,
like, on his head.
Headtop, him versus Wack 100, him with this.
I think AJ might have to start a little stream, man.
Let's see what AJ got going on.
You know, he's always been a person who, uh, um, been on, you know,
this stream kind of showed a lot of love.
Let's, I think it should start stream.
Anyway, yeah, what did I do with Drake?
He's the biggest rapper.
Oh, act.
You're, you're promoting him.
You're making, act.
That nigga will be dropping ass music, but you won't say that because you're a number one
fan, my nigga.
So you were like, yo.
Even if this shit asks, you might get off line,
might tell niggas you know,
yo, that shit was ass.
But, nigga, you get on line?
Nicky, you fucking jumping to it,
doing backflips.
Nick, all type of shit.
That nigga can't give you no tickets to his show?
Heck, the first,
nigga, he should be hitting up
when he tap in the city is you.
Yo, I'm in New York.
Yo, act.
I got how many tickets you need for my show tonight?
Okay.
Let me react to this clip.
Let me react to this clip.
Yo, chat.
Number one, if anybody knows me,
the reality of this is
like I've never been different
I always told you
if I'm ever have a downfall
it's going to be my loyalty
I'm a very loyal person
I'm somebody who
once I start liking
either your music
or I take a liking to you
as a friend
I fuck with you
and it's not
it's usually not conditional
on what you do for me
or whatever
is usually on
just my loyalty period
y'all have
seen this before, you know, with 6-9, I don't care if I don't like him. I don't care if I think he's a
snitch. That's, that's a guy who I think he's been good to me. I'm, I don't care, like, I'll promote
to my last day I'll promote six-nine. That's my boy. That's just my boy. Like, it is what it is.
Again, has people said crazy things about him? Do I agree with everything he does? No, but like, you know,
I'm a lawyer person, like, you know, I'm just not the person. And what I mean about lawyer, like,
you know, I'm just, like, I'm supportive too.
Because also, and here's the thing, too, you know, just to let everybody know,
I didn't get to the position that I got to by doing transactional transactions,
if that makes sense.
Like, it wasn't transactional energy.
I didn't have a friendship with young boy, Playboy Cardi, X, 6-9,
on some yo y'all give me this and i'm giving you this right like i've done like multiple
interviews with with a young boy i've never put one out you know i have them i just have them putting
them out i'm not trying to monetize like that i rather i care about the friendship a little bit more um
you know x that that was somebody who just genuinely i rocked with as a person right like you know um
Drake, I'm a fan of his music.
And I get it.
It's right now it's cool to hate Drake, right?
But I think me as a media personality,
I don't expect, like,
I feel like people are trying to impose their expectations on me when it comes to Drake.
I told y'all, like, I'm okay with not meeting him.
And I had multiple opportunities to meet him.
Like, I fucked up every opportunity.
Like, I literally was too drunk.
I fell asleep.
I went home, whatever.
Here's the thing.
I don't expect.
him to gift me nothing, right?
Like, you know,
it's so interesting when people
look at it so transactionally.
I never look at the artists that I support
on a transactional level.
You know, if you think about transaction-wise,
I'm in,
I'm tied to 6-9's
career ascension.
Yo, I've taxed these labels millions for that.
Like, you know, like, I've never gotten a dime
from 6-9, but I attached everybody else for it.
You get what I'm saying?
Like, I don't need to get money from Drake.
Like, I'm going to tax everybody else the same.
You know why?
Because everybody wants me to be tapped in with them.
Like, they'd be like, oh, well, we'll just.
So again, I don't look at it as transactionally as people might think.
Now, again, what people think I should require from these guys,
I just don't honestly think that that's the thing.
man i think i think drake deals with me as a fan in a good capacity and deals with me as a person
a good capacity we're not friends like that you get what i'm saying like he doesn't have to
come to the city and be like act let me suck your dick for a second like no that's not how it is
like and and i'll still stick to that and also me supporting his music isn't conditional
it's kind of crazy how like yo there's niggas online who's like they're
Dying over, like, supporting another artist, and it could be any artist, could be Kendrick.
Kendrick don't acknowledge them.
Like, you know what I mean?
Like, is y'all support conditional?
My support just isn't conditional.
That's just what I have to say.
I like Drake's music.
He's my favorite musician.
And by the way, I also want to put it out there in the air because the people who try to make this viral are the people who, like, part of their plan is to see me flip on Drake.
Right?
Like, that would be like a great way to be like, yes, we got him.
now, like he's almost dead.
Like, if, if, if I come out, I'm like, fuck Drake, too.
Like, I know y'all are waiting for that.
Again, he's my favorite musician.
And whether me and him are friends, whether he gives me tickets or not,
still my favorite musician.
I'm sorry.
So, you know, again, you know, like, you know, I know people, like, I know people,
like I've seen people tweet this and I had people hit me and they were like,
yo, bro, there's, you know, again.
I'll continue to say, if I'm going to ever have a downfall,
it's going to be my loyalty because, again,
I'm not here doing transactional friendships or relationships.
If I show somebody love, it's because I want to show them love.
If I like somebody's music, it's because I like it.
If someone's my friend, it's because they're my friend.
And I know y'all are, maybe y'all are like, oh, it's getting used and he doesn't know.
Yeah, I don't think I'm getting used in a professional sense.
do y'all it's no way i think i'm getting used in a professional sense right like i'm the most
successful media person i don't know what these other niggins is doing but i'm filled with success
okay when these things is complaining about shit it only rains down on me okay like like you
can't name none of these media personality of contemporary level and be like they got anything
more than me what more like how ungrateful do i have to be right oh do i think
I'm owed to be like BFFs with the nigger, no, bro.
So it's like, you know, again, for the people who want me to, you know,
and there will be more people trying to point out whatever.
Because I see people saying that, yo, act, this is time to jump off the Drake bandwagon.
This is time to say fuck Drake.
This is time to, that's just not me, bro.
Like, I like to do his music.
I just don't think he's as bad as y'all think he is.
And that's not, you know,
I have pity for a lot of y'all who have conditional relationships where you're how you think of somebody or your relationship with someone.
And I'm not even told my friendship.
I keep saying I'm not friends with drinking.
I'm a fan.
But I'm also a media personality.
And I do think I do benefit from my association with them.
Just like he benefits from the association with me.
If y'all are conditional where you're like, oh, somebody doesn't treat me like this.
So I'm going to say fuck him.
that's all you.
That's just not how I've been.
You know what I mean?
And, you know, again, to bring the young boy point up,
when I went to Gravedigger Mountain,
the first thing we looked,
I'm telling you, me and young boy,
there was a moment there.
There was like real tense moment.
I haven't going to lie to you, like real, like, like,
like, again, maybe one day I could really get into it,
but, you know, it got emotional eventually,
because it was real tense at first,
but it was just like,
Like, he said, bro, like, you've been rocked me since 16.
He's like, yo, you're one of the major reasons why I kept going when everybody knocked me down.
He's like when you criticize me, it feels different because I feel like I know you.
I don't know them other niggas.
And yeah, so, you know, I'm a little different in terms of archetype in terms of media personality.
But for anybody who took this as like, yo, act feels sad.
No, I'm not sad.
I'm not sad at all.
I don't go to sleep thinking that Drake owes me anything.
I think I'm very privileged.
I think I'm the best media personality possible at the moment.
So for the people who are, you know, who wanted this to be like,
oh, act finally is about to say fuck Drake.
No.
Still my favorite musician, so I'm sorry.
Maybe another time I could jump on that bandwagon, but it is okay.
All right.
All right.
uh i'm just knocking down topics to i'm just knocking down topics that's one of my topics i'm sorry
then and this has nothing to do the last topic but this is one of my topics is the kensig lamar's
situation and i hate the fact that rap is these days all about bro i i hate this aspect bro i
really do like y'all i don't understand i hate the fact that i feel like we're in politics
when i'm talking about rap you know like just just
Just truth be told, like a lot of the bullshit you even hear about me these days.
And you know what's so funny.
You know if I said, and this just goes to show your conviction and your persona.
You know what half of the bullshit they say about me these days?
Bro, it's Kendrick fans saying it.
Bro, they're treating me like, okay, well, since act is his big meter person,
we got to get him out of here to help get Drake out of here to make our guy win.
