Even behind bars, Diddy continues to act just like he always did: “The King still OILING”

What did Diddy eat? Where is he sleeping at the Metropolitan Detention Center in Brooklyn.

Image for article titled Here's What Life is Like For Diddy Behind Bars?

The lifestyle of Diddy has drastically changed in the last few days. Once a millionaire who was living in luxury, the disgraced music mogul is now sitting behind bars in the city that was once his playground.

After being arrested by federal authorities on Monday, and sitting through an arraignment on Tuesday, Puff is now staying at the Metropolitan Detention Center in Brooklyn, New York.

Because of his celebrity status and the high-profile nature of the case, Combs is in a Special Housing Unit (SHU), which is essentially a separate section of the jail that is distant from the general population.

In an interview with TMZ, Cameron Lindsey, a former warden at this exact detention center, said that Diddy is also in the SHU for his safety, since some may consider harming the mogul because of the nature of the allegations against him.

But despite being separate from the rest of the inmates, he isn’t given any special treatment. He’s served breakfast, lunch, and dinner just like everyone else.

The New York Post was able to find out the first meal the Bad Boy Records founder was fed once he was put in jail. Following his arraignment, he was served Swedish meatballs for dinner. If he didn’t get the meatballs, he would have opted for a black bean burger.

Lindsey also shared in his interview that Diddy will be required to wake up at 6 a.m., make his bed, mop the floor, and maintain the cleanliness of his cell.

While Diddy isn’t living in luxury anymore, he did score a rare legal win this week.

Last week, Derrick Lee Cardello-Smith learned he would be awarded $100 million in his civil suit against the disgraced music mogul. In the lawsuit, he claimed that he was drugged and sexually assaulted by Diddy at a Detroit party in 1997. Allegedly, the two met while Cardello-Smith was working at a local restaurant in the area.

But on Wednesday a Michigan circuit court judge reversed the ruling, meaning that the Bad Boy Records founder no longer has to pay the $100 million.

Sean “Diddy” Combs will continue to be held without bail, a judge ruled Wednesday evening, on charges including sex trafficking by force, transportation to engage in prostitution and racketeering conspiracy.

Judge Andrew Carter denied bail and ordered Combs remanded into custody, where his attorney said he would be held in the special housing unit of Metropolitan Detention Center-Brooklyn.

Carter said the government had provided sufficient evidence Combs is a danger to the community and a danger to obstruct justice and intimidate witnesses. Carter said the defense’s proposed bail package was “insufficient.”

Combs did not appear to react but had his eyes cast downward while seated at the defense table.

Before making his ruling, Carter had appeared skeptical of the defense’s claim that a 2016 video, in which Combs was seen kicking and dragging Cassie Ventura, was the product of a ten-year loving relationship dissolving because of her jealousy over his infidelity.

“What’s love got to do with that?” Carter asked.

The music mogul’s attorney, Marc Agnifilo, conceded that it was “a hard video to watch,” but maintained that it “doesn’t mean he should be incarcerated.”

Prosecutor Emily Johnson, in pushing for Combs to remain in custody, accused him of a “longstanding pattern of abuse,” and said his victims have an “extreme fear” of Combs because of his influence in the entertainment industry.

Johnson said Combs called a victim in November 2023 — after Ventura’s civil lawsuit was filed — seeking to maintain this victim’s public support.

According to prosecutors, the victim told Combs that when she read Ventura’s lawsuit, “I feel like I’m reading my own sexual trauma.” Combs allegedly tried to convince her she willingly participated in the acts, but the woman pushed back, saying that was “not how she saw things,” Johnson said.

Diddy told the woman, whom prosecutors said he supports financially, that “she ain’t got nothing to worry about” if she kept up her support of him. Prosecutors said it made clear Combs would use financial coercion to keep victims close.

Mindful of the judge’s stated concern about potential witness tampering, Agnifilo offered to place one or two retired police officers at Combs’ house at all times to control who enters and keep a visitor’s log.

“What I am trying to fashion is a situation where any witness intimidation … would be virtually impossible,” Agnifilo said.

Prior to Wednesday’s hearing, Agnifilo appealed Judge Robyn Tarnofsky’s Tuesday decision to detain the 54-year-old pending trial.

In a letter to the court ahead of the Wednesday hearing, Agnifilo wrote that Combs is “eminently trustworthy” and should be released on a $50 million bond.

The bond — which would have been secured by his Miami home worth $48 million — would’ve been co-signed by Combs, his mother, his sister, his three adult sons and the mothers of two of his daughters. The defense also proposed restricted travel, restrictions on female visitors and home detention among other conditions of release.

Agnifilo took issue with prosecution comparisons of Combs to sex offenders like R. Kelly, Keith Raniere and Ghislaine Maxwell, all of whom were jailed for a time at the same place — MDC-Brooklyn — where Diddy is currently being held. He said the charges, while serious, are “eminently defensible” and pledged Combs would show up to court to defend himself.

“Sean Combs has never evaded, avoided, eluded or run from a challenge in his life. He will not start now,” Agnifilo’s letter said.

The attorney previously said Combs is trying to sell his private plane. Agnifilo said he took possession of his client’s passport and those of five of his relatives.

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