Diddy’s huge prison ‘meltdown’ revealed, as ‘sex trafficker’ rapper remains in hellhole jail
Sean ‘Diddy’ Combs had a celebratory meltdown in a notorious prison because he couldn’t believe he was still behind bars there, it was claimed.
A panicked Diddy reportedly begged guards to be taken to a prison hospital for observation, claiming he thought he was having a breakdown on Thursday.
Guards at the Metropolitan Detention Center in Brooklyn denied his request, according to a source close to the rapper who was locked up in September.
“With his high-powered legal team, Diddy thought he would now be out on bail,” the insider said.
‘Spending the holidays behind bars was a nightmare for him. He eventually managed to calm himself down with the meditation technique he used while behind bars. It took him a few hours of deep breathing and concentration to get out of the bad situation he was in, but he finally did it.”
However, a source close to Diddy denied the claims, telling DailyMail.com that the rapper remains strong in prison despite missing his family a lot at Christmas, the time he always spends with his children.’
Diddy’s alleged meltdown comes after a judge ruled that an Alabama woman who says she was raped by Jay-Z and Diddy Combs when she was 13 can continue her lawsuit against the rap moguls anonymously for the time being.
Sean ‘Diddy’ Combs had a meltdown in prison over Christmas and asked guards for medical help for him, a source told DailyMail.com
The rapper is being held at the Metropolitan Detention Center in Brooklyn awaiting trial
Diddy, 55, was arrested on September 16 and charged with sex trafficking, racketeering and transportation to engage in prostitution
As DailyMail.com previously reported, Diddy was confronted a ‘gloomy’ Christmas in a Brooklyn jail. The disgraced music mogul reportedly continues to refuse meals while in jail as he awaits criminal trial on federal sex trafficking charges.
During a recent court appearance, Combs was described in reports as “amazingly thinner” and “grayer” after spending the past three months behind bars.
Although cameras were not allowed in federal court, Law and Crime reporter Elizabeth Millnew described Combs looking very different from how he appeared in a video portraying Hacky Sack in Central Park just days before his September 16 shooting was arrested.
He also faces the humiliation of being overshadowed in the detention center by another inmate who is now more famous than him – and more popular among the general public.
Luigi Mangione, 26, is being held at the same facility after being charged in the December shooting death of United Healthcare CEO Brian Thompson in New York. Mangione pleaded not guilty to the charges last week.
Diddy remains jailed in New York awaiting criminal trial on federal sex trafficking charges. He also faces a wave of sexual assault lawsuits, many filed by plaintiff’s attorney Tony Buzbee, a Texas attorney who says his firm represents more than 150 people, both men and women, who have been sexually assaulted allege abuse and exploitation by Combs.
The lawsuits allege that many people were abused at parties in New York, California and Florida after being given drug-laced drinks.
Diddy’s lawyers have dismissed Buzbee’s lawsuits as “blatant publicity stunts designed to extract payments from celebrities who fear lies are being spread about them, just as lies have been spread about Mr. Combs.” Jay-Z said in a statement that Buzbee is trying to blackmail him into settling the Alabama woman’s allegations.
In her lawsuit, the woman who says she was raped at age 13 identifies herself as Jane Doe. She said she was living in Rochester in 2000 when she went to New York City and befriended a limousine driver who drove her to an after-party for the MTV Music Awards, where she says she was eventually attacked by Jay-Z and Combs. .
In their lawsuit Wednesday, Carter’s attorneys cited a recent television interview with NBC News in which his accuser acknowledged inconsistencies in her story.
Alex Spiro, an attorney for Jay-Z, asked the judge to dismiss the entertainer from the lawsuit against the woman and requested a hearing on the case be set for the day after he submitted his requests in writing on December 18.
Citing an interview the accuser did on NBC-TV, Spiro wrote that the broadcast revealed “glaring inconsistencies and outright impossibilities” in the accuser’s story.
The woman has admitted inconsistencies in her story.
Torres wrote in her order Thursday that Spiro, less than three weeks into the case, has filed a “litany of letters and motions attempting to impugn the character of plaintiff’s attorney, many of which emphasize the alleged “urgency of this case. case.’
Referring to Jay-Z by his legal last name, the judge added: “Carter’s attorney’s relentless filing of combative motions containing inflammatory language and ad hominem attacks is inappropriate, a waste of judicial resources and a tactic that harms his client is unlikely to be beneficial. The Court will not expedite legal proceedings simply because counsel demands it.”