And like, honestly, you know, I would probably be seen 30 times.
better if I just said
fuck Drake I'm rocking with Kendrick
y'all do notice right this is
the path of least resistance
like it would be very
easy and I would get favorable
things said about me if I
just said fuck Drake I don't
like his music no more my new favorite
is Kendrick Lamar and he killed him in the battle
you know what all the people who are spreading
lies about me who are
they would all just either
love me or say nicer
things about me
But that's whack.
That's just not real.
You know what I mean?
And also, I'm, you know, I've been the person who have gone up against the barbs.
Like, Y'all Kendrick fans is weak.
I went up against the barbs.
Like, you know what I mean?
I think he's can't get me the full bend to nothing.
Pause.
So I'm just always stick to my convictions, you know.
But these days when I do report something, I see people like coming with the wildest things.
They think I'm, if I say something, you know, I report or I say things negative about drink too, right?
I said if Drake turned a Super Bowl down, he's stupid.
I really wholeheartedly believe that.
Like, why would you do that?
I don't care how big you think you are, right?
But if I say something about Kendrick,
everybody thinks that I'm making it up
or this is like a drink type of sciop, right?
For example, let me bring this up.
So did y'all see this?
Bro, I got killed for this.
I got killed for this, right?
Uh, give me one second.
Where is it?
Where is it?
Where is it?
So I posted this to my Instagram, right?
It says Compton business owners say they lost thousands of dollars when Kendrick Lamar shot the
Not Likas video in his hometown.
If you look at these comments, they're brutally killing me.
They're acting like I made this up.
I've never seen a grown man pole ride another man so much.
Drake got you in a choke.
This is not.
on follow because bro you on drake dick this would have been used the first week here you go making up
this is what they're saying to me like i'm just completely fabricating shit right leave that man alone
this not helping drake yo y'all should have went outside something yo okay here's the funny
thing about it right bro and maybe you know because and i'll take maybe i don't have really i shouldn't
there is no blame for me to take.
Because usually I would put via,
but this was not an academic story.
This story came out,
and by the way,
it says it here.
This story came out in the Los Angeles Times.
They're acting like,
I'm fabricating newspaper stories.
They only blamed me for this
when an entire reputed publication.
Remember this whole thing about
talking heads versus.
versus media personalities versus journalists.
They usually say to people who write for these outlets,
New York Times, L.A. Times, journalists, I copied and pasted.
I changed that one word.
They said that I made it up.
And I said, is rap really in this space?
Did y'all think I made this up?
Look, it went to the point.
By the way, let me put up the real article.
Look at this chat.
You can't even see it for free.
It says L.A. Times.
go to the website
www. www.
www.
www.
Latimes.com slash California.
Basically what I'm trying to tell y'all, chat,
I didn't make this up.
I copied and pasted off of a LA Times website.
It wasn't old.
Let me see if I could...
I need to find a way how I could show you out.
It's not old.
Look, September 14th.
My bad.
Once it does flash screen, it's going to bring back.
September 14th, I posted it three days ago.
I posted on the same day.
If Toronto comes up, if Toronto comes with an article, say, yo, Drake lost New Ho King, $5 million, I'd post it too.
But we're in the time of just, this is politics, bro.
This is politics.
Bro, people think that I made up this website.
I made up this article.
I just want to, for people who are on YouTube or we're going to watch this late, I want to show y'all, I want to,
Look, this is a Los Angeles Times credible website that made this is not me.
This is a whole article.
This is not me, right?
Anyway, people just said, act, you're making shit up.
Here's the funny thing about it.
Bro, on Twitter, they start going crazy on me.
Yo, act, why would you do that?
Act, yo, you're lying.
Look at this.
Then you have the standpages.
This is Kendrick chart data.
Kendrick Lamar updates.
So they posted a comment supposedly from the place that's quoted in the article saying this entire post is misquoted.
And pushing a narrative that we don't represent people.
Please don't believe everything you read.
Words have been twisted and that's not right.
The city should have made better decisions with notification on tax payment.
business owners. We in no way, shape, or form have any negative commentary for Kendrick.
This was a city issue in academics. You better be careful about misquoting people in twisting words.
We never spoke to you. I'm a food for the soul. Suck a cock. I hope y'all go out of business.
Like, it's only so much y'all could keep coming at me. Like, I didn't say I spoke to you,
bum-ass niggins at that trash-ass soul food restaurant.
I wouldn't come there to feed my dogs.
Pluto couldn't take a shit on y'all floor.
Please.
Don't ever think that I would be talking to you fucking bum-ass niggas.
I just want to make it clear.
The L.A. Times talked to y'all.
But y'all not attacking them.
Because in reality, they got a quote from me.
And I guarantee they didn't misquote y'all.
But y'all start to get Yelp reviews.
Because Kendrick is hip-hop Jesus.
You can't criticize him.
Rather than criticize, rather than stick to the convictions of what you said,
look, your store, your restaurant, which, by the way, I hope the Yelp reviews go down,
and I hope it go to zero.
I hope y'all go out of business.
I don't care.
My dog couldn't take a shit in the middle of y'all floor.
That's my opinion.
Okay?
I wouldn't never reach out to you, bum-ass things.
Let me pop my shit.
Let me stop playing with y'all, because y'all must think it's a little act instead of the big one.
whoever runs this shit black white spanish you can be albino suck 15 cocks and die i don't care
about your establishment it's probably trash i looked at the pictures it didn't look edible my dog
wouldn't eat there i actually suggest that everybody who listens to the sound of my voice
should probably give you a thumbs down on behalf of me fuck off your problem is with the people
you spoke to bitch ass niggas and bitch a whoever to fuck
owns it. You spoke to the LA Times.
Academics would never speak to a bum-ass
establishment like you.
That's a fact. So you spoke to the LA Times and then you didn't like
what they said and it's not, well, you didn't like how they quoted you
and it's not because they quoted you wrong. I guarantee it.
It's because Kendrick fans started saying,
how are y'all criticizing our Jesus?
You pussy. If you're going to make a comment, stick to it.
but please for the life of y'all
y'all trash ass restaurant
please don't ever mention my name
filth y'all cooking up in there
I wouldn't eat it my dog wouldn't eat it
so whatever money y'all lost
I hope y'all coming and talking about me incorrectly
I hope I could cost y'all a couple of thousands of dollars
bitch ass niggas because y'all just cost me
some reputation points by basically saying I lied on y'all
when I never fucking said I spoke to y'all in the first one
Okay, so
Fuck this place
Matter of fact, let me put it up
Yeah, let me not try to get sued
You know these motherfuckers
So happy these days
But fuck these niggas man
Anyway
So
LA Times put something out
Let's blame Mack
You know why
Nobody could print anything negative
About Kendrick's Jesus
Who?
What's the next thing?
Oh
So then I knew this shit was bad
When even the chick with probably the most biased
Well, like bias fan base
Start getting attacked by the Kendrick weirdos
Nicky Minaj
So Nicky Minaj basically said
Nicky Minaj basically said that Jay-Z
Nicky Minage basically said that Jay-Z was picking
Right
She says one nigga took the knee
the other nigga took the bag.
He going to get you N-words in line every time.
And then basically saying that,
yo, got everything in the world,
still spifling evil, discussing.
Go be fucking happy.
You in rap business, woman business.
When you got politician, police, you good, though.
Plus that ugly, laffy-taffy alien.
I think this is talking about Desiree Perez.
Okay?
She continued basically just accusing
Jay-Z of, you know,
essentially not picking
Wayne because he had an agenda and here we go denying a young black man what he's
rightfully um put into this game for no other reason but your ego your hatred for burman
drake nicky and wayne got you punishing little wayne um little wayne the gold nola was good
emm stood firm on having 50 cent come out a white man shit's sad house niggittangs but good
for them no loyalty wellp their niggies going to keep son of you okay uh he's
Essentially, she said that Jay-Z had a axe to grind.
I put that out on my Instagram,
because this is what the most,
this is what the Queen of Rap said.
I put no sauce on it.
I just said,
Nikki Menaz said this.
You know what the Kendrick fans and the weirdos of the internet said,
Act!
You and Nikki are wrong!
Jay-Z don't make no decisions.
It's the city that chose.
it. New Orleans.
They're the people
who didn't want to see
motherfucking little Wayne.
Then they said it was a panel.
Hold on, I got, I got them.
Look. Okay.
Well, we can't find their fake news
anymore because now the truth is out.
Now,
here we go.
Somebody named Jay Cicero, who's on the Super Bowl community,
you said, because it said
Jay-Z defenders deflected blame by saying the Super Bowl host city chose Lamar.
