Sean 'Diddy' Combs' legal problems deepen: two new charges of sex trading a month before trial | Today news

With just a month left for his trial, the shameful music mogul Sean “Diddy” Combs ended up in more legal problems. Federal prosecutors have now added two charges to his indictment, and expanded on the allegations that the prison-hipping-hop magnate was as recently as last year with sex trade. A preventative indictment filed on Friday accuses Combs of the use of violence, fraud or coercion to force a woman to participate in commercial sex acts from at least 2021 to 2024. The indictment, which was returned by a federal large jury in Manhattan, also claims that combs from the woman were transported to be identified as victim-2 and other people. The new charges are in addition to the conspiracy and charges of sex trade filed against Combs when he was arrested in September. This increases the total number of charges against him from three to five. Sean ‘Diddy’ Combs Trial Combs, 55, is scheduled to hear on May 5. He remains in a federal jail in Brooklyn. A message commenting on the new charges was left with his representatives. Combs denies that they have committed any crimes and pleaded not guilty to the first set of charges, who claimed to have forced and abused women for years with the help of a network of co -workers and employees while silence victims through extortion and violence, including kidnapping, arson and physical beats. His settlement on the new charges is not scheduled. Federal prosecutors claim the singer ‘I will miss you’ and the founder of Bad Boy Records used his ‘Power and Prestige’ as a music star to cause female victims to intoxicated, extensive sexual actions with male sex workers in events called ‘Freak Offs’. Central in the case is a video of March 2016 in which Combs hit and kick his then girlfriend, R&B singer Cassie, in a Los Angeles hotel. Prosecutors argue that the assault occurred during a ‘freak off’. Combat advocates believe the footage was nothing more than a “look at a complex but decade -long consensual relationship” between the two. Combs advocates claim that the case should never have been brought and fights to reject a charge of the allegations he carried a male guidance on state lines. “The government has summarized a criminal case, mainly based on the allegations that Mr. Combs and two of his longtime girlfriends sometimes brought a third party – a male accompaniment – into their sexual relationship,” Coms’ attorney Aexandra Ae Shapiro wrote in a Coms Conservation in February. “Each of the three charges in the case is based on the theory that this kind of sexual activity is a federal crime,” Shapiro added. Friday’s replacement indictment is the second in Combs’s case. In the first, in January, federal prosecutors revealed that their case was involved at least three women, which they said that combs were forced to participate in commercial sex acts. In return, prosecutors said, he provided them with money, career opportunities and payment of rent and housing costs. (With AP inputs)