
Last week, Sean Combs' lawyers filed a request that the music mogul was published against the deposit before his hearing.
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On Monday, a federal judge Sean Combs' application for the deposit was planned for his conviction for October 3 in the past month. The hip-hop tycoon was sentenced to two traffic classes to participate in prostitution, each with a maximum prison sentence of 10 years. He was acquitted because of the more serious indictment for sex trade and blackmail.

Combs was refused several times before the attempt and after the judgment. On July 29, the Combs defenders submitted an application for his release under new conditions, including a 50 million dollar bond, which was secured by his residence in Miami, in which he lives until the hearing and handed over his passport to the US agency for pre -judicial services. On request, the lawyers of Combs argued that their client is not a danger to the security of others and that there were no legal precedents for the attitude of combs in custody on the prostitutional assessments, which are also referred to as a man's law.
“Combs and two of his long -time friends had a private, intimate life that is not unusual today,” says the defense letter. “It was perhaps not common on June 25, 1910, when the man act or, as it was originally called, the Transport Act of White-Slave was adopted. But the attitudes to sex and morality have taken a long way over the past 115 years.”
In his answer, judge Arun Subramanian said that the circumstances of the combs had not changed since the deposit was last refused after the judgment. During the process, the prosecutors presented evidence that Combs is a single-friend of a hotel security material that showed that Combs kicked, stepped, stepped and pulled the singer Cassie Ventura, and the Combs defense team admitted that their customer had committed domestic violence. For this reason, judge Subramanian wrote, Combs did not meet the publication conditions.
“Combs' man act arguments could have an alternating current fund in a case in connection with the evidence of violence, coercion or submission in connection with the prostitution files in connection with the prostitution files.
The judge stated that Combs was also a risk of flours. However, he spoke of the concerns of the mogul about the conditions within the metropolitan detention center, the prison in which he was recorded in Brooklyn, but decided that it was not sufficient reason for the release.
“As COMBS admits, MDC employees could be certain in an incident with an endangered violence of an inmate,” judge Subramanian wrote.
The Combs defenders have also submitted an application for acquittal or resumption of the indictment of the man's law. Judge Subramanian has not yet answered the request.