The president of the Super Bowl committee, right?
He's or the president's CEO of Greater New Orleans Sports Foundation and a Super Bowl 59 committee member clarified that selection process is the NFL decision alone for all entertainment for the Super Bowl, basically saying that the city do not matter.
Okay.
Now, remember, so you've been.
Eliminated City, but you hear what the Kendrick fans?
It's still let Jay-Z.
It's probably Roger Goodell.
He picked it.
All right.
Here we go.
Then we get a nigger.
I'm just tell you, man.
It's sad that I got to clear some of this shit up.
Like, it's really sad.
Then the Super Bowl halftime producer, Jesse Collins.
He told Variety.
And by the way, let me just go to the actual post.
I want to make sure I read it in full because I keep hearing people saying it's taken out of context.
so let us go down down down
nah nah nah nah nah nah nah nah nah
y'all should follow academics TV on Twitter
if you don't
Jesse Collins was the go-to producer behind the scenes
Okay come on we got to turn the ads off for this one
All right time
Pause on this site
I can't believe that stupid-ass restaurant
Had the fucking audacity man
I hope you all the things go out of business man
Bum-ass niggas man
Fucking bum-ass niggas man
they so fucking scared of Kendrick Lamar
you should have never said nothing about it then
you know it's gonna be read
the way like yo y'all are dissing Kendrick
why like if you fucking
so pussy and scared of the nigga
why even complain nigga the 3,000
y'all lost today nigga eat that
fucking loss and fucking
cripp walk to not like us you bum ass
niggas the fuck are you over here acting like
oh no we didn't say nothing about Kendrick
act we didn't talk to you bitch I never said I talked to you bitch ass
ass niggas fucking trash ass restaurant
man god damn it
Anyway, it's been less than 24 hours since production of the Warped,
since production warped on the 76 Emmy Awards,
but Jesse Collins and his fellow executive producers are already on the go,
specifically to New Orleans.
They're flying to the Big Easy on Tuesday to Scout the Super to Superdome
as they plan the next February Super Bowl 59 halftime show starring Kedric Lamar.
It's her first time with the artist team, notes Jesse Collins,
entertainment prexy
Dionne Harmon
We've actually been
Been a few times already in preparation
But since the announcement
It's the first time since Kendrick team
And Us will come together
Adds blah blah
She's not wrong
Also Monday BT blah blah blah
I fuck that
Okay cool
It says between now and the Super Bowl
On February 9th Collins and company
Additionally have a trio of holiday specials
In the work including two
So basically this guy does a bunch of shit
Right let's just go to the Super Bowl
right uh i just want to hear the super bowl super bowl super bowl super bowl super bowl where is the super bowl
like i don't want to read all this because i don't go fuck about this other shit where is it that
no that's american musical war damn i just think it does a lot okay collins won an emmy
in 2022 for the super bowl halftime show more than that in the moment it's safe to say
collins that have plenty of pinch me moments as a producer for some of the biggest spectacles
But he still remembers opening the 2016 BT Awards as a particularly magic moment.
That year, all right, come on, let's get back to the Super Bowl.
Okay, cool.
Uh-da-da-da.
Okay, Lamar, of course, will once again be center stage in February with Collins at the helm.
This time, as a featured actor in the Super Bowl 59 halftime show.
He knows that Lil Wayne fans, as well as Lil' win himself, are disappointed that New Orleans native did not get the gig,
but Collins is confident that Lamar is the right choice.
We love Wayne, Collins said.
There's always Vegas odds on who's going to get to perform it,
but I think we're going to do an amazing show with Kendrick,
and I think everyone's going to love the halftime show.
I know Kendrick's going to work exceptionally hard to deliver an amazing show.
Lamar has already had a good luck charm for Collins,
who won that Super Bowl, whatever, halftime show Emmy
in the outstanding variety special live category,
which including Compton's native content.
The event served as a tribute to hip-hop that included Dr. Dre, Snoop, Mary J. Blige, M&M. 50 Cent, as well as Kendrick Lamar.
Collins has been a executive producer on the Super Bowl halftime show since 2021,
joining Jay Z and his Rock Nation team in Molden, one of the most anticipated highlights inside TV's most watch event of the year.
It's a decision that Jay makes, Collins says of choosing the annual halftime act.
Since we've been on board with that show
He's made it every year
And it's been amazing
He's always picked right
For all the delusional ones in the back
Ain't that what I fucking told y'all
JZ picks
Now I've seen a couple half stupid niggins
And I want to say the R word
But I don't want motherfucking Twitch to get mad
But you niggas deserve to be called
God damn
Exactly
Fuck bitch ass niggas
niggas, man.
I see some dummies said,
well, well, Jay don't really
have all the say, like, you know,
I don't think Drake could just, like,
just up and pick like Kodak black
and nobody said that, you fucking idiot.
Yo, the niggas picking
who he wants, and he's clearly
picking up eligible candidates, but he's
picking who he wants. That's the fucking
point. Jay Z's picking it.
If he picks one nigger, means he
then pick another nigga. That's what it is.
Like, it's kind of
It's kind of like
it's kind of like now you have to
Like niggas ignore facts
They create alternate realities
They just like
Fillibuster like this is like
What the fuck?
Where the fuck is going on?
Meanwhile
Even his cons and his team press
For the holiday blah blah
Okay I think that was the only thing
So for you fucking
retarded ass motherfuckers
I didn't even want to say the word
But god damn it
Fuck
You dumb ass things in the back
The reality is
man jazy picks it ain't the city ain't no fucking panel he's picking okay so if niggas said later on he
didn't pick way but he picked um kendrick it's cause it fucking true it is what it is true god damn it
tell you man these motherfuckers man these motherfuckers man these motherfuckers bro now to get to
little Wayne statement right so i don't even know why I'm so tight
like first of all I want to say forgive me for uh forgive me for the delay um the delay on
just the delay i want to say uh i had the first of all i had to get strength i have to get strength
enough to do this without breaking um i must say thank you i must say thank you to every voice
every opinion, all the care, all the love and the support out there is your words turn
into arms and it held me up when I try to fall back. That hurt, hurt a lot. You know what I'm
talking about, it hurt a whole lot. I blame myself for not being mentally prepared for a
a let down and just automatically mentally putting myself in that position like
somebody told me that was my position so I blame myself for that but I thought
that was nothing you know I thought that was nothing better than that that
spot in that stage in that platform in my city and so I hurt I heard a whole lot but
which y'all y'all are fucking amazing.
It made me feel like shit not getting this opportunity.
And when I felt like shit, you guys reminded me
that I ain't shit without y'all.
And amazing reality.
So like I said, it broke me.
And I'm just trying to put me back together.
But my God, have you all help me.
Thanks to all my peers, my friends, my family.
My homies on sports television, everybody repping me.
I really appreciate that.
I really do.
I feel like I let all of y'all down by not getting that opportunity.
But, and on me.
Once again, I ain't going to lie, man.
I might have to pour some more liquor because I'm just giving it up raw tonight.
I ain't going to lie. Pause, no ditty.
Really, no ditty.
Yo, Wayne, I ain't going to lie, bro.
This was goddamn fucking pathetic, bro.
I got to keep it a beat.
I love Wayne.
But, Wayne, somebody going to have to tell you the truth.
I don't know if it's me or somebody else,
but somebody got to tell you the truth.
The reason why you're broken, nigga,
is because, nigga, you haven't given a fuck
in a good couple of years.
We do love you, and the fans do love you,
and you are a legend, but God damn it, nigga.
Let me, you...
You're like the old uncle that shows up to the cookout
And everybody talk about you behind your bat
But nobody want to tell you
What the fuck we've been talking about
So I'm gonna tell you.
Wayne, they say you suck it performing, my nigga.
They say you don't remember your lyrics.
Yeah, you got great songs, but they say you suck.
Literally.
That's all they say, nigga.
You're trash.
I'm sorry to say.
They say your garbage.
That's one thing.
Now, do I believe you deserve to perform
or you are off deserving to be performing at the Super Bowl headline in your city?
Yes, but not only does that first point that you fucking suck and performing currently matters,
the next point matters that I'm out of make too.
And I do love you.
This is tough love.
I get it, you're a legend.
You've given us so much.
