Diddy will TESTIFY in sex trafficking case - and 'can't wait to tell his story'

By James Halpin

Diddy will TESTIFY in sex trafficking case - and 'can't wait to tell his story'

DIDDY will testify in his bombshell sex trafficking criminal case as the disgraced rapper tries to clear his name.

The music mogul - real name Sean Combs - is in a New York prison after also being charged with racketeering and transportation to engage in prostitution.

The star's lawyer, Marc Agnifilo, makes the shock claim that Diddy will defend himself in front of judge and jury in a new documentary that will air on streaming site Tubi.

Agnifilo is set to say there is nobody better to defend the rapper than himself, according to TMZ, who produces the show.

On the stand, Diddy could face questions from lawyers over beating an ex, drug-fueled Freak Off parties, and accusations he even blew up a car.

Testifying would be a high stakes strategy that could prove a pivotal moment in a trial that could put Diddy away for at least 15 years if convicted on all charges.

The documentary, The Downfall of Diddy: The Indictment does not have a release date but it is promising to raise issues that are not public yet.

Diddy is currently waiting for his trial inside Brooklyn's Metropolitan Detention Center sharing a cell with crypto fraudster Sam Bankman-Fried.

He reportedly is not eating in jail fearing that he will be poisoned, according to one former inmate.

Plagued with rat infestations, violent outbreaks, and understaffing, the prison is a far cry from the luxury Diddy has lapped up for years at his Miami and LA mansions.

Metropolitan Detention Center is able to hold 1,600 inmates, cartel kingpins, and other celebrities are among those to have called the jail home.

High-profile individuals who have experienced the prison's brutal conditions include R Kelly, Fetty Wap, and Ghislaine Maxwell.

Maxwell famously bemoaned her time at the jail, complaining about sleep deprivation, a lack of potable water, a sewage stench in her cell, and living among rodents and cockroaches.

Diddy was arrested on Monday and yesterday had his $50 million bail bid denied by a judge.

Prosecutors argued that the embattled hip-hop tycoon was a danger to the community and urged the judge to keep him locked up.

Accused of running a sex crime empire, Diddy has denied the allegations stemming from a months-long investigation.

A dozen accusers have come forward bringing civil suits against him dating back to the 1990s.

One accuser, Thalia Graves, filed a lawsuit alleging Diddy drugged, bound, and raper her in 2001.

In court filings, his attorneys argued that he should be released on a $50 million bail because he was struggling to find a place to live in New York City.

The lawyers cited the US Open and Fashion Week as some of the reasons why their client couldn't land a month-long rental.

But prosecutors argued that Diddy was a danger to the community and urged the judge to keep him locked up until trial.

Assistant US Attorney Emily Johnson said: "Mr. Combs physically and sexually abused victims for decades,"

"He used the vast resources of his company to facilitate his abuse and cover up his crimes.

"Simply put, he is a serial abuser and a serial constructor."

The prosecutors then referenced a video that matched the footage of Diddy chasing his ex, Cassie Ventura, in a hotel hallway and beating her, which CNN obtained in May.

They argued this was surefire proof that Diddy shouldn't be trusted to roam free alongside his alleged victims.

In February 2019, MDC was again in the national spotlight after inmates suffered days without heat or power during a cold snap.

Power and heating in parts of the jail were cut off after a fire, with inmates left in near freezing temperatures and total darkness after the sun went down.

"The MDC was one of the most troubled, if not the most troubled facility in the Bureau of Prisons," Cameron Lindsay, a former warden at the jail, told The New York Times at the time.

Despite issues raised ranging from overcrowding to human rights violence, it has remained one of the go-to locations to house both high-risk and high-profile detainees.

Right now, the jail is housing a trio of cartel figures - Ismael "El Mayo" Zambada, Nestor Perez "El Nini" and Genaro Garcia Luna.

Zambada was the co-founder of the infamous Sinaloa Cartel, while Perez has been identified as El Chapo's top security man.

Luna is a former Mexican national security secretary being held for his links to the cartel.

Diddy is one of the latest inmates to join the jail - despite his attorney's pleas.

His lawyers noted "several courts in this District have recognized that the conditions at Metropolitan Detention Center are not fit for pre-trial detention."

"Just earlier this summer, an inmate was murdered," they wrote.

"At least four inmates have died by suicide there in the past three years."

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