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The Diddy Arrest & Indictment!

Broadcast on:
18 Sep 2024
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The latest on the Diddy/Sean Combs arrest and the now unsealed indictment!

Denied bail, Diddy could be sitting in a cell for a long time!

Well, it's all about freakoffs and a whole lot of baby oil, apparently. Welcome to the show. We're going to get right into it. Did he? If you haven't heard by now, where have you been? You've been under a rock has been arrested on Monday night. Today is Wednesday, Tuesday. He, you know, appeared before a magistrate judge and was denied bail in spite of the defense's attempts to persuade them that he wasn't going anywhere and wasn't much of a threat to society. They still denied his bail. Now, I don't know where to begin, I guess, other than the whole freakoff thing. The freakoff thing is I'm finding humorous. I know this is not a funny thing, but watching news reporters and different correspondents actually talk about the case and bring and saying the word freakoff is kind of funny. Come on, I can't be the only one. And then 1,000 things of baby oil. Now, those like the big Johnson and Johnson bottles of baby oil where they like the little tubes, the little little tiny travel size ones that they found 1,000. I mean, brother lysus, you know, doesn't want to be ashy. I don't know. But they also found lubricants and all sorts of stuff, whatever. Anyway, let's get to, let's get to the more like pressing legal stuff that's going on. Three counts, right? In this indictment, a 14 page indictment, we'll get back to the brevity of that indictment in a minute, because it is relatively, relatively brief, right? It's 14 pages, which is not usually the case, right? So three counts, racketeering, conspiracy, sex trafficking, forced, you know, sex trafficking or through coercion of some sort. And transportation to engage in prostitution, right? Now, the actual indictment doesn't contain a lot of details, right? These are all, you know, it doesn't have a whole bunch of the allegations that have been bought up previously. For example, the idea that there were minors involved, like there were, you know, young ladies that were underage who were applied with various substances, illegal substances, and then coerced into these free golf events. And so that doesn't really show up here, right? So why is it that this is only a 14 page indictment? And the answer is that more than likely this indictment is going to be amended. So they will typically do that. So it's called a speaking indictment. And it could become very detailed and well over 100 pages at some point, with all sorts of information put in there and specific details. What's happening at this particular point, if you, so March is when did he, this whole thing first kind of like really blew up. And it's been six months. So what have they been doing in those six months and those six months, they've been basically gathering information, identifying location, locating witnesses, securing documents, which would include video evidence and such. We saw those two raids on his homes. So they've just been gathering and getting everything together. And as far as witnesses go, you know, you've got Cassie and Little Rod, right? So those were civil cases, but they're still able to appear in this particular case for this particular trial. There is absolutely no time limit on a Rico case, right? So like the assault, sexual assault, and assault, like what happened to Cassie in that God awful video, right? That's something that can't be prosecuted. And now we can't really, that doesn't come into this whole thing. But for a Rico case, her testimony and her speaking on events and speaking about incidents and things that took place with Diddy, love, whatever moniker he's using at this particular point, he's going to have to come up with a new one. I might have some suggestions. But yeah, there's, you know, these people are probably going to come forward along with God knows how many other people. The way they have this all set up is that Diddy is an enterprise. So if you look at the actual indictment, you know, it basically accuses him of having an enterprise, right? So an enterprise involves obviously more than one person I would suggest. I would think, right? So you got a bunch of people that involved here, whether that's his family, his own grown sons or, you know, whoever, the different minions and such around him, because the way it all plays out in the indictment, it suggests that he coerced and threatened people. So he was kind of like, you know, this, this gangster kind of guy that had to maintain that reputation. And he did it through threats of violence and threats of financial ruin and all different types of things to people around him, who basically enabled his behavior or kept their mouth shut for fear of losing their job or losing whatever else it was that he was threatening. If we look at this, the overview for decades, Sean Combs, a.k.a. Puff Daddy, a.k.a. Diddy, a.k.a. PD, a.k.a. Love, the defendant abused, threatened and coerced women and others around him to fulfill his sexual desires, protect his reputation and conceal his conduct. To do so, Combs relied on the employees, resources and influence of the multifaceted business empire that he led and controlled, creating a criminal enterprise whose members and associates engaged in and attempted to engage in, among other crimes, sex, trafficking, forced labor, kidnapping, arts and bribery and obstruction of justice. Now, geez, that just sounds like, if we're, if we were reading us about some like random gangster somewhere, right, some other person out there in New York, let's just say, right? Some random guy, Joe Blow, like, you know, you'd be like, okay, this guy, but this is a, this is a major celebrity. This is probably this, to me, this has to be the biggest celebrity case scandal of all time. I'm going to put it. I mean, the OJ Simpson case, obviously, the level of fame and celebrity and