
Sean âDiddyâ Combsâ sex trafficking and racketeering trial came to a close after seven weeks on Friday as the rapperâs defense team and prosecution completed closing arguments.
Both sides saw wins and losses throughout the trial, but experts claimed Diddy âmight be cookedâ on one specific charge as the jury prepares to deliberate. After his arrest in September 2024, the âLast Nightâ singer was charged with sex trafficking, racketeering and transportation to engage in prostitution. He has pleaded not guilty to all charges.
Former Danity Kane singer and Diddy protĂ©gĂ©, Aubrey OâDay, has been following the trial and isnât sure what the outcome will be. While she personally believes the rapper is âguilty of all the charges,â the musician isnât sold on the prosecutionâs case in court.
âThe rational, justice side of me that leads a good amount of what I do nowadays says the answer should be what was proven by the prosecution, the law, and thatâs conflicting to what I want personally,â she told Extra.

Experts claimed Diddy âmight be cookedâ on one specific charge.REUTERS
She noted: âI donât know if the prosecution proved [Diddyâs crimes] without a doubt, though.â
During closing arguments, prosecutors argued that Diddy ran an alleged criminal enterprise with full control. They pointed out that the jury heard testimony, saw texts, viewed bank records and heard audio showing the rapper committing crime after crime for decades. According to the prosecution, the government showed that Diddy didnât take no for an answer. Up until today, Diddy was able to get away with crime because of his money and power, Assistant U.S. Attorney Christine Slavik said. âThat stops now.â
Hereâs where experts say things stand for each charge against Diddy with the jury about to deliberate.

Sean âDiddyâ Combs listens as prosecutor Maurene Comey makes her closing arguments during Combsâ sex trafficking trial in New York City.
Transportation to Engage in Prostitution
As to the transportation to engage in prostitution charge, an expert told Fox News Digital, Diddy might be in trouble.
âThe sex workers were very clear about their role and their purpose for being transported across state lines; it was for sex and not something else,â criminal defense attorney Eric Faddis explained. âDiddy might be cooked on this charge.â
However, the defense did find a way to show the jury a different explanation in an attempt to undermine the governmentâs argument. âDefense got an employee of one of the companies to say that Diddy was just buying the escortsâ time and not any sexual performance, which the jury could use as a basis to acquit Diddy on the transportation charges,â Faddis, a founding partner of Colorado-based Varner Faddis, said.

Racketeering Conspiracy
The jury is unlikely to find Diddy not guilty of racketeering, criminal defense attorney John W. Day told Fox News Digital.
âThe only thing Diddy and his team can hope for is a miracle where the jurors donât buy the governmentâs claim that this was racketeering and that Diddy was the head of a criminal empire dedicated to fulfilling his desires,â the founder of New Mexico-based law practice, John Day Law, explained. âA defense win is more likely if the jurors are conflicted on the racketeering charges and canât reach a unanimous verdict. That could lead to a hung jury on one or more of the charges. But the jurors spent the entire trial waiting to see how Diddyâs lawyers rebutted the massive case against him, and they merely rested without putting on any witnesses. That leaves the jury picking through the governmentâs case to see if this really rises to racketeering, and if not, they may hang or acquit on some of the charges â but itâs unlikely.â


According to the legal expert, the prosecution âpresented overwhelming evidenceâ that Diddy âpresided over this little kingdom of criminal activity designed to make him happy â and made a compelling case to the jury that this met all the elements of racketeering, sex trafficking, and transportation for prostitution.â
âThe prosecution can withstand an acquittal or a hung jury on some of the counts, but the prosecutors really need a conviction for racketeering to claim total victory,â Day added. âAgain, that can be a difficult charge to convict on if the jurors donât buy the theory that this entire business empire was engaged in sex trafficking and transportation to engage in prostitution. But the defense needed to have convinced at least one juror that the case wasnât there, and that witnesses were lying to save their own necks. And thatâs a tough sell to a jury that spent weeks listening to horrific testimony about Diddy and his empire.â
Sex Trafficking by Force, Fraud or Coercion
Things arenât as clear-cut on the sex trafficking charge, one expert told Fox News Digital. Diddy was accused of sex trafficking two of his ex-girlfriends, Cassie Ventura and Jane, who testified under a pseudonym. The prosecution claimed the rapper transported both women across state lines and then forced them to have sex with male escorts while he watched.
âOn cross-examination, both Cassie and Jane admitted to willingly participating in some of the âfreak offs,â which could cause the jurors to wonder if all of the romantic encounters may have been consensual,â Faddis noted.
âBoth Cassie and Jane admitted to voluntarily ingesting drugs before the âfreak offs,â which may undercut the prosecutionâs coercion argument.â
The criminal defense attorney did note that Cassie and Jane both gave âcompelling, evocative testimony detailing physical abuse and financial coercion.â