The Breakfast Club - Diddy asks for bail AGAIN! 

Episode Date: July 29, 2025

Since the firing of prosecutor Comey the Sean Combs defense team has decided  to restate their case for a house-arrest type living situation for Diddy while he awaits sentencing. Loren analyzes t...he likelihood of Diddy receiving bail.YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@BreakfastClubPower1051FMSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

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Starting point is 00:00:00 This is an iHeart Podcast. The Girlfriends is back with a new season, and this time I'm telling you the story of Kelly Harnett. Kelly spent over a decade in prison for a murder she says she didn't commit. As she fought for her freedom, she taught herself the law. He goes, oh God, Harnett, jailhouse lawyer. And became a beacon of hope for the women locked up alongside her. You're supposed to have faith in God, but I had nothing but faith in her. I think I was put here to save souls by getting people out of prison.
Starting point is 00:00:33 The Girlfriends, Jailhouse Lawyer. Listen on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts or wherever you get your podcasts. Just like great shoes, great books take you places. Through unforgettable love stories and into conversations with characters you'll never forget. I think any good romance, it gives me this feeling of like butterflies. I'm Danielle Robay and this is Bookmarked by Reese's Book Club, the new podcast from Hello Sunshine and iHeart Podcasts where we dive into the stories that shape us, on the page and off. Each week, I'm joined by authors, celebs, book talk stars, and more for conversations
Starting point is 00:01:11 that will make you laugh, cry, and add way too many books to your TBR pile. Listen to Bookmarked by Reese's Book Club on the iHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. So, what happened at Chappaquiddick? Well, it really depends on who you talk to. There are many versions of what happened in 1969 when a young Ted Kennedy drove a car into a pond. And left a woman behind to drown.
Starting point is 00:01:37 Chappaquiddick is a story of a tragic death and how the Kennedy machine took control. Every week we go behind the headlines and beyond the drama of America's royal family. Listen to United States of Kennedy's on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. I knew I wanted to obey and submit, but I didn't fully grasp for the rest of my life what that meant. For My Heart podcasts and Rococo Punch, this is The Turning, River Road.
Starting point is 00:02:09 In the woods of Minnesota, a cult leader married himself to 10 girls and forced them into a secret life of abuse. But in 2014, the youngest escaped. Listen to The Turning, River Road on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. I'm the homegirl that knows a little bit about everything and everybody. You hear that exclusive? You know she don't lie about that, right?
Starting point is 00:02:33 Lauren came in hot. Hey y'all, what's up? It's Lauren LaRosa and this is The Latest with Lauren LaRosa. Your daily dig, your daily breakdown, an easy digestible one too. And that we love a good snack. Of all things, pop culture, entertainment, news, and the conversations that shake the room. Now you guys know I love to keep y'all up to date, but more than anything, I love to take y'all to court.
Starting point is 00:02:59 So today, while on air for Breakfast Club, I got a text that something was coming. Then there was a story that broke via TMZ's website of Diddy in a filing that was filed on Diddy's behalf. Now, we had kind of predicted this in the room. I know we talked about this here on the latest with Lauren LaRosa as well, that since former prosecutor Comey was let go, I had already had an inkling that if I was, you know,
Starting point is 00:03:29 Diddy's team, one of the things I would do is try for that bond again, you know, and try to get him home to await his sentencing, which is gonna go down on October 3rd. Now, the reason why I said then that I thought that this would be smart was because even though the final decision's up to a judge, the prosecutors are the people who've laid out all this information.
Starting point is 00:03:49 And if at all there is any hiccup with the prosecution, it can potentially favor Diddy on his side. Now I found it interesting that in this request for bail, it's a $50 million bail package, which is not a crazy number or a number we haven't heard before. If you guys remember months ago, back in September of 2024, Diddy had actually offered a $50 million bell package and his plan was to put up his mom's home, a couple of the Miami properties, the collateral. He said, you know, he would stay away from any woman and there'd be like a signing sheet
Starting point is 00:04:22 of who goes in his home and you know, he wouldn't fly and all these things, right? So they basically just took that same bell package offer because of course you want to have a good number. You want to put up as much as you can because the point is to make the court believe that you have so much on the line, you're not going to mess up at all while on that bell, nor will you try and flee before a court can sentence you to face whatever consequences it is for your crime. So that's not new.
