Sean 'Diddy' Combs Sentencing: Defendant to Allocute; Victim, Cassie Ventura to Speak; Prosecutors Seek 11 Years
Sean "Diddy" Combs, convicted in July on two federal Mann Act counts and acquitted of racketeering and sex‑trafficking charges, faces sentencing Oct. 3 before U.S. District Judge Arun Subramanian in the Southern District of New York, with prosecutors asking for 135 months (11 years, 3 months) and a $500,000 fine while the defense urges a cap of 14 months or immediate release crediting roughly 13 months already served. Combs will be allowed to allocute and wear non‑prison clothing, and victim Cassie Ventura — along with a witness known as "Mia" and other victims whose letters describe ongoing fear — are expected to give impact statements as the court hears competing submissions after the judge denied motions for a new trial and acquittal.
🔍 Key Facts
- Sentencing is scheduled for Oct. 3, 2025 before U.S. District Judge Arun Subramanian in the Southern District of New York; the court has permitted Combs to wear non‑prison clothing and he will allocute (address the court).
- Combs was convicted in July 2025 on two Mann Act counts (transportation to engage in prostitution) and acquitted of racketeering conspiracy and sex‑trafficking; Judge Subramanian denied his motions for a new trial and for acquittal, saying the prosecution presented overwhelming evidence.
- Federal prosecutors filed a presentence submission seeking 135 months (11 years, 3 months) in prison and the maximum $500,000 fine, and included letters from accusers describing ongoing fear and harms.
- Defense attorneys filed sentencing papers urging a cap of 14 months (noting Combs has already been jailed in Brooklyn since his September 2024 arrest and will have served about 13 months by the Oct. 3 date) and asked the court to consider immediate release/time served; the defense plans multiple speakers, will play a video at sentencing, and submitted an apology letter in which Combs says he is "stronger, wiser, clean, clear and sober" and takes "full responsibility."
- Victim impact statements were filed and several victims will speak at sentencing: singer Cassie Ventura submitted a letter saying she testified while nine months pregnant, expressed disappointment at the acquittals and fear of retaliation if Combs is released; a trial witness who testified under the pseudonym "Mia" has been authorized to speak (prosecutors sought about five minutes).
- Letters of support for Combs were submitted by inmates and their family members (including Ho Wen Kwok/Miles Guo and the mother of an inmate, Maribel Flaquer), praising his mentorship work at MDC Brooklyn (described as "Free Game With Diddy"); at the same time, at least one alleged victim (identified as Victim 3/Virginia Huynh) said she cooperated with prosecutors but disputed that she had been forced into prostitution.
- As background, a previously offered $50 million bail package was rejected by the judge; prosecutors signaled they would seek a substantially longer sentence than the defense recommendation.
📍 Contextual Background
- Federal prosecutors commonly resolve federal criminal charges through plea agreements, which typically result in a sentence below the statutory maximum.
- As of 2025-09-29 Harjinder Singh was being held in the St. Lucie County Jail after being denied bond on three counts of vehicular homicide and immigration violations.
- As of 2025-09-29, the statutory maximum prison sentence for attempting to provide material support to a designated foreign terrorist organization is 15 years.
- A U.S. House judiciary subcommittee held a meeting in Charlotte, North Carolina to hear from families of violent-crime victims on 2025-09-29.
- On 2025-09-25, Circuit Judge Stephen Everett denied Donna Adelson's motion for a new trial in the murder-for-hire case and rejected defense arguments that the jury verdicts were not legally justified and rested on speculation.
- Donna Adelson faced a possible life sentence for her role in the 2014 murder-for-hire killing of Daniel Markel (as of 2025-09-29).
- The Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) executes search warrants at residences and family homes as part of criminal investigations.
📰 Sources (9)
- Combs will speak (allocute) at the sentencing; his attorney Teny Garagos filed a letter dated Sept. 26 requesting he be allowed to speak and wear non‑prison clothes, which the judge granted.