You know, by the way, ever since you had that health,
scare where we thought
we've given you a lot of grace
but here's a thing and here's the reality of it
Wayne
you suffer from
a severe case of
not giving a fuck
and when a nigga don't give a fuck
he can't wake up to
great things just falling in his lap
I love you Wayne
but my nigga you got to go watch what Usher did
to go get a Super Bowl performance
and you are in the Usher category, brother.
A legend.
A living legend who's still active.
Mount Rushmore type.
But you know what that nigga had to go do?
That nigga had to go to goddamn Vegas.
Do all type of residency days.
He even says he stayed there for months.
Like the nigga was putting in work.
I don't even know if Wayne could successfully finish a tour
and perform all his songs.
either word for word or even,
bro, that's the reality of it, right?
Like, you know, clearly,
I want him to get this opportunity,
but Wayne got to stop playing victim right here.
They're saying you suck at performing right now.
You need to get better.
This whole thing like, oh, I got,
I rap too many shit.
I don't remember my lyrics.
That ain't going to cut it, brother.
We ain't going to cut it, nigger.
Nigger, bring a pen and a paper out to your performance
that you can read it off there, nigger.
Read it off. Matter of fact, you know what somebody, I seen him pop up at Drake Show at the motherfucking Prudential Center.
You know what somebody quickly pointed out to me, they say, yo, those monitors around the stage, that's for when Wayne comes out that he can look at his lyrics right there.
I said, what the fuck?
That's the fucking problem.
You can't remember your goddamn lyrics.
Like, what are we talking about?
So that's number one.
You need to fix that.
Number two, you got to start giving a fuck about this shit, brother.
I'm sorry to say, Monica.
You, the reason why you Kobe and the reason why I think Drake surpassed you and really Drake is the one comparing with Jay Notchu, competing with Jay Not You, even though you've had a phenomenal career and we do love you, is because you've shown time and time again, you don't give a fuck.
That's just the reality of it, bro.
Like, my nigga, like, brother, a nigga made a video saying, I'm surprised I wasn't picked.
Well, nigga, here's a funny part about it.
they picked Kendrick like over a month ago.
Like this is how you know he's not tapped in.
This is how you know he doesn't give a fuck.
They told the nigga a month ago.
He had to shoot the video a month ago.
Or like he was told he had to shoot a video a month ago.
He shot the video supposedly like a week ago or not a week, two weeks ago or something like that.
But it was after drink did some of the week two shit or the round two shit.
But the thing I knew a month ago.
So if you find it out on TV, it tells me you're not giving it.
a fuck personality, things that a Super Bowl headlined performance is going to fall in your lap,
which is just not going to happen.
You got to start giving.
You got to start giving a fuck.
No, I'm serious.
And I'm not saying any of these things to clown Wayne because, like, I think that's the
saddest part about it all.
We all love Wayne.
We all make excuses for Wayne.
Wayne went through a health scare.
These days when we look at Wayne,
we just got to be very clear, chat.
Like, I know, I know.
We got to be very clear.
When I look at Wayne these days,
I'll be like, yo, I'm glad he's looking sober.
Like, let's be honest, right?
Like, we're like, we're getting like these little trinkets of,
oh, yeah, no, no, no, he's looking sober.
Oh, shit, like, again, I think Wayne has a lot of work to do on himself.
And he still has work to do not necessarily in terms of catalog with his career.
But being a legacy act, you got to,
you got at least present yourself a certain way, my brother.
Like, you shouldn't be just showing up picking up a mic.
Like, this is your first year on the job of being a performer.
That's why they're not picking you.
Did you see how that motherfucker Kendrick came out to that,
when he was just the guest.
appearance during um
22 was it 22 22
nigger had soldiers with them they got
they were doing choreography
like come on bro
don't gas light us and like we want you
to get it like bro you deserve it
you're like you're one of the greatest
we want you to get it
but it would be a disservice if
we just
said that you didn't have to present yourself in a certain way
just because you got to this point,
this isn't a lifetime achievement award.
This isn't like some type of,
oh, okay, great, your career was good.
So just give it to them.
Like, yo, niggis is showing multiple performance
where they say you can't remember your lyrics,
your performance is trash.
Okay, so that's one thing.
Number two, they say you're not even,
like a lot of these things,
you got to pitch to these people.
You got to put on an exhibition
that you are the suitable candidate.
You got to be in contact with these people.
You clearly, like, I'm going to fall back from the old you and Jay-Z got an issue,
but if that's the case, Jay-Z is one of the influential people that's making the pick.
Show the niggins something.
I'm pretty sure he would have picked you.
Maybe not this year because I don't think you want to drink getting on Sean,
but come on, bro.
You can do better, bro.
Like, we got to give way in a little tough love.
Like, you know, again, we give way in a lot of passes, but you know, Wayne.
Niggins saying you can't even remember your lyrics, bro.
Like, come on, bro.
Respectfully, bro.
That's a problem.
Trust me, I hate it even criticizing Wayne because I do love Wayne.
And me criticizing him feels like, it just feels blasphemous.
So I apologize as much as I'm, but it's kind of true.
Like, Wayne, you got to do a little bit more effort, bro.
Please, bro.
Please, dog.
Please.
Please.
Okay.
Uh, next topic real quick.
Man, oh man, you know what?
Listen, first and foremost, me and this individual got no more smoke, no more beef.
Jay Critch came on here.
We hash things out.
We shouted.
We screamed.
We got at each other.
It was cool.
Whatever.
We left with a better understanding of each other.
So I am no longer in the place of saying, fuck this guy.
So that's not my demeanor.
And anything, I'm going to report on this news, but it's not, I'm actually not happy about this at all.
If you guys don't know, my man, the hood fave, uh, Jay Critch,
looked like he was caught lacking by, um, some unscrupulous individuals in a video that
was posted in social media.
I only seen six seconds.
You see Jay Critch.
He's seen shirtless.
Where the fuck?
Oh, my bed.
Okay.
He's seen shirtless standing outside of, I can't, I can't picture where this is.
This looked like it might be either a venue or something of the sort.
Regardless, the video goes like this.
What you want to do, bitch?
What you want to do, critch?
I'm fuck out of here, nigga.
Sank that.
Okay.
Number one, look like somebody hit him with a shoe, which is kind of crazy, right?
I'll give him some credit.
He smiles afterwards, and the dude even says supposedly his favorite saying afterwards.
or cite that or whatever.
Now, I'm going to be honest with you, brother.
I hated to see this happen.
I think this is about the third or four time
we've seen Jay Critch getting physically attacked in public.
And I got to say, yo, you know, critch,
listen, I'm not even clown to you, brother.
But where's your crash dummy at, brother?
Like, you need a crash dummy to make an example out of these niggas.
How is everybody seeing you and thinking that you are a pinata?
Like, this is not the wave.
Now, by the way, I know that there's a guy.
is some complexities to this because apparently, you know, um, he commented and he said, yo, bro,
nigga, I popped on y'all niggas first. So one versus six. And apparently he was outnumbered one
versus six, which also I'm asking questions about that. Like, critch, like, why or where are you
showing up to Dolly that you could run into six people that might not like you? Was this completely
unannounced. Did you know that maybe your opposite is going to be there? How are you alone?
Again, things happened, but damn. Now, as far as the logistics, okay, I'm going to give
a little credit. He said it was one versus six. If you walk away from a one versus six, not bleeding,
ribs not broken, all your jewelry, not confiscated, you're not walking, well, I guess he walked
without a shoe but like he should be walking around walk away without your teeth damn they're
naked so perhaps he stood his ground one versus six right he said left with all his chains i
don't see no change but maybe he had his chains in his hand say you lost and i guess the guy
the guy name is what dotty dot he says i beat you out your sneakers before they even got there and i let you
have your chain. I took it off
your neck. You thought it was
lit when you backed out that
camera dummy.
Okay, I don't know who this guy is.
Oh, this is guy.
So you saw me Dolo.
Pull a camera out trying to trove me. You can't
World Star me, nigga. Signed
that. So, nigga deleted
my song after I paid him for a feature
because this girl was in my section
with her friends. And I used to
talk to her friend. And he
know that. You want to show you
bitch you were so tough
slash tender and she was just
chilling you two jelly
bro signed that
I guess they had a song together
oh
niggas a niggas crazy
I was just dead getting a hot dog
pause
so it was just getting a glazy
and I guess this was a video
or no a photo
uh Jay Critch looked kind of clean here
I'm not gonna lie to you but like
yeah I ain't gonna lie
Like, yo, you know, I got to say shout out to Jake Critch.
