In his latest court appearance on Wednesday, Sean “P Diddy'” Combs was reported to appear as though he has lost weight, appearing thinner and “grayer” after three months behind bars.
The disgraced hip-hop mogul, who has pled not guilty to charges of sex trafficking and racketeering, is being held at the Metropolitan Detention Center in Brooklyn, the same facility where suspected UnitedHealthcare CEO shooter Luigi Mangione is also being held.
Combs is allegedly refusing meals out of fear over his safety, according to one prison expert who spoke with the Daily Mail. It’s also shaping up to be a lonely Christmas in jail for the Bad Boy exec.
Though cameras are not allowed inside the federal court, Elizabeth Milner, a reporter for Law and Crime Network, noted that the 55-year-old appeared to be “astonishingly thinner,” which she added is to be expected of anyone who has been behind bars for three months.
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Shareif Ziyadat/Getty Images)
Speaking on the Daily Mail podcast The Trial of Diddy, director and founder of Wall Street Prison Consultants Larry Levine claimed that Diddy continues to refuse meals, according to sources on the inside. The prison expert speculated the rapper could be refusing meals due to paranoia over his personal safety as the MDC is is notorious for inmate fights and deaths.
Levine said: “He does get a lot of people in trouble. People want to kill him. So what if somebody on the outside knew someone that had a relative that worked in the prison and they put something in his food?”
He continued: “A little bit at a time, then he gets poisoned, whatever it is, and it’s early checkout for Mr. Puff Daddy. They kill him. That’s another reason, another theory as to why he wasn’t eating. He was afraid the food was poisoned or contaminated.”
Levine also speculated that Christmas will be very lonely for the Diddy, especially in the SHU, or Special Housing Unit. Inmates are typically given a “goodie bag” with snacks on Christmas day, but if he remains in the SHU, he may just have to rely on whatever is available in his commissary.
On top of that, the holidays are a particularly hostile time behind bars due to normal visiting hours being cut short because of the high volume of visitors on days like Christmas. Which, according to Levine, “creates a lot of tension among the inmates,” and that “more fights break out during the holidays between inmates than any other time.”
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