Sean ‘Diddy’ Combs’s son Justin Combs pleaded for his dad’s release from prison ahead of his sentencing.
On Friday, the 31-year-old nepo baby took to his Instagram Story to show his support for his father ahead of the disgraced rapper’s sentencing hearing.
‘FREE PD ASAP,’ he wrote alongside a double exclamation point emoji and over a plain background.
He also set his post to the tune of Diddy’s collaboration with Nas titled Hate Me Now.
This comes as Daily Mail revealed Diddy has been teaching a prison course from behind bars and is leaning on rave inmate reviews in a bid for freedom.
Diddy is due to be sentenced on October 3rd for two counts of transportation to engage in prostitution for flying male escorts to hotels for ‘Freak Offs’ with his girlfriends, or sexual performances where he watched them have sex and masturbated.
Sean ‘Diddy’ Combs’s son Justin Combs pleaded for his dad’s release from prison ahead of his sentencing; pictured January 2020 in Los Angeles
Diddy, born Sean Combs, was sensationally acquitted of the far graver racketeering and sex-trafficking charges – crimes that carried a minimum 15-year term and even the possibility of life behind bars. He pleaded not guilty to all charges lodged against him.
He was arrested in September 2024 and has since been incarcerated at Brooklyn’s Metropolitan Detention Center.
Earlier this week, Diddy’s attorneys asked the judge presiding over his case to consider sentencing him to just a 14-month sentence followed by a supervised release with mandatory drug treatment, individual therapy and group therapy, because guidelines for ‘Mr. Combs’s crimes of conviction’ are usually six to 12 months.
His attorneys also said Diddy ‘has been adequately punished by serving 13 months in the terrible conditions’ already.
Diddy is the father of seven kids with four different women.
Justin is his second eldest child, his first biological son, and his only kid from his past relationship with ex-girlfriend Misa Hylton.
His eldest is his adopted son Quincy Brown, who was born to Diddy’s late wife Kim Porter and Al B. Sure!.
‘FREE PD ASAP,’ he wrote alongside a double exclamation point emoji and over a plain background
He also set his post to the tune of Diddy’s collaboration with Nas titled Hate Me Now
The media mogul is set to be sentenced on October 3 and faces up to 20 years in prison; pictured May 2022 in Las Vegas
Ahead of his upcoming sentencing, his children wrote letters on behalf of his character. Court documents show that all of his kids except for his toddler daughter wrote letters to Judge Arun Subramanian to ask for compassion for their father as he faces prison time; pictured January 2020 in Beverly Hills
With the late model, Diddy also welcomed Christian ‘King’, 27, as well as 18-year-old twin daughters D’Lila and Jessie.
Diddy is also father to daughter Chance, 19, from his past romance with Sarah Chapman.
He shares two-year-old toddler Love Sean Combs with Dana Tran.
Ahead of his upcoming sentencing, his children wrote letters on behalf of his character.
Court documents show that all of his kids except for his toddler daughter wrote letters to Judge Arun Subramanian to ask for compassion for their father as he faces prison time.
In his letter, Justin described the rapper as a supportive father who has always been present to take care of him and his siblings.
In his letter, Justin described the rapper as a supportive father who has always been present to take care of him and his siblings; pictured January 2010 in New York City
He was arrested in September 2024 and has since been incarcerated at Brooklyn’s Metropolitan Detention Center. At the end of his trial earlier this year, he was convicted on two counts of transportation to engage in prostitution; pictured August 2023 in Atlanta
‘Since his absence, life has felt incomplete,’ he wrote. ‘Each morning I wake up praying it was just a nightmare.
‘My father has been there for me every day of my life — not just physically, but emotionally, spiritually and in the deepest sense of what it means to be a father. I know how rare that is.’
He also pleaded with the judge ‘to see my father the way I do — not through headlines, but through the eyes of a son who loves and needs him.’
He continued: ‘Please allow him the chance to come home, to be the father his children desperately need and to continue the work of becoming the man I know he is capable of being.
‘My siblings and I cannot get back this lost time, but we pray you will give us the gift of having our father back in our lives while we still have time with him.’