Sean “Diddy” Combs is in Custody, but Multiple Sources Suggest His Depraved Behavior May Continue.
According to the New York Post , the Bad Boy Entertainment founder is being held in the 4 North section of the Metropolitan Detention Center (MDC) in Brooklyn, New York, where about 20 inmates are housed under loose rules. In the prison, these people can also entertain themselves by playing hockey.
“There were iron bars in one of the rooms on 4 North,” said Gene Borrello, a mafia boss who was once imprisoned there. “They had little holes in them. If you lay down, you could look through those holes and talk to the women downstairs and see what they were doing.”
The Metropolitan Detention Center (MDC), where Diddy and many other notorious inmates are held. Photo: Mega. |
The comments raised concerns that Sean “Diddy” Combs could continue his “freak offs” in prison. “He could do that if he wanted to,” Borrello said, adding that the girls on the third floor were mostly drug addicts.
On X, another former gang member known as G-Lock revealed that female inmates were not shy around male inmates. “They would show their bras and stuff,” he claimed.
In September, The Associated Press reported that MDC was plagued by rampant violence and multiple deaths. The Justice Department and the U.S. Bureau of Prisons have been working to address the problems and hold offenders accountable.
Federal prosecutors have charged nine inmates in connection with a series of attacks at MDC between April and August. The charges detail serious safety and security issues at the prison, after two inmates were stabbed to death and another was stabbed in the spine with a homemade ice pick. A corrections officer was also charged with shooting at a car during an illegal chase.
Diddy continues to request bail but has not been approved by the court. Photo: NYP. |
Hip-hop mogul Diddy was brought to MDC in mid-September after being arrested at a Manhattan hotel. The rapper has pleaded not guilty to charges of extortion and sex trafficking. His lawyers have filed a motion to release him on $50 million bail , promising not to let him leave his home or obstruct the case by threatening witnesses. The jury has yet to reach a verdict.