Sean “Didi” Kums denied the release of the ruling before the verdict
Sean “Didi” will remain in the federal reservation until he faces the verdict later this year, and a judge has ruled.
The Times newspaper confirmed that the American boycott judge, Aaron Supramanian, denied the rap movement and the disgraceful music producer who requested his issuance before he was issued on October 3. Koms was at the federal detention at the Brooklyn Metropolitan detention center Since his arrest In September. Facility It is said to be notorious For accidents of violence as well as a shortage of employment, overcrowding, and even power outages.
Supramian said in the order, which the Times reviewed: “Compass failed to meet his burden to show the entitlement of the release.” “The guarantee request has been rejected.”
COMBS, 55 years old, did not respond immediately to the Times request for comment.
In his matter, Subramanian was not proven by lawyers’ arguments for the Combs, including that he should not be punished for his lifestyle “fossil”; It is the goal of “continuous threats to violence” in MDC; And explanations of his violence against his ex -girlfriend, Cassandra “Cassi” Ventura and Jane, who went to a pseudonym. The two women witnessed the music vehicles known as “suspension operations” and provided allegations about his violent behavior.
Koms’s lawyers urged the release, and they insisted that their customers are not a flight risk. However, the judge did not see “clear and convincing evidence” of this or the danger that his lawyers said that Comles was confronted in prison. Regarding “Squalor and Danger” in the facility, Subramanian acknowledged that “the general screaming regarding these circumstances has come from all angles,” according to the arrangement.
However, Combs said that MDC staff “managed to maintain it safely and attend his needs, even during an accident of the threatened violence from a prisoner.”
Although Coms was cleared in July of blackmail and sex trafficking, the jury convicted him of two prostitution charges. The jury’s ruling is left divided safely facing up to 10 years in prison for all those who charge prostitution.
The rejection of the guarantee comes after the Compass Legal team on Sunday presented a message from a woman who defined herself as a “victim of 3” of the trial. Virginia Houina wrote to support the release of rapper, claiming that he “made clear efforts to become a better person,” according to the message reviewed by the Times.
She added: “I want to assure the court that if he is released, I think Mr. Combs will abide by all the conditions imposed and will not endanger his freedom or the welfare of his family. Allowing him to be at home will also support the recovery process for all concerned.”