Starting point is 00:04:48 They altered it a little bit, but that is not new. So the new bail package that they're proposing is a $50 million bond secured by Mr. Combs' home in Miami. So now it's only the one home. The bond will be co-signed by three financially responsible people. Combs will reside in his home in Miami. Combs' travel will be limited to the Southern District of Florida, the Southern District of New York for attorney meetings, as well as airports necessary to travel between the
Starting point is 00:05:13 two. Now, this is a little different because originally, and it's been updated probably like, I would say two times since the original one that I keep referencing, but originally they were mentioning Jersey being one of the places that did he could travel to as well? And again, there were multiple different assets listed including his mother's home I do think it's interesting that they're offering up The bond for the home like the home is the asset right? But then at the same time they're saying he'll be Residing in this home. It's like okay. We want to put together this very favorable bond package, right?
Starting point is 00:05:48 We want to put together this very favorable bell package, right? We want to put up so much that you believe that we know we got too much on the line to lose the way that we can do that. We're offering you money. We're offering you assets. But basically I'm telling you I'm going to this is the place where I'm laying my head that I'm giving it to you right the place where I'm laying my head, that I'm giving it to you right in your hands.
Starting point is 00:06:08 This is important to me. I thought that that was something worth calling out as well. They also mentioned that Diddy will be placed under express supervision of the US Pretrial Services Agency and that he'll be reporting to the agency as directed by the agency. Before, they had mentioned something like, almost kind of like a house arrest type of thing,
Starting point is 00:06:29 where there was check-ins and, you know, he would be on lockdown, essentially. And that's what they're proposing here, is it'll be very heavily supervised, it'll be expedited the minute that he can get out of here, we can get him set up with that, that is what we're gonna do. And then lastly, they say that Diddy's passport
Starting point is 00:06:44 will be surrendered to pretrial services and he won't be allowed to apply for another passport. In court on the final day of court when he was not granted bail right then and there, his attorneys made it clear then too, like we literally have his passport right now in our physical possession. They're just trying to show that he is going to abide by the rules this time. Now backing this up, the reason why, again, I mentioned, I believe that they're filing for this is because there have been some hiccups when it comes to the prosecution. We still to this day do not know why US attorney Comey, who was the lead attorney for the government
Starting point is 00:07:24 on this case against Diddy, why she was let go. But there has been conversation of overreach. Was this a government overreach? The way that they tried to frame or angle this case when it came to Diddy. Now I don't know enough, nor does anyone know enough to point to that when we look at why Diddy's team would think that now would be any different than before when a judge said no to bail.
Starting point is 00:07:49 Because if you think about it, everything the judge mentioned as far as why they didn't believe that he should be let go until sentencing, it's still the same. The judge mentioned the video from Cassie and the violence that that showed. That video is still there. That video is still in the judge's mind. The judge talked about Diddy not having regard for the law essentially and just kind of doing whatever he wanted to do. That thought based on what we heard in the courtroom over these last couple of weeks,
Starting point is 00:08:15 it's still there regardless of what he was found guilty of or not. It's still there. Now I think Diddy's team is doing the right thing. I mean it's their job too, but they're doing the right thing by leaning into law. So throughout this document, I want to read some episodes from the document They point out some things that you know, I think they're able to now more clearly cite backup information for Then within the time limit they were given to do it right after they proposed the idea of did he get in bill?
Starting point is 00:08:40 It was literally like we had hours that we waited Versus now it's been weeks and days for them to be able to, you know, provide more case law and things to back up their argument. So what they're saying is, is that first of all, the district court must find by clear and convincing evidence, this is in the first opening pages of their submission for a bail request, they say the district court must find by clear and convincing evidence that the person is not likely to flee or pose a danger to the safety of any other person or the community if released. Second, it must be clearly shown that there are exceptional reasons why such person's detention would not be appropriate. Now they're like, look,
Starting point is 00:09:22 this is everything we need to show you and we have no problem with doing that. So the first thing that they bring up is, and you know, this is a conversation they've been having in the world, honestly, has been having since Diddy was convicted of the two Man Act counts, right, that deal with prostitution. So they look, the history of the Man Act and the way that this has always been used, no one has ever been jailed pre-sentencing. In the document, they say in the lifestyle that he and other adults voluntarily chose,
Starting point is 00:09:51 Mr. Combs will be called a swinger, but in the vocabulary of the man act or of prostitution generally, he might at worst be somewhat recognized as a John, someone who pays to have sex with a sex worker in this case. A male sex worker more particularly, a male sex worker who works for and is vetted by a well known company or agency which is the agency, it was like the Cowboys or the Cowgirls agency that they reference a lot in Diddy's trial. So they're already framing him as a John. This is Diddy's So they're already framing him as a John.
Starting point is 00:10:25 This is Diddy's team. They're framing him as a John, and basically they're saying, look, there's no other person in these cases from what we can find who was considered a John the same way he would be considered that hasn't been able to go home while they're wait sentencing.
Starting point is 00:10:39 They also then point out that from what they can find in the history of this act, there is no evidence of someone having to sit in jail while waiting to be sentenced. They're basically like, look, y'all have never done this before. In this case, and what he's actually found guilty of is not exceptional to the point where y'all need to do it now. So please help us understand.
