Hundreds of potential jurors are being interviewed starting today for Sean ‘Diddy‘ Combs’ sex trafficking trial by the judge & lawyers in a case that could see the one-time mimi-mogul behind bars for life if found guilty.
Making a joke that the process of selecting a panel for the Combs trial resembles the density of J.R.R. Tolkien’s Lord of the Rings, Judge Arun Subramanian opened Monday’s session by informing potential jurors and the courtroom he expects the multi-charge trial to last up to eight weeks. That’s eight weeks from when opening statements from the U.S. Attorney’s office for the Southern District and the Marc Agnifilo- and Teny Geragos-led legal team begin on May 12.
As he has been for almost every hearing since his arrest back in September, a sweater wearing Combs was in court this morning. The much accused ‘It’s All About the Benjamins’ performer came straight t the Manhattan courthouse from Brooklyn’s Metropolitan Detention Center.
Jury selection Monday for the incarcerated Combs’ case comes over six months after the Bad Boy Founder was arrested in a New York City hotel lobby by law enforcement Claiming innocence and entering a not guilty plea, he 55-year-old Combs was initially facing one claim each of racketeering, sex trafficking and transportation to engage in prostitution. This year, subsequent indictments have added forced labor allegations and two additional charges of sex trafficking and transportation to engage in prostitution – which were put on paper last month.
Aiming to get a jury out of over 150 prospects in the next three days, Judge Subramanian also noted that the trial will run from 9:30 am – 5 pm ET for the first week. The matter will go to 9 am – 5 pm ET beginning the week of May 19.
In the first round of jurors, all of whom have already filled out an extensive questionnaire on their fitness for the trial and knowledge of the high-profile case, there were discussions of celebrity relationships (Michael B Jordon and Mike Myers came up), family connections and careers, intances of sexual abuse and the death penalty. As is the case during cases like this, the defense challenged several potential jurors, but to little effect as the time conscious Judge Arun Subramanian wanted to keep the process moving.