how much the American people adored him. So when that whole thing happened with the Cole Brown Simpson and Ron Goldman, the murder of those two, that trial was a spectacle, right? That trial was a racial thing because of the component of OJ Simpson, African American versus, you know, two white people dead. So that divided the country in a certain way. And, you know, that was a huge thing. And that trial was actually televised, right? So that was actually, this will not be televised. There's no, they can do still photography. There'll be no broadcasting of this because it's a federal case. So I think this is up there and this trial will go down as probably the trial of the century. I can't, I can't think of another. I mean, the, the R Kelly stuff was whatever, but not like this. And this is gonna go for a while too. There's a lot happening here. So I just want to look at some of the other points of that. Now I'm physical abuse, count for physical abuse by Sean Combs, Puff Daddy, the defendant was recurrent and widely known on numerous, now we all know that because we saw the video of the 2016 video of Cassie being beaten like a dog. We saw that, right? On numerous occasions from at least in or about 2009 and continuing for years, Combs assaulted women, among other things, striking, punching, dragging, throwing objects at and kicking them. These assaults were at times witnessed by others and included one instance at a Los Angeles hotel in about March 2016. That's, that's the one with Cassie, which was captioned on video and later publicly reported where Combs kicked, dragging through a vase at a woman. She was attempting to leave. Now they, from a prosecutor, prosecutorial standpoint, yeah, you could use the idea of his character building his character based on that particular video evidence of what he did to Cassie as to substantiate the allegations that he was an abusive individual who did these things, right? Because the actual allegation matches the 2016, what was on video. So and they're, they're separate things, but I could see what they're, what they're attempting to do here. And I, and I'm 100% behind it because we all saw that. So again, in the court of public opinion, he's already guilty. Like I don't, I don't think he's a single person who saw that video, who's on his side in his camp, or even mildly thinking that his pathetic apology forced attrition kind of thing that there's no way that anyone's on his side for this. And it's not limited to these women, blah, blah, blah, extended to his employees, witnesses to his abuse and others. So there's a lot of people that are involved. Look, there's, you know, number six, the Combs Enterprise from at least in or about 2008 through on or about the date of the filing of this indictment, Sean Combs, the defendant and others known and unknown were members and associates for criminal organization known as the CMB. I'm just kidding. Those of you who know New Jack City will know why I just said that. Anyway, members and associates of Combs Enterprise engaged in and attempted to engage in among the other activity, sex trafficking, forced labor interstate transportation repurposes prostitution, coercion, and enticement to engage in prostitution, narcotics offenses, kidnapping, arson, bribery, and obstruction of justice is just the Combs Enterprise, including its leadership, its members and its associates. I want to talk about that for a second. It's leadership, which would be Combs, I assume, unless he's got like a vice president of his enterprise who helps beat people and, you know, coerce women into freakoffs and stuff. It's members and its associates constituted an enterprise. So, and this is defined by Title 18 United States Code Section in 1961 for a group of individuals associated, in fact, although not a legal entity. I am curious about those people because those people, those witnesses, those members of this enterprise are currently, I would speculate, I would suspect, I would believe that they are currently cooperating with the government in an attempt to save themselves, right? Diddy's already thrown under the bus, under the jail, and we're going to get more to that, to the jail situation shortly, but Diddy's already under the bus, and I don't think anyone's holding out. I don't think he's earned a reputation as somebody where people will ride or die for him, no matter what. Now, I think just based on the history and what we're being told and what we've seen and the rumors and such about how he treats people, and if this is all under force, I mean, one doesn't have to be, you know, you don't have to be, you don't have to read Sun Tzu or The Art of War, I understand Machiavellian strategies or anything to understand that from a leadership perspective, if you're beating people or forcing them into things and coercing them through threats of violence and threats of ruining their reputations or financially putting them in a bad place, those people aren't loyal to you, they're just scared of you and fear and intimidation are two different things, and they do not create or evoke loyalty to the person who's actually the leader or the boss, right? So I imagine that these people are quickly turning over and they are quickly trying to keep whatever, you know, keep their asses out of jail out of the same situation, none of them are probably, you know, at his level of financial success. So they're more than likely cooperating and we're going to see over time, we're going to watch how this whole thing plays out, because again, like I said, this is a, this is a living document technically, right? So this is something where they're going to continue to add to it, they're going to have more witnesses, they're going to have way more things going on. I like this, I shouldn't say I like, but the purposes of the Combs Enterprise, the purposes of the Combs Enterprise included operating a global business in the media entertainment and lifestyle industries, including among other things, record labels, a recording studio and a parallel line, an