Diddy prosecutors drop kidnapping and arson claims, narrowing racketeering charge in final days of trial

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Federal prosecutors narrowed its racketeering conspiracy charge against Sean “Diddy” Combs, just one day before closing arguments in the sex trafficking trial.

The music mogul faces five federal counts of racketeering conspiracy, sex trafficking and transportation to engage in prostitution. He’s pleaded not guilty. Under the racketeering conspiracy charge in the indictment, prosecutors accused Diddy of “creating a criminal enterprise whose members and associates engaged in, and attempted to engage in, among other crimes, sex trafficking, forced labor, kidnapping, arson, bribery, and obstruction of justice.”

In a letter to the court, the government proposed removing three theories related to the racketeering conspiracy charge as a way to “streamline” jury instructions.Specifically, the government removed instructions related to attempted kidnapping, attempted arson and aiding and abetting sex trafficking.

“The Government is no longer planning to proceed on these theories of liability so instructions are no longer necessary,” prosecutors wrote in the letter.

All of the five federal charges against Diddy remain.

Federal prosecutors narrowed the racketeering charge against Diddy in final stage of trial

Federal prosecutors narrowed the racketeering charge against Diddy in final stage of trial (REUTERS)

The move comes after Alexandra Shapiro, one of the 55-year-old mogul’s defense attorneys, moved for a judgment of acquittal on all counts. She claimed there were “deficiencies” to each count and then walked through each charge.

Related to kidnapping as part of the alleged racketeering conspiracy, Shapiro argued that two of the three of the government’s examples were “insufficient.” In one kidnapping allegation, Capricorn Clark, Diddy’s former employee, testified about being driven by Diddy’s then-head of security to a dilapidated building where she was subjected to lie detector tests for five days in a row. If she failed, a man told her she would be thrown in the East River, she testified. But Shapiro argued there was no evidence that Diddy knew this was happening or that a co-conspirator had kidnapped her.

As for the arson allegation, which stems from a claim by Scott Mescudi, better known as Kid Cudi, that Diddy firebombed his Porsche in early 2012 after he discovered the rapper had dated his longtime girlfriend Cassie Ventura. Shapiro argued that there was no evidence that her client was involved, noting that Mescudi didn’t witness the incident. She added that there was female DNA found on the bottle used for the Molotov cocktail.

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