If, if y'all beat his ass 6 v1 and he looked like this, yeah.
Now, granted, this is a catch-22 because, you know, you never want to start clowning niggins who do in the jumping.
Be like, oh, you ain't fuck him up enough because now when niggas start stabbing niggins start doing all the type of weird dumb shit, we're going to be like, why are you doing all that?
They're like, well, I thought you said us punching on him before.
It wasn't enough.
So we stabbed him this time.
All of us stabbed him.
So now I really try to encourage that.
But yeah, yo, you know, Jay Critchman, you know, good job for surviving a 6 v.1.
But, bro, please, please, please, my nigga.
Please, if you got these enemies like that, nigga, watch how you go outside.
He says, and I ain't run into him.
I ain't run into him.
He ran into me.
You see how worded that?
Very mindful of how.
how it actually happened.
I don't go to the Graham saying I ran down on
ops, ops running to me
and have a bad day.
Showtime.
Okay.
Okay.
All right.
I don't know.
This is this guy right here.
Remind me if I ever, if this thing ever paid for a song,
I make sure this nigga's song does not get deleted,
man.
This thing will look like he is a demon.
Okay.
Yeah, I ain't gonna lie.
I'm not giving Jay Critch to Elle on this one.
I'm not giving Jay Critch to Elle on this one.
Now, I will say, though, I'm hoping the reason that this dude is saying that Jay Critch was mad.
It's not true.
If J. Critch is mad that his girl was in a section with this guy, yeah, you know, again, you got to be mad at your girl more than you mad at the guy.
So, yeah, I can't knock it.
I can't knock it.
But please, y'all, y'all leave Jay Critch alone, man.
All y'all niggins leave Jay Critch alone, bro.
All right?
leave j critch alone either that or j critch i'm gonna keep it a being with you bro you need a permanent
nigger around you like that nigger name should be you got to call that nigger example like his
name should be example like jitch all of this fuckery stops when you make an example out of somebody
you got to make an example you see right now they think they're making an example out of you jay critch
I'm keeping it a bean.
Like,
like,
like,
your nickname is Hood Fave,
but they're thinking you,
like,
not the Hood Fave.
You got to make an example
of these things,
man.
I ain't going to lie to you.
You got to make an example.
Either that or holl at me
and I'll call the cops for you,
nigga.
I get all six of them nays
locked up with a case.
Assault and battery
with a deadly weapon.
You feel me?
Nigger hit me with my own shoe.
That's a deadly weapon,
nigga.
You're going to jail.
You're fighting the case now,
nigger.
You better get your Ysel Woody on,
nigger.
Yep.
Yup. Yep. That's what it is. Yup.
Yo, listen. Jay Critch, man, if I find out all five of them niggies' name,
now, I ain't going to just complimentary tell. I'm not on the why I sell Woody, but you know what I mean?
I'm saying. If you can't make an example out of one of them, I got you, bro. I got you. Okay.
Now, again, I got no problem with Jay Critch. And again, maybe he took a W in the situation.
if he said it was really 1V6.
But, you know, again, we don't know these guys who start getting at you.
So you got to think about it in the bigger scheme of things
and you look worse than they look, right?
Because even if you beat them up, you can't put up a video
because we're going to be like, who'd you beat up?
But they get to put up a video that they hit you, right?
It is what it is.
My man Bobby Shmerda.
Did I see this?
Look at this, Shat.
Tell all the bitches in Miami Shmurda don't buy no pussy.
Your motherfucking ass out of it.
Get your ass out of it, bitch.
Get the fuck out of it.
That dusty pussy.
We don't want nothing to that shit.
Take your ass to the shelter.
I'll be getting his pussy before I even link certain bitches.
I'll be like this bitch probably sell pussy.
If you, like to get some pussy for you, like the.
Tell all the bitches in Miami.
Okay.
Uh, so he said 10 a.m.
They trying to hit a leg.
What the fuck is going on in Miami?
My motherfuckers trying to sell pussy early in my, in the morning.
Attention told of broke girls in Miami.
We buy buildings, not bitches.
I'm going to go back to New York and buy some more buildings, okay?
He posted that, and then the girls try to respond to him, okay?
One of the girls says, yo, tell us girls, there's an after party.
After booby trap at his crib, us girls pull up and all he got his hard D and his little tidy whitties.
We walked our happy fat asses out the front door.
You're lucky we didn't slap you
Complain in our face
You're so mad you had to go to sleep
With a hard pecker
That you go to the internet
Like the ugly little nerd you are
I'll pray
You
You really thought you were in him
And you could pull off
The strength of yourself
Laughing my ass off
Go to bed
Loser
And he says a mess
You're not him babe
And it's tearing you up inside
Put the phone down
And get some rest babe
And she says
Not having sex with Bobby Shmurda
Is something worth going viral for
Uh, have you seen him?
Tag me something juicer next time.
Now first and foremost, man
Uh, I'm gonna be honest with you.
This is clearly, you know, um,
a woman who is into that, like,
bro,
bro, this BBO bandit.
This is some diabolical shit, bro.
Nigger, the curvature on this goddamn BBL right here,
nigger.
It's like the curvature on the goddamn, uh,
the horizon or the goddamn sun,
but this is crazy, nigga.
Like, to calculate this type of ass, nigga,
you got to, like, put pie squared.
You got to find the hypotenuse.
Like, nigga, you got to get on some algebra shit,
nigga, some geometry shit to find what the fuck she got going.
The circumference of this dumb shit right here,
like, does the ass match the thighs and the legs?
This shit look crazy.
Now, I'm going to be honest with you.
Bobby, if you were trying to solicit vagina from this chick right here, nigga,
I'm sorry.
At some point, you got to start, like, knowing your worth.
Us, man, we got to know when it's better to just beat our dick more than just fuck anything.
Like, God damn it.
Yeah, I see why he ain't want to pay, but holy shit, nigga.
Is this where you were trying to bring home in the first place?
Like, nigga, she looked like she got a loaded diaper, nigga, except this is skin.
Like, this looks crazy, my nigga.
And honestly, I can't even blame this girl that much.
You know why?
Bro, we got to stop blaming some of these chicks who you know what they're doing.
If they're selling that, you know, you can't blame them for what they're doing naturally.
You got to blame yourself for indulging it or for being fooled.
You're in Miami.
You done party till 8 o'clock a.m.
You're bringing a girl home from a strip club 8 a.m.
She probably works there.
actually there's videos and pictures of her there.
I don't know if she works there.
Yeah, she probably thinks that you're going to pay some shit.
So again, this is not my cup of tea,
but I can't shame her for doing what she normally does.
We've already came to the conclusion that a lot of these women out here,
they're glorified escorts.
They're selling that, you know?
And if that's the reality of it,
why the hell are we that surprised that she's doing
something of the sort.
I think we just have to just openly
accept her for her and then
Bobby, you got to come
back to New York a pick better, bro.
Okay? Or, you know, I don't have
Bobby was trying to do like the Shannon Sharp
nigga, just
just
find like one of these mid
New York chicks, nigga, and just
accidentally go live and do
your thing, bro. I don't know if that's what he was doing.
Anyway, he was assigned to give
kick game to the pussy purchasers
and this is what he said.
Niggas out there buying the coochie, right?
Y'all niggas can fuck the game up.
Just drop all the girls, right?
All the girls, if they actually are for money,
that means they need it.
I mean, they ain't got no money, right?
So if they actually out for the money,
they ain't got no money,
they're going down on their money,
you know what I'm saying?
They got a little loan from last nigga,
but that shit running out.
And they ain't got no motherfucking resuscary who I'm saying.
Now you're talking to a nigga that got residual income,
so I'll be good, you'm saying.
But long story, sure,
what I'm going to tell y'allie is,
tell these bitches $100 for the pussy.
They got to agree.
They all tell a bitch,
this deal going and go to the shelter
$100 a pop. I'm giving this to
all the basketball players. Listen, I know y'all guys with
the college and shit. Y'all think it's college niggas.
That's what you fucked up, Bobby.
The basketball players
these are who to be blamed.
The athletes,
because they deal in
discreetness, the athletes
are paying top dollars for
mid-pussy. If you guys
don't know. So the majority of women
these days, they're operating
as quasi-esquoise.
or prostitutes.
Their sexuality is up for purchase.
Their vagina is up for purchase, right?