Starting point is 00:11:02 They're leaning on the law heavy. The judge and the prosecutors leaned on Diddy's actions. Diddy's team is like, we acknowledged those actions, which I think honestly, you're not going to get around them. I don't think that Diddy will be granted a bail this time. I really don't. But the judge and the prosecutors from the beginning said, we're not going to act like this didn't happen. And on top of us acting like, not acting like it didn't happen because we saw on video, we heard testimony of it. You guys stood here in court for the first week of court and admitted to all of these things.
Starting point is 00:11:32 There is not enough in front of me as the judge, right? I'm speaking hypothetically as a judge, where I feel like all of those things that you admitted to and that I heard of and that we witnessed are counteracted, where he's rehabilitated enough, right? Where I can believe that these things don't happen. And again, we talked about here on the latest with Lauren LaRosa, the last time we talked about Diddy and him being in a rehabilitation program, we talked about the optics of that.
Starting point is 00:12:00 And the reason why, if I'm Diddy, regardless if I really want to be really rehabilitated or not, why I would do that. Now, I don't know if at some point his team tries to bring that into the conversation here because if we're being honest, it's a bit too early to claim, hey, he's doing better now. He's only been in a program, but some weeks, if that. Now, Diddy's team also call out the fact that, you know, the man act is 115 years old. It's outdated. People think of sex differently.
Starting point is 00:12:29 So being a swinger, living the lifestyle that, you know, Diddy and his girlfriends, including Cassie Ventura, were living, it's not a crime. It's just a way of life for some people, but he's being treated like it was a crime. We've talked a lot about that here. You guys know what I'm referencing, but something new that they mentioned, they talked about how MDC Brooklyn, which is the location, where did he is, the conditions of the jail and why that based on other case law that they cite as a look, y'all did that over here, should be a sufficient reason for him to be released. So they say number one, the jail has continued reports of inordinate periods of lockdown.
Starting point is 00:13:06 They say number two, there are claims that the facility provides inadequate or substantially delayed necessary medical care, a particular risk in this case because Diddy has had, you know, his own health things. There was, you know, the reports of him going to the hospital and having to be taken out of the hospital late in the middle of the night because of a health scare of some sort. Number three, they cite general issues about the conditions at the facility. These conditions have not abated in Mr. Combs' detention at the facility. As the court is aware, during Mr. Combs' incarceration at the NBC, the facility was
Starting point is 00:13:41 subject to an interagency sweep that was designed to achieve our shared goal of maintaining a safe environment for both our employees and the incarcerated individuals housed at MDC Brooklyn. And that was a statement from the jail. In other words, Diddy's defense team says there's a significant issue at MDC Brooklyn that obviously relates to the safety of employees and incarcerated individuals that require outside law enforcement to come in and take action because MDC as a jail didn't have significant law enforcement.
Starting point is 00:14:12 The presence of law enforcement, they mentioned that throughout the walls of the facility he's in for 24 hours of the day at some points, there's insufficient safety precautions been taking place. And they point back to, but very subtly, because I think they don't want to lean in too heavy here because it can kind of look crazy on them because it's like, he's a celebrity, but so what? He committed a crime. But they subtly hint that they say, because Sean Combs is in an exceptional situation
Starting point is 00:14:38 as a post verdict, pre-sentence inmate at MDC. Now, there is nothing about someone who was found guilty of a crime going to jail that is exceptional. I can understand their argument of no one else has been jailed for this and that's a conversation. But if you say that he that you know just his post verdict and pre-sentence confinement is exceptional and then you point out things like they're not being adequate safety or enough resources or you know, they don't respond to medical things all in the right time. I'm not saying that this is right, but these are things that we hear people complain about
Starting point is 00:15:21 and that we see people fighting against for their loved ones every single day when it comes to these prisons in these jails. So when I read this line, I'm like, it would be much better if you guys just said what y'all are saying, because for everything you allege that the jail is lacking or inadequate of, they're going to come back with an answer of how they fixed it or how it's not lacking or inadequate because they don't want a lawsuits and you can't just I mean you really if I'm if I'm did his team I wouldn't even lean into the celebrity of it all and it's more of like and not even like he's a celebrity oh my god he shouldn't be living like this it's more of with the celebrity of
Starting point is 00:16:00 the case if everyday inmates are not being kept safe and everyday employees are not being kept safe with the celebrity of the case, this should be an exceptional reason why we should be able to move for him to come home and wait until a sentencing. But I think you there's a really slippery slope there. Wow. You can't even say slippery slope when you talk about this. And then the the baby oil there's a really slippery slope there though like when you have a conversation about this because I get what they're saying, but at the same time a Judge has already had Weeks of testimony presented in front of him and evidence that he said to watch in a jury who decided on certain things
Starting point is 00:16:42 Where it's kind of like, you know, the narrative has been because of this man's money power and celebrity He's been able to do these things and go about his everyday life as if things are fine And and that's kind of what the judge, you know Talk briefly about When when making his decision for bail the last time it's like these are things that you blatantly ignored the rules of the court on. So if you'll do that for whatever circumstance or whatever reason, because of who you are, because of the power, because of whatever, we can't trust it.