alcoholic spirits business, a marketing agency, and a television network and media company. Now that just sounds like anybody in the music world, right? That's what that really sounds like, right? Preserving, be preserving, protecting, promoting, enhancing the power, reputation, and brand of Sean Combs, the defendant as a musician, entrepreneur, and a figurative entertainment industry. That doesn't sound so bad because I mean, that's pretty much anyone in the music business, anyone who has a business, a brand. Jay Z has a brand with multiple, you know, ties to so many different things and establishing that brand, maintaining that brand, keeping that enterprise going is just part of the, that's part for course. Enriching members and associates of the enterprise, including its leader. Yeah, well, you're trying to make money. So none of that seems to really be a thing as far as I'm concerned, but preserving, protecting, promoting, enhancing the power of the Combs Enterprise, including the power of its leader, fulfilling. Okay, so this is where it gets fulfilling the personal desires of Combs, particularly those related to Combs sexual gratification, including through the exploitation of women and the use of commercial sex workers. Now I'm also going to say that, yeah, that's where it starts to get salacious and starts to get the whole freak off thing. And basically, this whole thing is about him fulfilling sexual desires and having freak offs and having women procured and oftentimes, or maybe all the time, drugged and either unbeknownst to them, you know, involuntarily drugged or drugged through coercion, whatever methods it was, and then having these parties and having prostitutes, male prostitutes and performances thing, and he's, you know, doing his thing in the corner while it's happening. This is all kind of, this is all kind of whatever, but to me also that, a lot of that sounds like the life of a rock star, no offense to all the rock stars out there, like no offense to people in the music industry or rap stars, whatever. You rock start to just embody the whole thing of like successful musicians and artists who have the world at their feet. I'm not saying every single one of them is running around with 30 different women in their dressing room. I would not talk in Led Zeppelin days, right? Shout out to Led Zeppelin, Robert Plant and everyone who did me page. But that just seems par for course, like women, yeah, your teammates, your managers, your minions go out and find women for you, bring them into the dressing room, we're into the hotel and you kind of have fun, right? I don't know if that's much of a crime. It's going to come down to how it was done, who's going to say what, through what means, what evidence they have, right? That's really what it's going to come down to, you know, because I'm thinking both from not only the prosecutorial standpoint, but also from a defense standpoint, like, okay, well, you're saying I've had like, is it a crime to have a bunch of women in my apartment or in my house or in my penthouse in the hotel I'm at and have a whole bunch of people having sex? Is that a crime? I don't know. Can you prove that I've drug people, a coerced people through some means? Did I actually go pick up prostitutes somewhere? Do you have evidence of that? That's just whole things to come down to. Because on the surface, just saying that he was a bit of a freak and had a lot of baby oil and lubricants around and had and liked to watch people have sex, it's not really a crime. So, and again, I'm not, I just, let's make it clear. I'm not making light of this. I'm not suggesting there isn't criminal activity here. I'm saying all that stuff has got to be proven, right? And that's what's going to happen. You know, here we go with the freak off members and associates as a co-interprise, including high-ranking supervised security staff, household staff, personal assistance, and other combs, business employees facilitated the freak offs. They capitalized that by among other things, booking hotel rooms for the freak offs, stocking the hotel rooms in advance with required freak off supplies, including controlled substances, baby oil, lubricant, extra linens, and lighting, cleaning the hotel rooms after the freak offs and try to mitigate room damage, arranging for travel for victims, commercial sex workers, and combs to and from freak offs, resupplying combs with requested supplies, delivering large sums of cash to combs to pay the commercial sex workers and scheduling the delivery of IV fluids. All of this, again, sounds like a typical night if you're worth billions of dollars or millions of dollars and you have tons of women wanting to see you. That's what that sounds like to me, right? Somebody got the room ready, someone got a bunch of condoms, got a bunch of lubes, some sex toys and a bunch of stuff together and arranged for the girls to show up. They're going to have to go and they're going to have to prove this and I think they're going to, if you ask my opinion, right? Again, not making a lot of this, just suggesting that, hey, you're going to have to prove a whole lot of this stuff, right? You're going to have to really go in on this because, you know, I don't know, I don't know, there's a lot and I think it's going to come down to whatever they seized on those rates because that's for the last six months what they've been doing. They've been going through the federal, they do not make a case like this, they do not have this indictment, they don't do this unless they really got some good stuff. This is not just some random speculatory sort of thing, right? They've got some stuff and we're going to see it leak out over the next course of a year and change. You know, this is going to take a while. This is this trial probably may not be on until 2026, maybe the end of next year with 2025, a year, year and a half before we, this thing even goes to trial. Think about that. And at this particular point in time, he's in jail, no bail, no bail. Now that could