And the reality is that,
because it's so easy and accessible
to get to athletes,
athletes are the main ones
who are paying for vagina
because they're pain for bitches to shut up,
not having an attitude, not expose them,
not tell to their girl,
and just do the freaky shit
they want to do for the moment
and just get the fuck out of there.
You see a rapper think he's that cool.
he think he's getting pussy just because of his hit song that they played in the club twice.
That nigga, that nigga was smirder walking like two, like,
and booby trapping thought that all the bitch is going to suck his dick, right?
When they said no, he starts exposing him.
That's the thing with rappers.
Rappers don't got a problem with playing the shame game because they're going to look like more of a pimp if they're like,
man, fuck this bitch, this bitch is blah, blah, blah.
So again, that's the problem.
But these girls already getting paid, you know, even,
as ridiculous that shorty looked she getting paid by some of these athletes man trust and believe it
okay so bobby listen if you're not don't try to reprice what she got going on fuck with bitches
that either going to be in your price if you're saying you pay a hundred dollars or it seemed like
you were saying you don't pay none at all um good but you're not going to fuck that girl at booby trap
who has gotten her her ass as big as a beach ball she didn't do that for no reason you know
mean so again you're either going to pay the price or a nigga you stop trying to get with the girls
who are trying to get niggas to pay okay it is what it is i can't even fall to girls because
these days vagina selling is very popular man vagina selling is very very popular i don't know how
profitable it is but it's definitely popular okay all right um jasi this man so
Why is so Woody?
He did a no jumper interview, right?
And the no jumper interview, this is classic.
No jumper.
Wouldn't have been able to...
Let me try to go to the interesting part.
Here we go.
And then they're talking to them?
Yeah.
But somebody else was like, nah, you know what I mean?
Whatever, whatever.
So I went.
And then this thing, you know, they let me go, but they start...
So they actually think why he starts snitching, man.
Here we go.
Plus one of the other.
Here we go.
Freedom, I mean.
They bonded.
I was on there.
I ain't hanging with nobody type of time.
But when my best friend got killed, you know, me and Tick was just, I don't know how we really just locked in.
But we locked in and shit, it's been there ever since.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Right.
So you and Tick still got like a relationship to this day or?
For sure.
But, you know, I mean, due to his freedom, I mean, there's no communication with us.
I'm about to ask you right now.
So, yeah.
So, uh, how do you feel with the jacket that's been labeled on, you know what I'm saying?
With everybody, the interrogation videos leaked and everybody have this, uh, have their way of thinking about you now and shit.
Like, how do you take that?
How do you feel about people who call me, labeling you a snitch?
Because it's all, it's on the, it's only on the internet.
I haven't ran to one person.
They said to my face.
And I ain't saying like on no gangster store.
Like, I pray that nobody don't provoke me.
You feel what I'm saying?
Because I ain't miss for nobody.
I ain't looking for trouble.
So if I see, if I'm out.
and somebody walk up and say, I'm a snitch or whatever.
I'm just like shut out.
I'm a bus one of another.
I'm going to be honest with you.
There's an endearing part of like Woody's personality where like, obviously most people,
I guess if you're from the streets, you probably don't like the fact that he told.
But it's, you know, he's still kind of talking tough, but it's, he's also kind of have like
this innocent thing to, but I'm not looking for no trouble.
Like, Brad just want to be left.
Like, it's kind of like he's also having, he has a humbleness to him where he's,
He's like, yo, I'm not looking for no trouble.
You know what I mean?
When did you actually have to start, like, going to the police station and they started contacting you?
Yeah, what was that decision like?
Yeah, when was this decision?
And, like, what year would you say, like, they started really just, like, contacting you a lot?
When it, you know, when they, when they, when they, when they, when they, when they, when they, when they, when they, when they, stuff to a place.
Yeah.
So after nut passed, that's when really there was on you?
Because you got picked up that same day, right?
Now, they didn't pick me up.
So, um, some happened.
and somebody called me like,
hey, the investigators
want to talk to you.
I'm like,
what are they going to talk to me for?
You know what I mean?
Going out of there and talk to them?
Yeah.
But somebody else was like,
you know what I mean?
Whatever, whatever.
So I went.
And then this thing, you know,
they let me go,
but they started
everybody in the Lender starts saying,
I did this.
That's why I don't care.
Everybody in the Lenton said,
I did this, I did this, I did this,
I did this, I did this.
They could kiss my ass.
Yeah, I was talking.
Everybody, everybody dressing it.
It wasn't one person from Atlanta was saying my name.
So he's just like, y'all, y'all, y'all.
Y'all.
So you felt justified in talking to the cops because there were so many people talking in general?
No, I didn't feel justified.
My whole thing is get them off of me.
So it wasn't being justified.
I didn't believe in none of the other stuff, but it's just certain stuff.
Like, I ain't no fault guy.
You feel I'm saying?
And I'm not going to let nobody treat me like when I have on it.
That was also very interesting what he's saying.
It's like, you know, he didn't really go too much into like, you know, his issues with Thug or at the time with Thug.
He said Thug didn't live up to his word a lot.
That's why he started feeling away about Thug.
But he essentially said, you really said then.
And I think this is a part about being a street dude that I think some people like.
He says, I'm not a fall guy.
I'm not, you know, I'm not the guy who, yeah, I just go do life in prison while y'all keep making money out here and fucking bitches.
And that's how it goes.
He's like, that's not me.
And I think the street life is predicated on somebody like Woody being the fall guy, right?
Where it's like, yo, you'll keep it real.
You'll hold it down.
You'll take the charges and go forever right in a jail while young thug keep buying
foreigns for his six bitches out here.
He keep living life and keep doing whatever the fuck he want to do.
So that was kind of interesting where I'm like, maybe the street dudes are.
kind of involving them be like, nah, I don't got to be no crash dummy.
And if y'all won't call me a snitch for that, fuck it.
Independent mindset, I'm going to treat people how they treat me.
So that's what really led up to a certain point.
But you probably never in a million years thought that those, the tapes would come out either, right?
Right. I knew they would.
Oh, you knew they would.
Yeah, but I didn't think they'd make an arrest.
So what I'm saying?
Anytime somebody talked to the police, it's almost impossible that he's never going to come up.
Yeah.
You know what I'm saying?
So, and I'm a type of person I ready to be prepared or think things too.
So I'm going to think about 10 steps ahead just to be on the safe side in every which way.
But, all right, so did any of your homies know?
Because I've seen somewhere where, I think Muntu, he said that,
Doug actually advised you to go down there and talk to the police that night because they said, y'all,
we ain't got shit to do with nothing.
Go talk to him.
That's what he said on the stand.
open case yeah yeah but he no that's what he said on the wild cell trial
standing like the other day but that's what I just he said but I fear you on
that yeah but I'm not gonna speak on it because this this I don't record
yeah all right I think I love saying I don't recall man I feel it so all so yeah
so yeah early days when did you start like really you know I ain't gonna lie
yeah shot to Remo man Remo takes a lot of
the control in a lot of these situations out of you know um like adam's a pretty good interview
but i don't know sometimes adam's not prepared or adam is doing like a classic move where you let
your new guy be the bad guy while you be the you know the smooth criminal and kind of just
keep conversation in terms of extracting but reba will be doing a good job he going to the studio
and just being around the guys like what year would you say uh of course his question's a hell of federal
though like you know what I mean like shit if he was white
he'd be Vlad Jr but not his remote
20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20
um it kept me out of screech
okay we're not going to watch all this um
there's a part where like
I guess I guess Adam paid this guy
um actually I talked to Adam and he told me how much
I won't tell you how much me but um yeah it
and his manager jumps in like yo
basically saying, yo, we went past the time y'all paid for.
I guess it was a miscommunication.
They thought he only paid for like an hour when I guess Adam paid for two hours.
Here we go.
So they jump in.
Been around him a few times.
He was nobody.
He was kicking him with back in the...
We not.
They could turn that into...
That could be a whole...
This interview.
There we go.
20 more minutes.
I don't know if he still is or whatever, but...
Everybody right.
rocking this or if you blood,
who don't care where you from, what hood you here.
That's how he was until they started
divided, you feel it?
Yeah.
Pause for a second.
Another 25, so
maybe a full hour and a half?
I thought it was supposed to be an hour.
Oh, I thought it was supposed to be two hours.
I thought it was two hours.
I got some more questions,
though, some good shit.
So what you just say?
Shout to Remo and Adam standing on it.