Starting point is 00:17:17 And you've shown us that you have no regard for authority because of these things. So we'll see what happens y'all. At this point now what normally happens is, you know, the prosecution will have, you know, some time to respond so that should probably be coming out within the next day. I give it 24 hours before they respond because it's going to be textbook response.
Starting point is 00:17:37 It's going to be the Cassie video. It's going to be allegedly the hotel room being set up for a freak off while Diddy was waiting to be brought in by police here in New York on these charges It's going to be the fact that in that hotel room. They found drugs It's going to be all the things all the things like they're gonna be they haven't went anywhere since the last time So I predict that Diddy will not receive the bell. I said the day that the last bell hearing happened at court when he was found not guilty on the most serious charges like the conspiracy and all those things, that I wouldn't have been surprised if he got a bell. I'm honestly not against that happening. I think that at this point, it would make sense for him to receive one. But in me hearing the way that the judge responded to Diddy and his team before, and the facts
Starting point is 00:18:32 of the case are still the same because Diddy's team can't, they don't even reference the firing of the prosecutor. Like they don't even get into those things for real, for real. So it's like, what's new here? And to me, that's the only thing that's new, but it's like, there's a tiptoe around it. And I don't know if the tiptoe is because, you know, that's just internal information of like, why? Maybe they don't know why the firing even happened, or, you know, third, maybe the firing has nothing to do with something that they could even use to
Starting point is 00:19:03 prove that Diddy should be given another shot at bail. Whatever the case may be, outside of that firing, nothing else is new. So I see the judge leaning in the same way. Now, if the judge doesn't, it's going to really make me want to know what, uh, uh, Comey was fired for, because to me, that's the only thing new here that has happened since the last time they put this request up. But let me know your thoughts. Take it to the streets in the tweets. Hit me on IG on X.
Starting point is 00:19:36 I'm Lauren LaRosa everywhere. L O R E N L O R O S A. I want to hear from y'all. At the end of the day, there is always a lot to talk about. You guys, my low riders, I appreciate y'all every single time you join me to talk about it. I will catch you guys in my next episode. Y'all know, look, we stay in court, don't we?
Starting point is 00:19:56 Child can't wait. The Girlfriends is back with a new season, and this time I'm telling you the story of Kelly Harnett. Kelly spent over a decade in prison for a murder she says she didn't commit. As she fought for her freedom, she taught herself the law. He goes, oh God, Harnett, jailhouse lawyer. And became a beacon of hope for the women locked up alongside her. You're supposed to have faith in God, but I had nothing but faith in her.
Starting point is 00:20:27 I think I was put here to save souls by getting people out of prison. The Girlfriends, Jailhouse Lawyer. Listen on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts or wherever you get your podcasts. Just like great shoes, great books take you places. Through unforgettable love stories and into conversations with characters you'll never forget. I think any good romance, it gives me this feeling of like butterflies. I'm Danielle Robay and this is Bookmarked by Reese's Book Club, the new podcast from
Starting point is 00:20:59 Hello Sunshine and iHeart Podcasts where we dive into the stories that shape us on the page and off. Each week, I'm joined by authors, celebs, book talk stars, and more for conversations that will make you laugh, cry, and add way too many books to your TBR pile. Listen to Bookmarked by Reese's Book Club on the iHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts,
Starting point is 00:21:20 or wherever you get your podcasts. So what happened at Chappaquiddick? Well, it really depends on who you talk to. There are many versions of what happened in 1969 when a young Ted Kennedy drove a car into a pond. And left a woman behind to drown. Chappaquiddick is a story of a tragic death and how the Kennedy machine took control. Every week we go behind the headlines and beyond the drama of America's
Starting point is 00:21:45 royal family. Listen to United States of Kennedy's on the iHeartRadio app, Apple podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. I knew I wanted to obey and submit, but I didn't fully grasp for the rest of my life what that meant. For My Heart Podcasts and Rococo Punch, this is The Turning, River Road. In the woods of Minnesota, a cult leader married himself to 10 girls and forced them into a secret life of abuse.
Starting point is 00:22:15 But in 2014, the youngest escaped. Listen to The Turning, River Road on the iHeart radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. This is an iHeart podcast.

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