change, that might even change by the time of this recording, by the time that this goes up, when he was in front of the original judge, as I mentioned earlier in this, when we start the top of this discussion, the judge who denied his bail is what's called a magistrate judge. They basically, it's an administrative position. They're pointed by the district to handle the initial court proceedings during hearing, right? That's what they do. So when he gets in front of the district judge, the district judge is actually going to be handling the actual case. So when he gets in front of a district judge, that could be, I don't, it could be today, again, it could be the time and district recording, there may be an update. They're going to, the defense is going to make their case for bail, of course, or some sort of house arrest or something. And they're going to put up everything they can and make the case that he's not a flight risk and, you know, he's not a danger to society. But that's what the real issue is here. Based on the indictment, the fact that he coerced and there's interference with witnesses and things along those lines and the efforts of sort of being an intimidation factor, that is what they're looking at to say, no, you can't be out, you cannot be free, because you are a threat to the whole, like, to any of the witnesses in this, probably a bunch of them. So that's what it comes down to. Right now, he's being held in the Metropolitan Detention Center in Brooklyn. This is where Joseline Maxwell was, our Kelly was, this is a really bad place. It's like murders and all sorts of issues. They try to close a place down. That's how bad it is. I mean, it's bad. I don't know how that plays out for Diddy. I'm sure being of his status, he gets his own cell or he's isolated from a protection standpoint. I assume that would be the case. But who knows, you know, this is, this is, this is dangerous for him. And he could be there if they deny the bail, if the district judge denies the bail, he could be there for a long time. So again, he's going to come up with a new moniker, you know, because love and Diddy and Mr. Baby Oil are not going to look good in, in the Brooklyn Detention. It just doesn't look good. Anyway, this, this is, again, I think this will be the trial of the century. I think this is going to be interesting. I think as more details are leaked, as more witnesses come forth. Remember, we're still at a point where we haven't seen any documented evidence, right? Other than the 2016 hotel beating of Cassie, I'm talking outside of that, regards to Little Rod saying he had video evidence, regard to any type of documentation, photo photographs or anything. We're going to need to see that stuff eventually. It'll leak, it'll come out, it'll be part of the case. We shall see again, this trial may not be, may not take place for a long time. And they're going to have to supply all that stuff. Who knows, you know, he might have things laced up to the point where he's got, I mentioned this previously, where is he an asset of the government? Is he a plant and industry plant? That's been speculated on plenty of times. The idea that he's protected somehow, that he has dirt on tons of celebrities, he's got these freak off tapes and all this footage. Where is all this footage? That's what I want to know. If they raided the house and there's that much footage, it's got to be somewhere. Unless he really, really, really went deep and buried at somewhere on some islands somewhere far away in like multiple underground bunkers and only him and possibly some other person knows about it. Where is all this stuff? Because that's what the government is currently putting together. They must have some of it, they've got to have some documents and there's got to be some evidence that's going to really substantiate and make their case, right? That really going to seal it for him. Because a lot of it, to me, sounds like, well, hey, I didn't go out and get prostitutes. You don't have anything on me. Do you have a wiretap or is there something, some evidence of where I was on tape, whether it video or audio, where I was actually engaged in the transaction of these things? Do you have me on tape, giving ecstasy or whatever drug to women? Do you have me doing these things? Can you prove that I was involved? I mean, I don't know. It's crazy. This is crazy. We'll keep you updated. I mean, I'll I'll render my opinion on this and I will talk about it over time as more details break. Again, there could be changes as of the taping that I'm doing right now. There could be changes and it's possible that he's actually at a jail. I highly doubt it, but we will see. I don't know if there's anything more to say on this. I think I've said everything. Keep watching and watch when they use the word free golf. It's kind of funny, especially depending on the actual correspondent or person using the word, the language, like the anchor who's actually using it's kind of it's kind of funny. All right. Well, that's it. Let me know in the comments below what you think about all this. What do you think? I mean, I'm pretty sure, like I said, most people are against this guy and rightfully so after what he the Cassie because that was just that was brutal. And it speaks volumes of who he is as a person and who he has been, right? So a lot of this stuff, although I'm saying, they're going to need to prove things. A lot of this is pretty much, we're not speculating on his character anymore. If you remember long ago, when things first came up, I said, look, we don't have any evidence. This is before the video. But after seeing that, it's pretty much a done deal for me. Definitely done. I think as a celebrity, there's no coming back. Nothing will ever bring him back. That much I can say. Let me know in the comments below what you think. If you haven't subscribed, please subscribe. And I appreciate you the ones who do subscribe and do comment and interact. Hit that like button to truly appreciate that. And I will talk to you soon. Peace.