Opening statements in Sean ‘Diddy‘ Combs sex-trafficking trial in Manhattan federal court will happen on Monday after jury selection was delayed.
The disgraced music mogul’s former girlfriend, the R&B singer Cassie, real name Cassandra Ventura, is expected to be among the trial’s early witnesses.
The defense revealed last week they plan on arguing that Diddy and Cassie engaged in mutual violence throughout their relationship.
Meanwhile prosecutors said they have been unable to communicate with ‘Victim 3’ who will likely not show up to testify against Diddy.
Lawyers for the three-time Grammy winner say prosecutors are wrongly trying to make a crime out of a party-loving lifestyle that may have been indulgent, but was not illegal.
Prosecutors say Combs coerced women into drugged-up group sexual encounters, then kept them in line through violence.
Diddy trial thrown into chaos as key witness goes MISSING
A star witness in the Sean ‘Diddy‘ Combs trial is reportedly MIA, throwing the disgraced Bad Boy mogul’s sex trafficking case into chaos.
Opening statements are set to begin next week. But federal prosecutors have been left scrambling.
They can’t find one of the female victims who is central to their case. She does not live in New York where the Combs’ trial is being held.
Final stage of jury selection
The final stage of choosing jurors is known as ‘peremptory’ or discretionary strikes: jurors that either side does not want to sit on the jury.
Diddy’s defense gets 10 strikes for the main jury of 12 people and the prosecution wil have six.
Then each side gets three each for the six alternate jurors.
There are 45 jurors who are qualified for this final stage: none of them will be in court and they are due to return on Monday for opening statements.
Some potential jurors dismissed after admitting they have seen damning Diddy video
Several who were eliminated from the jury pool had seen or heard media reports related to the case, including some who said they saw a video in which Combs was hitting and kicking one of his accusers in a Los Angeles hotel hallway in 2016.
But one man who had written on a questionnaire that the video left him with the ‘impression of an angry hostile person who is entitled’ was not dismissed from the jury pool.
After the video aired on CNN last year, Diddy apologized, saying, ‘I take full responsibility for my actions in that video. I was disgusted then when I did it. I’m disgusted now.’
Diddy tried to obstruct justice from jail, prosecutors argued
In November, prosecutors claimed that the rapper had tried to reach out to prospective witnesses and influence public opinion from jail in a bid to affect potential jurors ahead of the trial.
Prosecutors wrote that a review of recorded jail calls made by Combs showed he asked family members to reach out to potential victims and witnesses and urged them to create ‘narratives’ to influence the jury pool. They said he also encouraged marketing strategies to sway public opinion.
An attorney for Combs, Anthony Ricco, said in court that the prosecution’s portrayal of Combs as ‘a lawless person who doesn’t follow instructions’ or ‘an out-of-control individual who has to be detained’ was inaccurate.
Judge Arun Subramanian denied the bail application, saying evidence showed Combs to be a ‘serious risk of witness tampering.’
What Diddy’s overheard courtroom whispers to heavily pregnant TV reporter reveal
A heavily pregnant Cassie Ventura is expected to take the stand in Diddy‘s blockbuster sex trafficking trial.
The rapper’s ex-girlfriend and victim of the notoriously violent smackdown video that was the catalyst for his arrest, she now holds the key to the most hotly anticipated celebrity trial in recent memory.
Read the full list of charges against Diddy
Rapper Sean ‘Diddy‘ Combs faces a slew of charges related to his alleged sexual and physical abuse of women.
He was charged with three crimes – racketeering, sex trafficking and transportation to engage in prostitution.
Diddy jury will not be sequestered
Diddy jurors will be able to leave court and go home after each day of the trial.
‘There are no plans to sequester the jury, which means you will go home every day after court,’ the jury questionnaire obtained by the outlet read.
However, jurors were instructed to “avoid all media coverage and not to go on the Internet or social media with regard to this case for any purpose.”
They are advised to avoid discussing the case with family, friends and colleagues until after the trial is done.
Diddy admitted being ‘nervous’ in court
Composed and with his hands in his pockets, Sean ‘Diddy‘ Combs greeted potential jurors who hold his fate in their hands with a slight nod as the sex trafficking trial that could send him to prison for life began Monday.
And despite the gravity of the crimes against him, Combs, 55, remained composed and calm, hugging his lawyers as he came in and nodding his head slightly when he faced the jurors with his hands in his pockets.
Until he cracked midway through the process after Diddy’s legal team requested a bathroom break. When the judge asked if they could carry on, Diddy put up his hand and said: ‘I’m sorry your honor, I’m a little nervous today.’
Heavily-pregnant Cassie seen days before she takes the stand against Diddy
The singer, who is expecting her third child with husband Alex Fine, was spotted in New York this week as jury selection in her ex partner’s case dragged on.
She announced her pregnancy in February this year, and is understood to be in her third trimester.
Will Diddy’s trial be televised?
Unlike other high-profile cases, the rapper’s trial will not be televised as it is in federal court.
Electronic media, including cameras, are banned in the Manhattan court room.
A sketch artist’s work will be the only visuals coming out of the courtroom.
Jury selection was delayed several times
Jury selection in Diddy’s trial was initially scheduled to last three days, ending on Wednesday.
But judge Arun Subramanian alloted more time for the process, intially delaying the final steps to Friday and then again to Monday.
Diddy’s lawyers had asked for the delay on Friday, saying that they were concerned that more jurors would get cold feet between now and Monday and it would be safer to wait until then.
Prosecutors strongly opposed this and said it should move ahead today because it could cause long delays on Monday before opening statements.
The judge had leaned towards the delay, saying that if they finished choosing the jury on Monday you got a ‘certainty you’re not going to have to redo jury selection or worse’.
He said opening statements would still begin early on Monday.
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Diddy trial live updates: Cassie Ventura to testify as other witness goes ‘missing’