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Sean 'Diddy' Combs sentencing live updates: Combs gets 50 months in prison

Prosecutors argue Combs deserves at least 11 years in prison.

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Last updated: Friday, October 3, 2025 8:23PM PDT
Sean Diddy Combs gets 50 months in prison

NEW YORK -- Rap mogul Sean "Diddy" Combs was sentenced on Friday to more than four years in prison after a jury found him guilty of two counts of transportation to engage in prostitution in July.

He gets credit for time served since his arrest. Combs has already spent 12 months at the Metropolitan Detention Center in Brooklyn.

Before his sentence was handed down, Combs tearfully addressed the court and apologized to victims, his children and other domestic violence survivors and begged the judge for mercy.

Federal prosecutors argued Combs deserved at least 11 years in prison, while Combs' attorneys sought time served. Combs has been in custody since his September 2024 arrest.

(ABC News and The Associated Press contributed to this report.)

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Oct 03, 2025, 11:46 AM PDT

Combs sobs while watching video about his life

Dozens of family and friends came to support Sean Combs at his sentencing hearing, with so many supporters that the court gave him an additional row. Among those in the courtroom are Combs' mother, Combs' sister, his six oldest children and all of the living mothers of his children.

Despite the additional row for supporters, several people who showed up to support Combs were turned away from the main courtroom and sent to the overflow room.

Combs' ex-girlfriend, Gina Hyunh -- who identified herself as "Victim 3" in the government's indictment, but has since alleged in a letter she was "pressured to feel like a victim" by prosecutors and she believes Combs should be released -- sat with the public in the courtroom.

When Combs' six children approached the podium together to address the judge, they held onto one another for support. They were all in tears when they gave impassioned pleas to the judge in support of their father.

Combs was emotional as his children spoke, often wiping away tears and hanging his head.

When the defense team played a video of Combs' life and achievements, Combs began sobbing and tapping his feet incessantly.

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Oct 03, 2025, 10:53 AM PDT

Defense plays mitigation video as court breaks for lunch

The defense highlighted a video right before a break for lunch that noted Combs' accomplishments and testimonials from those closest to him.

The defense's presentation so far was atypical of sentencing hearings in Manhattan federal court both in its length and its content.

The defense's presentation so far includes arguments from multiple criminal defense attorneys, one of whom broke down in tears as she described her client and his personal contributions to her life, a video that resembles a campaign ad and emotional remarks from six of Sean Combs' children.

Mitigation videos are not unheard of, but Sean Combs is the rare defendant that can afford to produce one.

The video depicts Combs playing with his children, running the New York City Marathon, participating in charities and mourning late ex-girlfriend Kim Porter. His children are then seen addressing the camera.

Combs appeared to get emotional, slouching in his seat and leaning his head on his hand as the video showed moments of his life before his criminal conviction and before a different video, showing him attacking Cassie Ventura, became a defining image.

The court is taking a lunch break until 2:15 p.m.

A pastor, someone from a re-entry program and more attorneys are still slated to speak before a prosecution rebuttal and Combs himself addresses the court.

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Oct 03, 2025, 10:33 AM PDT

Combs' kids plea for his release: 'Please give us the chance to rebuild together'

Sean Combs looked toward his children from his seat at the defense table as each of his six adult kids delivered an emotional plea to the judge from the podium.

"He is still our dad, and we still need him present in our lives," Jessie Combs said.

"This is our father. We will love him unconditionally," Quincy Brown said, adding, "My father has learned a major lesson."

"With our dad incarcerated, we have all felt a huge emptiness in our lives," Chance Combs said. "He shares the ways he is working on being a better man and a more patient father."

The train daughters of Sean "Diddy" Combs, arrive at Federal Court, in New York, Friday, Oct. 3, 2025.
The train daughters of Sean "Diddy" Combs, arrive at Federal Court, in New York, Friday, Oct. 3, 2025.

She also said her youngest sister, Love -- who was born in 2022 -- deserves a "father who tucks her in at night."

D'Lila Combs agreed, saying, "We cannot watch our baby sister grow up fatherless. ... These are the years she will never get back, these are the memories she will never have."

"Please, your honor, please give us the chance to rebuild together," she said.

At the conclusion of their speeches, Judge Arun Subramanian said, "I know how hard it was ... but it was very important for me to hear."

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Oct 03, 2025, 10:18 AM PDT

Children of Sean Combs address the court

After federal prosecutors expressed skepticism about Sean Combs' sincerity, defense attorney Nicole Westmoreland insisted he is remorseful.

"He gets it," Westmoreland said during her emotional attestation to Combs' character and impact.

She singled out "Free Game with Diddy," the six-week course about entrepreneurship that Combs taught to fellow inmates at MDC-Brooklyn.

"Mr. Combs can reach so many more on the outside than he can on the inside. It is of no benefit to anyone to warehouse him in a prison," Westmoreland said.

Combs' children then clustered around the podium to address the court.

Quincy Brown, Chance Combs, D'lila Combs and Jessie, the children of Sean "Diddy" Combs, arrives to the Manhattan federal court.
Quincy Brown, Chance Combs, D'lila Combs and Jessie, the children of Sean "Diddy" Combs, arrives to the Manhattan federal court.

"I ask you to give my father a second chance. A second chance at life, a second chance to right his wrongs, a second chance to be the man he truly is," Justin Combs said. "I humbly ask you to see my father the way I do, the way his family does, the way he truly is."

Christian Combs called his father his "superhero" who taught him to treat women with respect.

"He has changed," Christian Combs said. "Please let my father out."

Jessi Combs, 18, immediately broke down in tears as she introduced herself to the judge.

"Your honor he is still our dad," she said with a quivering voice.