Sean Combs’s
Trial
Supported by
Acquitted of more serious charges, Sean Combs was found guilty of violating a law enacted during a panic over “white slavery” that is now a common tool in sex crimes prosecutions.
By Julia Jacobs and Ben Sisario
Acquitted of more serious charges, Sean Combs was found guilty of violating a law enacted during a panic over “white slavery” that is now a common tool in sex crimes prosecutions.
Sean Combs’s
Trial
Supported by
Acquitted of more serious charges, Sean Combs was found guilty of violating a law enacted during a panic over “white slavery” that is now a common tool in sex crimes prosecutions.
By Julia Jacobs and Ben Sisario

Mr. Combs’s lawyers have contended that two women he is accused of sex trafficking were consensual participants in encounters…

After seven weeks of testimony, the government detailed to jurors why it says the mogul is guilty of sex trafficking and…

The prosecution began its closing argument by focusing on a racketeering charge, describing what they say was a criminal…

After 28 days of testimony in the federal sex-trafficking and racketeering trial, the prosecution rested and the music mogul told…

Combs was acquitted last month of most serious charges in sex-trafficking trial but convicted on two lesser counts

Following two months of testimony and arguments in the New York federal case, jurors rejected the most serious charges of sex…