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June 30, 2026

In 2025: the day Diddy's fate went to the jury

Today in True Crime

by CaseBond  ·  Source-backed daily true-crime history

June 30, 2026

Non-graphic · Sensitive events discussed without explicit detail.

In 2025: the day Diddy's fate went to the jury

At roughly 11:30 on the morning of Monday, June 30, 2025, twelve ordinary citizens filed out of a Manhattan federal courtroom and into a deliberation room to decide the fate of one of the most influential figures in modern American music. After nearly two months of testimony, the federal racketeering case against Sean "Diddy" Combs had finally been handed to the jury. Within minutes, the gravity and the friction of the moment made themselves felt: the panel sent two separate notes to the bench, and before the day was out, the jurors had flagged one of their own as a problem.

Music mogul Sean "Diddy" Combs in September 2023, roughly eighteen months before his federal racketeering and sex-trafficking trial in Manhattan.
Sean "Diddy" Combs in September 2023.
News crews and court officers outside the Manhattan federal courthouse during the Sean Combs racketeering trial, May 13, 2025.
Press and court officers outside the Sean Combs federal trial, Manhattan, May 13, 2025.

The charges were severe. Combs stood accused of one count of racketeering conspiracy, two counts of sex trafficking, and two counts of transportation for prostitution. The racketeering conspiracy count, brought under the federal Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act (18 U.S.C. § 1961 et seq.), was the spine of the government's case. Originally written to dismantle organized crime, RICO allowed prosecutors to tie a range of alleged acts together as a pattern of criminal activity rather than a string of isolated incidents — a framing that, if accepted by the jury, would expose Combs to a long federal prison term.

Presiding over the trial was U.S. District Judge Arun Subramanian, who spent the morning of June 30 walking the jury through their instructions before sending them to deliberate. Those instructions are the quiet machinery of a criminal trial: the judge lays out the legal standard for each count and reminds jurors that the burden of proof rests entirely on the prosecution, which must establish guilt beyond a reasonable doubt. It is the highest standard in American law, and it exists precisely because the stakes of a wrongful conviction are so high.

The jury did not ease into the work. Within about ten minutes of beginning deliberations, the panel had already sent two notes to Judge Subramanian. Notes are a routine, expected feature of jury deliberations — they can request that testimony be read back, ask for documents or exhibits, or seek clarification on a point of law. But the speed with which these arrived signaled a jury that was immediately, intensely engaged with the material in front of it. Both the prosecution and the defense have the right to be informed of such communications and to weigh in on how the court should answer, a safeguard meant to keep jurors properly guided without being improperly nudged in either direction.

Then came a more serious complication. As the day wore on, the jury notified the judge that Juror No. 25 had become a cause for concern. The available reporting did not spell out the nature of the problem, and the range of possibilities is wide: a juror exposed to outside information, a juror in distress, or friction inside the deliberation room that was interfering with the panel's ability to work. When such issues surface, a judge has several options, from questioning the juror directly to, in extreme cases, replacing them with an alternate. How a court handles a troubled juror is delicate work — the integrity of the verdict and the rights of the defendant both ride on getting it right.

Credentialed press gathered behind a barricade outside the Manhattan federal courthouse during the Sean Combs trial, May 13, 2025.
"Credentialed press only" barricade outside the Sean Combs federal trial, Manhattan, May 13, 2025.

The atmosphere outside the deliberation room matched the tension within it. Reporting from June 30 described emotions running high and tempers flaring in the Manhattan courtroom, the accumulated strain of a trial that had stretched across nearly two months of graphic testimony and contested evidence. By the close of the day, after roughly five and a half hours of deliberation, the jury had not reached a verdict on any count. That was not a surprise. Complex federal cases with multiple serious charges routinely demand more than a single day, as jurors methodically work through testimony, weigh witness credibility, and apply the law to the facts as they find them.

The deliberations resumed the next morning. On Tuesday, July 1, 2025, the jurors returned to their room at 9 a.m. Eastern Time to continue the work they had begun the day before, carrying forward the same charges, the same evidence, and the same requirement that any verdict — guilty or not guilty — be unanimous.

The case carried weight far beyond the defendant. Combs built his reputation as a rapper, record producer, and record executive, credited with helping develop a generation of stars including the Notorious B.I.G., Mary J. Blige, and Usher. The decision to pursue racketeering and sex trafficking charges against a figure of that stature reflected a federal posture that fame and fortune do not place a defendant beyond the reach of anti-trafficking law. As the deliberations carried into July, the same principle that governs every American criminal trial governed this one: that even the most prominent defendant answers to a jury of his peers, judged against the evidence and nothing else.

Also on this day

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    On June 30, 2009, a rancher reported finding human remains, including a partial skull, in a field at the Duck Lake Ranch north of Gerlach, Nevada — an unsolved homicide.
  • 92-year-old convicted in UK's longest-running cold case (2025) · Los Angeles Times
    On June 30, 2025, a Bristol jury convicted 92-year-old Ryland Headley of the rape and murder of a woman in southwestern England decades earlier, in what is believed to be the UK's longest-running cold case ever solved.

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Sources used/checked for this issue

  • Sean 'Diddy' Combs trial: live updates, June 30, 2025, CNN — "Sean 'Diddy' Combs trial: live updates," CNN, June 30, 2025. https://www.cnn.com/entertainment/live-news/sean-diddy-combs-trial-06-30-25
  • Sean Combs Trial: Jury Begins Deliberations, The New York Times — "Sean Combs Trial: Jury Begins Deliberations," The New York Times, June 30, 2025. https://www.nytimes.com/2025/06/30/arts/music/sean-combs-diddy-trial-jury-deliberations.html
  • Diddy trial updates, Day 37, USA TODAY — "Diddy trial updates, Day 37," USA TODAY, June 30, 2025. https://www.usatoday.com/story/entertainment/celebrities/2025/06/30/diddy-trial-updates-day-37/84408744007/
  • Sean 'Diddy' Combs Case: Jury Issues Detailed in Note, E! Online — "Sean 'Diddy' Combs Case: Jury Issues Detailed in Note," E! Online, June 30, 2025. https://www.eonline.com/news/1419313/sean-diddy-combs-case-jury-issues-detailed-in-note
  • June 30, 2025 — Diddy Jury Instructions, Diddy Trial Watch — "June 30, 2025 — Diddy Jury Instructions," Diddy Trial Watch. https://diddytrialwatch.com/jun-30-2025-diddy-jury-instructions-2/
  • Emotions Run High in Diddy's Trial as Tempers Flare, HypeHub Magazine — "Emotions Run High in Diddy's Trial as Tempers Flare," HypeHub Magazine. https://www.hypehubmagazine.com/2025/07/emotions-run-high-in-diddys-trial-as.html
  • Sean Combs, Wikipedia — "Sean Combs," Wikipedia. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sean_Combs

Today in True Crime by CaseBond — 2026-06-30

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