Hey, whoever that's Woody's manager,
hey, listen, listen,
let me just give you out some
game right now, okay?
Hey,
what are you trying to be an influencer?
I know Adam Pageall,
but when you're on a platform like Adam
or like no jumper,
bro, you let that shit cook,
okay?
I don't know what, like,
I hate when hood niggas become managers of people
because they fuck up the artists
or whoever they're managing
by trying to tax for every little minute.
Yo, yo, we're two minutes over.
Nah, you got to let it rock.
bro, like, really the opportunity is being given to Woody here.
Like, no jumper is no jumper, whether you want to think it's litter or not.
No jumper is no jumper.
You have to realize Woody's no longer on a stand.
Every moment from now, until Thug's verdict, he gets more and more irrelevant.
He wants to be an influencer.
He's doing 20 V-1s.
Again, this whole pay-for-play culture with, like, interviews is cool when you're just selling the story.
but if you're trying to be an influencer
you kind of want to
the right platforms
you want to do it for free
you gotta do it for free
which again I'm not saying this year
I did this for free
but still like
I hate when people are like nickel and diamond
like this guy has
whoever this guy's manager
Woody's manager
probably knows nothing about
this type of shit
he's over here just trying nickel and dime
like yo let's get another extra 3K
no nigga
well he was trying to say we got to wrap it up
but I thought we were doing a full two hours
but I mean
anywhere between an hour and a half
and two hours
hours of school how much you're trying to pay well we already he said how much you're trying to pay
yo they're about business you know this is why i can't do this type of interviews bro
that's an hour so what you just asked for 20 more minutes all right they do it
all right well listen stay away for those questions y'all trying to go around and and um we're not
doing the mechanics business because that's extra for him going for y'all to follow him in the hood
that's too that's extra for y'all to follow him in the hood what that's too personal
That's too person.
Yo, they just try to squeeze some more money out of this.
You know, just give us some more money.
God damn it, bro.
I get it, though.
I get it, though.
You know what I mean?
Like, they don't got much.
But also, like, you know,
y'all got to respect the platform that you are on.
Like, you know what I mean?
This is a huge interview.
You know what I mean?
I don't care where we vlog.
I'm saying,
you're only paying for this.
No, the deal was this.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
I've got to tell you that.
You talk all that?
I want to take them to McMinvieve it.
Okay.
This is me.
I know.
I ain't tell you my bed, that's on me.
There's something on me.
I've got to tell you.
Okay, that's cool.
Cool.
All right, love.
But you gotta have access to that footage.
When they go to the mechanics bill, you gotta have access to that footage.
Oh yeah, we'll send you a draft to make sure you cool with it.
Yeah, we don't want to show any.
If you realize, don't get a fuck by none of that.
Yeah, but now you're right, though, my bed, I first told you that, yeah.
They're my fault.
They could turn that into a, I'm saying, this, this is the truth.
They could turn that to a whole document around you.
That could be, that could be a whole, this interview could be one project, and them going to be one project,
and them going to Mechanistville and all the other shit,
that could be fucking $100,000.
That's a whole other situation.
I'm explaining, I'm a-
Nicky said $100,000.
You're right.
I'm explaining to you my mindset.
Okay, cool.
You feel what I'm saying?
I just wanted to put that out there.
Yeah, like I said, I'm going to explain to you with you.
You got it.
Yeah, got you.
Did you ever feel worried when Thug would put your name in certain songs?
You were smart for this, Woody.
You were smart.
Anyway, they also did a vlog.
Y'all could go watch these full things on,
No jumper.
I ain't going to lie.
I was more excited for the vlog.
Yesterday had a great time at the juicy event.
This is Woody in the hood.
I ain't going to lie, man.
Atlanta.
Man, I thought Atlanta was a bunch of niggas with Draco's.
Like, bro, this is the king of Atlanta.
Note the callous disregard for the law.
That was a red light.
Woody.
Throw it up.
Look, look.
He got asked for pictures.
All these people hollering at him right away.
total local celebrity. Hey man, the world has changed. You know I can make a meme right now
watch me hop on the back of this shit. No, no, I'm not gonna do it. But imagine. I don't want to
have to hold on for deer alive with my booty scraping the ground and shit. Come on, you walk
up, guys. Where's him right down? I want to call him. Yeah, you're the king of Atlanta, bro.
Wait, is this a nigga with a bulletproof vest? Oh, this is Adam nigger right here. Yeah.
Oh, everybody who does graffiti here, you gotta give him a permit?
I thought he was done. I was like, that's karma for what he just said to me.
Hey man, he keeps saying shit like that. Oh, man.
I'm going to do what a lot of people in this city are too scared to do.
Woody, get over here.
I'm going to put you on a headlock.
I'm going to hold it in for a couple extra minutes.
Yeah, they went out.
They went on the mechanism.
When I pulled over on here, when I had the watches in the wind.
Bro, this sign is so camouflaged from the street.
They're not able to see it because there's a fucking giant tree in front of it.
Yeah, that was stupid.
Yeah, wow.
It just went on.
We got a couple more, though.
Oh, okay.
This is a weed and seed.
community? What the fuck does that mean? I don't think they gave us explanation.
I was gonna say we should take a photo in front of the sign but we got... Nah, would he really
to kill there later bro. How do you come here? Like what do the store mean to you though?
Oh I come here. I call it. They said nachos here. I come eat that shit. Oh where?
Yeah, yeah. That's the man shit you gonna get out of here. Some nachos. Yeah,
nachos and there slush. All right word with the slug. What do you got to do? What do you go to cash?
Good story. You don't want to peekie out here too? We really made a hell of a
decision by doing the hood blog on the same day as the Falcons game because everybody's out
everybody's supposed to up at the sports bar and then not to mention you bring Big 22 to the
section kind of turns into a block party you know they like my energy they see my pornoes they know
I serve good dick what he told everybody that's his daily grind you know hit up
plus I say thank you God thank you for your love thank you for your mercy thank you
for one more day one more chance thank you that our last day wasn't our last day you
gave us another opportunity and we don't take it lightly so we are here giving you
Glory, honor.
I think it for my brother, God, I did you, listen.
Wait, is this the police?
Let go, get him to part.
I thank you for my brother, guy.
It's you, listening, God, listen to me, physically.
We can film Woody.
I want to say I'll get your stroke his boss.
I'm on the way.
What's a .
Get it.
I'm kill this motherfucker.
I'm like Larry Bird.
Oh, everybody.
Oh, man.
Internet celebrity.
Get them.
Get them. Get them.
I'm fast. They got to catch me.
Yeah, they got to catch you.
Hell yeah.
You said your hands swollen or something?
Yeah, when you slapped me.
I didn't hit you that hard.
Why you look different?
Because I'm, I would-
You came to LA?
You from LA?
No, I'm from here.
Well, I'm originally from New Jersey.
And you put your hands on me?
Oh, you're from Jersey.
I'm from Jersey.
Oh, I knew it.
You couldn't be from here, put your head on me.
I'm north side though.
I'm north side.
What's between the north side, the east side and west side?
Gwinnett.
It's like Gwnet County?
Yeah.
Oh.
I just gonna call the cops on you.
God, I don't do that illegal no more.
I am- I have a deal with him.
He said, oh no more.
Huh?
I put the box in a little black box.
Come on, let go.
Come on, look.
I'm about it.
Get this on camera.
She want to slap up me.
You want to hold this.
Hold this from me real quick.
Then I'm holding on, pull it up.
Ready.
Is that brick baby?
Oh shit, what he?
Yeah, what are you a savage?
Why are you ready to?
Tell him.
You're an equal opportunity guy, man.
Fuck on, when you get...
Hey!
I'm on Shemar, eh.
That shit took me instead of reach him.
Bitch you on favorite that.
Hey.
Wait, Sharmes with that?
Yeah, he posted.
Two biggest gangsters right here, man.
Brick Baby and, uh, uh, Woody.
Yeah, he played too much.
But why he thinks it's cool to just be popping up on 20 v1 something?
He don't fucked up.
He don't fuck them.
I said...
I keep telling him, so y'all be talking about...
You didn't know he was going to be there?
Yeah, they told.
I was about to say that's a five shit.
I didn't know he was going to pop up like that.
Jay made me think that he was going to pop up like.
And at this point, I don't even think that that nigga Woody snitch, bro.
That nigga is a real nigga, bro.
What's wrong with you?
What's your point?
