Sean Combs' attorneys seek expedited ruling on sentencing appeal

Attorneys for Sean Combs urged a federal appeals court on Thursday to speed up its decision on whether his 50-month prison sentence was improperly imposed. The Bad Boy founder, convicted of transportation to engage in prostitution, is serving his term at a low-security facility in New Jersey. The hearing before the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit focused on claims that the judge considered acquitted conduct during sentencing.

Sean Combs' lawyer Alexandra Shapiro argued during a two-hour hearing that U.S. District Judge Arun Subramanian erred by factoring in acquitted charges of fraud and coercion when determining the sentence last October. Shapiro told the three-judge panel, “This case presents an important issue about respect for jury verdicts and public confidence in our criminal justice system.” She noted that multiple justices have questioned the constitutionality of sentencing based on acquitted conduct, according to her presentation in court. Combs, aged 56, did not attend the proceedings in New York. Combs was convicted last summer after an eight-week trial of causing male escorts to travel across state lines for sexual encounters called “freak-offs” involving his girlfriends Casandra “Cassie” Ventura and a woman identified as Jane. A New York jury acquitted him of racketeering conspiracy and sex trafficking but found him guilty on two counts under the Mann Act related to prostitution. His release from Fort Dix is set for April 15, 2028, per the Bureau of Prisons. The judges questioned both sides intensely. One judge noted that it is constitutional to consider all relevant conduct for sentencing and asked why trial findings of psychological abuse, emotional abuse, and providing drugs to the women should be ignored. The panel also pressed Assistant U.S. Attorney Christy Slavik on why prosecutors treated the prostitution charges as secondary to their racketeering and trafficking theories, given the acquittals on those main counts. No timeline for a decision was provided, and the judges gave no hints on their leanings. This appeal forms part of Combs' efforts to leave prison sooner, including a separate challenge to overturn his conviction and a personal letter to President Donald Trump requesting a pardon.

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Former President Donald Trump outside New York Appellate Court, holding appeal documents for his hush money conviction case.
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Trump appeals New York hush money conviction, invoking presidential-immunity limits on evidence

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President Donald Trump has filed a 96-page appeal with a New York appellate court seeking to overturn his felony conviction in the Manhattan hush money case, arguing the trial improperly relied on evidence tied to his official acts and that the judge should have recused himself.

Lawyers for Sean 'Diddy' Combs filed an appeal on December 23, 2025, urging a New York federal court to release him immediately, overturn his conviction, or reduce his four-year sentence. The appeal argues that the trial judge improperly relied on charges for which Combs was acquitted. Combs was convicted in July 2025 of two prostitution-related offenses under the Mann Act.

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Sean Combs has written a personal letter to President Donald Trump requesting a pardon following his sentencing to over four years in prison. Trump, once a social acquaintance of the music mogul, stated he is not considering the appeal. The request comes amid Combs' ongoing legal battles over sex trafficking-related charges.

A federal judge has canceled the trial of Salvadoran national Kilmar Abrego Garcia and ordered a hearing to examine if prosecutors are vindictively pursuing human smuggling charges against him. Abrego Garcia, mistakenly deported earlier this year, returned to the US amid controversy but now faces these allegations. The hearing is set for January 28.

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Former Let’s Dance judge Dermot Clemenger, 52, has evaded authorities for over a year following charges for 31 counts of buying sex. Media outlets have located him working at a restaurant in Wales, while police have failed to apprehend him despite an international warrant. The statute of limitations for the final charge expires on January 25.

A federal judge rejected the early release request for former Veracruz governor Javier Duarte, who remains imprisoned in Mexico City's Reclusorio Norte. The decision was made on November 21, 2025, despite his defense claiming he had served 95% of his nine-year sentence. His lawyer announced an appeal, as the penalty ends in April 2026.

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Madrid's Juzgado de lo Penal número 3 has acquitted a man accused of sexual assault by an escort in a swingers' club, ruling that the complaint stemmed from a financial dispute and lacked sufficient evidence. The incident took place in September 2023 at a naturist sauna in the Ciudad Jardín neighborhood. The sentence, issued on December 11, 2025, dismisses requests for up to four years in prison.

 

 

 

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