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Jury selection continued on Tuesday in Sean “Diddy” Combs’ federal sex trafficking and racketeering trial in New York.
USA Today reported that on Monday, six potential jurors were retained, while 15 were dismissed. Some dismissals were due to language challenges or health concerns, while others were due to possible biases against Combs, as mentioned in a USA Today article.
USA Today also noted that a male juror was released for breaking court rules by engaging with media related to the trial. The juror admitted he clicked on a USA Today article discussing jury selection and read it for a few minutes.
Read Crime Online’s Ongoing Coverage on Sean ‘Diddy’ Combs’
The jury will be composed of 12 primary jurors and six alternates. Those who acknowledged hearing about the high-profile case have not been automatically disqualified. Some prospective jurors admitted to watching a video purportedly showing Combs assaulting Cassie Ventura. Nonetheless, one candidate was dismissed after claiming that an image from a news story, depicting Combs near a woman lying on the ground, was “strong evidence.”
Previously, Judge Arun Subramanian ruled that prosecutors are allowed to show a video that shows Combs attacking Ventura at a California hotel in 2016. The video was released to the public last May, months before Combs’ arrest. Ventura is expected to testify against Combs and will not use a pseudonym.
Combs was arrested on September 16, 2024, outside a Manhattan hotel on federal charges of racketeering, sex trafficking, and transportation to engage in prostitution. Combs has been denied bail three times, as Judge Andrew L. Carter determined there was a “serious risk” of witness tampering in this case.
Combs’ legal team sought home detention with GPS monitoring. In exchange, they offered to post $50 million bail and to use Combs’ home as collateral.
“The government has proven the defendant is a danger. The bail package is insufficient even on risk of flight,” Carter said while denying Combs’ bail.
Federal authorities raided Combs’ homes in Holmby Hills, California, and Miami in March 2024. Reports indicated that the raids were connected to an ongoing sex trafficking investigation that resulted in his arrest months later.
The reported raids also occurred four months after Ventura accused him of sex trafficking and abuse. In a multimillion-dollar lawsuit, she alleged that Combs drugged her and forced her to have sex with other men. The pair settled the lawsuit a day after its filing.
However, in May, the video surfaced showing Combs assaulting Ventura at a California hotel in 2016. After the video was released, Combs put out a video expressing remorse for his behavior.
Two more accusers came forward a week after Ventura’s lawsuit. One of the women claimed Combs drugged and raped her at Syracuse University in New York in 1991. Combs denied those allegations before a third accuser, Liza Gardner, levied similar allegations against him.
In that case, Gardner claimed Combs and singer-songwriter Aaron Hall drugged and raped her and a friend following an Uptown Records event in 1990. Gardner said she was 16 at the time of the incident. She also accused Combs of choking her a day after the assault
Days after footage of the Ventura assault was publicized, two more women filed lawsuits against Combs. One of those women was April Lampros, a New York Fashion Institute of Technology student who reportedly met Combs in 1994. Lampros accused Combs of sexually assaulting her on four occasions between the mid-1990s and the early 2000s.
Lampros claimed Combs promised to mentor her and connect her with executives in the fashion industry. Instead, Combs allegedly forced her to drink before raping her in a hotel room. Lampros recalled another instance in which Combs forced her to perform oral sex in a parking garage while a parking attendant watched.
Combs has been accused of committing or facilitating sexual abuse in at least 30 other lawsuits — including one, filed in October, which alleges he and Jay-Z raped a 13-year-old girl in New York in 2000. The accuser in that case had her lawsuit dismissed in February.
Reuters reported that the jury will be anonymous. Combs’ trial is expected to last two months.
[Feature Photo: Mark Von Holden/Invision/AP, File]