Yo, I'm going to be honest with you.
I want to stamp Woody as the, the, the, the, the, 2024 Alpo.
This is Atlanta's Alpo right here.
Real is it, like, real ass nigger from the bone gristle.
You know what I mean?
A nigga holding it.
down Atlanta. This is y'all. I keep telling y'all, y'all, y'all to snitching capital.
We'd be glad that y'all finally got the trophy I've been working so hard for.
Y'all could never outwrap New York niggas. So y'all found one thing, and y'all can't
outdress New York niggas neither. Don't listen to Yadi. Y'all found one thing y'all could do
better than New York niggis than a snitch. Good job, Atlanta. Y'all are amazing.
Y'all have now taken the Ratatouie title from the Big Apple. You know what I mean?
y'all just the big cheese down there good job for y'all Atlanta this is what y'all work very hard for y'all alpaw is right there he's popping wheelies in the streets he run mechanic mechanicaville he's he's the real nigga out there I'm sorry okay so until well actually now until nothing because loki I watched that full Adam interview he said if a nigger come around playing with him he he he down to make examples okay he's saying he's a
he's down to make examples.
So, yeah.
Shout to Atlanta.
You know what I mean?
Y'all worked very hard to, you know, to dethrone New York as the home of snitching.
Six-nine don't got nothing on y'all.
And, yeah, cool.
Listen, a hell of a reputation.
Y'all known for Batiman and rats.
Beautiful.
Beautiful.
Shit.
Atlanta could not be known for that.
anything better. Good job, man. All right. Let's keep going on.
Oh, yeah, he did speak on Charleston White in the full interview. I don't know what the
timestamp on that is, but he did speak on Charleston White.
Certain songs.
Damn, all they were, they feel like they could tie me to. If you, if you watch me in the trial,
you see, this is my person.
Get there.
Because they wind the whole.
That's why I went like eight girls tried to leave with me.
But how you sleep at night knowing, like, knowing, like,
She had this, you know, everybody heard of him.
You feel what I'm.
And I ain't bragging like, like, I'm happy that people in jail or anything.
But I'm slow, though.
But do you feel like he kind of, like,
pushed it up to the limit of, like,
trying to, like, almost tempt people into doing that
with, like, the dress shit and everything?
Relationship with her.
Did you ever see those rumors?
Yeah.
I'm trying to find where you talk about it.
Whoever want to be stupid and can crash out on me,
they're done.
You feel?
They better to succeed because they got family and they got people.
They, they don't know.
Even how this nigga talk, pause.
Man, you ever get tired of it?
Oh, I mean, yeah, I'm just trying to stay free.
Yeah, 100%, man.
Living my life in fear.
I'm trying to find it.
I was in jail and everybody knew who I,
and at the time my best friend had got killed,
so I was, they're going to regret it.
Miss Love and somebody else where you'd be locked up and shit.
A conversation I've heard a lot of people having while we've been out here
is like, how is Woody really moving around like this?
I respect everybody.
See, like I said, like how none it is, right?
I don't walk around just saying,
or FD niggas or FD niggas.
I respect y'all, I respect y'all.
Even if somebody mugging me,
I just look at them, watch me, and go by my business.
You know what I'm saying?
Because, like I say, I grew up in a lot of hoods.
And a lot of people in other hoods know how I get down.
Just like I know how they get out.
And that's just it.
You know what I mean?
I ain't looking for problems.
That's why every time I get on an interview,
I said, hey, don't bother me.
You feel?
No, I wasn't, no, I thought was always a good person.
So for instance, right, if me and you rocking, if you fall short, I gotta be there to help you lift up.
People that mostly, maybe Atlanta and maybe be able to lock you up.
You know what I mean, like I said, you got to the same point, you gotta have an ace in your back package, you know what I mean, just,
female and then like that.
Place where I don't think they're gonna catch feeling crazy, because it creates an environment for somebody like you to make content, people go crazy.
Crazy. He was out in the streets and stuff like that. Yeah, I guess.
Oh yeah, yeah. Oh, so he was nobody you was kicking the way back in the day?
I don't say. Or were you just complimented it? It wasn't true so I didn't.
Mm-hmm. He posted on social media and we could be together I still didn't see when he was headed on.
All they talk of you doing, you're for the bench stop dead. Do some.
Oh yeah, that's what he tell. He's a crash out.
You been shot. So you-hop. I ain't got a hole in me. So if you can hit up, go get some smoke, bro.
you hear me?
Yeah.
Yeah, man.
So y'all be mentioning people like, hey man,
the boy got bullet holes in them.
Don't forget that.
A lot of real ones got bullet holes in them.
They don't make them real?
Because they got bullet holes in them?
No, I'm just saying.
Oh, okay.
They're real and they have been shot.
Yeah, fool.
No I mean.
But you can't respect somebody's...
Anyway, I ain't going to find out of part
he told my old Charleston White.
But regardless, yo, shout to Woody, man.
You've been really redefining gangst of me,
man.
Yo, Woody told on Thug and sent a prayer for that nigga.
That's some real nigga shit, bro.
To put a nigga in an indictment and tell and pray that he make it out.
God damn it, nigga.
God damn it, nigga.
That's like setting a mouse trap and it catches the mouse.
And you pray the mouse to get out of this shit.
No, nigga.
But yo, he say, yo, Father God.
Yo, listen, we're saying the Woody Pryor right now.
Father God, we need you more than ever.
I pray that you answer our prayer in free Jeffrey and co-defendants.
The world has seen the treatment of our justice system
and has done to lock us up and force us to tell untrue stories.
The mistreatment is crazy.
Wrong is wrong.
We got sympathy for all victims and their families as kids.
Bad choices are made and punishment is acceptable.
But this is kind of different story.
This is corruption.
This is madness and very personal.
God, you know our heart and our mindset.
You know our growth.
Please touch the wicked and change your heart and release them six men that's fighting for their life every day in that courtroom.
They have family that loves them and needs them.
This isn't about justice.
It's about power.
And I pray those who think they have more power than God realize that pain and suffering they're causing as well.
I ask for forgiveness every day.
I refuse to sit by and continue to watch us hurt each other.
It has to stop at some point.
Father Jesus, Father in Jesus' name we pray that you take over the situation and protect us from all the wannabe God's free Jeffrey.
You're a thug for you to do 10 years.
I ain't going to hold you.
When a nigga who told you on you just praying for you, nigga, you're fucked.
I ain't going to hold you.
The nigga who told all you got to say a prayer for you, you're fucked.
I'm sorry.
Fucked.
Fucked.
I ain't going to allow.
You're going to do 10 years time served.
10 years time served, probably do like two.
Get out of there.
15 years probation that's what's going to happen
but yeah the niggins told all you
and prayed for you
this is why I said Woody gangster
told all niggas and prayed for them
real as it it gets
you feel what I'm saying
okay
all right
all right actually I'm gonna leave
I'm gonna leave one more story for tomorrow
I'm gonna do it tonight I'm gonna do the pee
long way story tomorrow we're gonna get the indictment on that
so the federal indictment
I'll pull up on pee long way tomorrow
Feds bust Peeley Longway with over $20 million in drugs.
It wasn't just him a whole gang of people, apparently 100 people.
We'll get that federal paperwork tomorrow.
Also the indictment paperwork for Diddy, we will get as well.
So please go take a nap real quick.
I will be waking up mostly in four hours to wait for the indictment
and first appearance, not necessarily the arraignment of Diddy,
but pretty much the arraignment of the if the charges will be announced and the indictment will be on seal so chat
tomorrow morning four hours from now okay i'm gonna get a quick nap um drink some water take a shower and i'll
be back on in like four or five hours depending on what time we get to find out that the indictment
will be on sealed okay hopefully it's not an afternoon thing or it's not like a noon thing but um
we will be on going through and scouring through that whole indictment but yes big story tonight chat
we went over it. Didi has been arrested on a federal sealed indictment at this point. We'll be
unsealed in the morning. Please, thank you for tuning in. Really quickly, I don't even know.
Yeah. Oh, by the way, we're having a merch to drop low-key tomorrow, so I'll announce it tomorrow.
It's all good. Chat, love y'all. Talk to you on the morning. I guess I don't know if I should say
pray for ditty just pray for the victims pray for the victims people love y'all thank you for watching
hopefully i was entertaining and also uh informative in giving you all the relevant information
relating to what we knew tonight appreciate you and i'll see you in the morning okay chap love
