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Labrish
Nyuuz
Diddy gets a standing ovation from inmates, says lawyer Agnifilo
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[QUOTE="Munyaradzi Mafaro, post: 51453, member: 636"] Rap superstar Diddy faces his judgment day after a Manhattan jury delivered a split verdict that left him beaten but not broken. The music mogul dodged the most serious charges of sex trafficking and racketeering but got nailed on two prostitution transportation counts. Judge Arun Subramanian locked down the sentencing timeline during a Tuesday court session while defense attorneys scrambled to prepare their final arguments. Both prosecution and defense teams agreed on the September schedule that puts Diddy's fate just months away. The fallen hip-hop king heads back to his Brooklyn jail cell knowing his freedom hangs by a thread. Fellow inmates welcomed back their celebrity cellmate with thunderous applause that echoed through the detention center hallways. These hardened criminals rarely witness anyone beat federal prosecutors on major charges and saw Diddy's partial victory as their personal triumph. Defense lawyer Marc Agnifilo claims his famous client has undergone serious soul-searching during his time behind bars. The attorney speaks with the rapper multiple times daily and notices profound changes in his attitude and self-awareness. Diddy apparently recognizes that wealth and fame cannot mask personal demons that have haunted him for years. Federal sentencing guidelines could slam the music entrepreneur with two decades behind bars under the Mann Act violations. Defense teams must submit their mercy pleas by mid-September while government prosecutors prepare their punishment recommendations. The 1919 law originally targeted men who transported women across state lines for immoral purposes before lawmakers expanded its scope decades later. Brooklyn detention officials keep the high-profile prisoner locked up pending his October court appearance. [/QUOTE]
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Labrish
Nyuuz
Diddy gets a standing ovation from inmates, says lawyer Agnifilo
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