- A trial witness who testified under the pseudonym 'Mia' will speak at sentencing after prosecutors requested she be allowed about five minutes to deliver a victim impact statement.
- Singer Casandra 'Cassie' Ventura submitted a court letter urging a sentence that considers victims' harms and expressing fear of retaliation if Combs 'walks free.'
- Defense counsel plans at least four team members to address the court and intends to play a video at sentencing; prosecutors requested a sentence of 135 months while defense urged a cap of 14 months with credit for time served.
- Letters of support from an inmate (Ho Wen Kwok, a.k.a. Miles Guo) describing Diddy’s mentorship programs at MDC Brooklyn ('Free Game With Diddy') and efforts to run business/entrepreneurship courses for inmates.
- A mother of an inmate (Maribel Flaquer) submitted a letter crediting Diddy with positively influencing her son (named Raymond) through the mentorship course.
- An alleged victim (Virginia Huynh, identified in filings as Victim 3) wrote she cooperated with prosecutors but 'did not agree' she had been forced into prostitution, saying she felt 'pressured to feel like a victim.'
- Publicized concern from alleged victim Cassie Ventura that she fled New York fearing 'swift retribution' from Diddy or his associates.
- Court-submitted apology letter contents and direct quotations (Diddy saying he is 'stronger, wiser, clean, clear and sober' and taking 'full responsibility').
- Defense team formally requested a 14-month sentence in filings ahead of sentencing.
- Prosecutors seek a minimum sentence of 11 years in prison.
- Reminder and confirmation that Diddy was convicted on two counts of transportation to engage in prostitution and acquitted of racketeering and sex‑trafficking counts; the letter references the 2016 InterContinental hotel assault on Cassie Ventura.
- Court will permit Sean 'Diddy' Combs to appear in non-prison clothing at his Oct. 3 sentencing.
- Diddy will address the judge and allocute for the first time regarding the convictions.
- Defense formally proposed a 14-month sentence and noted Combs has already served 13 months in custody.
- Victim impact statements were filed ahead of sentencing, including a statement from Cassie Ventura saying she testified while nine months pregnant and expressing disappointment at acquittals.
- Federal prosecutors explicitly requested at least 11 years and 3 months (135 months) in prison and sought a $500,000 fine—the maximum legal penalty.
- Defense requested a sentence of no more than 14 months; documents confirm Combs has been in custody in Brooklyn since September 2024 and may be eligible for release with time served.
- The article notes Combs intends to allocute (address the court) at sentencing.
- U.S. District Judge Arun Subramanian denied Sean 'Diddy' Combs' motions for a new trial and for an acquittal.
- Judge Subramanian wrote the prosecution provided 'overwhelming evidence' and referenced the jury's split verdict in rejecting spillover‑prejudice claims.
- Prosecution recommended 135 months in its sentencing submission; defense proposed a 14‑month sentence and noted Combs has already served about 13 months.
- Prosecutors filed a presentence submission asking for at least 11 years and three months in prison.
- Prosecutors included letters from accusers describing ongoing fear and the effects of Combs' conduct.
- Article reiterates Combs' July conviction on two Mann Act counts and notes he has remained jailed since conviction; defense seeks 14 months or immediate release.
- Defense lawyers will argue for Combs' immediate release at a pre‑sentencing hearing scheduled for Thursday.
- Prosecutors have not yet filed their formal sentencing recommendations with the court (per the CBS report).
- Combs has been detained in New York City since his September 2024 arrest and will have been jailed nearly 13 months by the Oct. 3 sentencing date.
- Defense sentencing memo filed Monday urges a cap of 14 months for Combs’ two Mann Act convictions.
- Sentencing is set for Oct. 3 before Judge Arun Subramanian in the Southern District of New York.
- Each Mann Act count carries up to 10 years; Combs was acquitted of racketeering conspiracy and sex trafficking.
- Judge previously rejected a $50 million bail package; prosecutors are expected to seek a longer sentence than 4–5 years.