For #MeToo advocates, Diddy verdict is ‘a huge setback’ as powerful men prep comebacks

When Lauren Hersh, the national director of the anti-sex trafficking activist group World Without Exploitation, heard Wednesday that Sean βDiddyβ Combs was convicted only on the two least serious charges against him, she felt grief for his former partner Casandra Ventura and his other accusers.
βI think this is a travesty,β Hersh said. βIt shows there is culturally a deep misunderstanding of what sex trafficking is and the complexity of coercion. So often in these cases, thereβs an intertwining of horrific violence and affection.β
Hersh, the former chief of the sex trafficking unit at the Kings County district attorneyβs office in Brooklyn, said that Combsβ verdict β guilty on two charges of transportation to engage in prostitution but acquitted on one for racketeering and two for sex trafficking β is a mixed message about Combsβ conduct. But it will likely be felt as a step backward for the movement to hold powerful men to account for alleged sex crimes.
In a cultural moment when other music stars like Marilyn Manson and Chris Brown have mounted successful comebacks after high-profile abuse investigations and lawsuits, Hersh worries the Diddy verdict may deter prosecutors from pursuing similar cases against powerful men and chill the MeToo movementβs ability to seek justice for abuse victims.
βItβs a huge setback, especially in this moment when the powerful have continuously operated with impunity,β Hersh said. βIt sends a signal to victims that despite the MeToo movement, weβre still not there in believing victims and understanding the context of exploitation. But Iβm hoping itβs a teachable moment to connect the dots with what trafficking is and understanding the complexity of coercion.β
The charges against Combs were not a referendum on whether he had abused Ventura or the myriad other women and men involved in his βfreak-offβ parties, where group sex and drug use intertwined into an allegedly decadent and violent culture around Combs.
Combsβ defense team freely admitted that his relationship with Ventura was violent, as seen in an infamous 2016 videotape of Combs beating Ventura in an elevator lobby at the InterContinental hotel in Los Angeles. Marc Agnifilo, one of Combsβ lawyers, said in closing arguments that Combs has a drug problem but described his relationship with Ventura as a βmodern love storyβ in which the hip-hop mogul βowns the domestic violenceβ that plagued it.
βThe defendant embraced the fact that he was a habitual drug user who regularly engaged in domestic abuse,β federal prosecutors wrote in a hearing about Combsβ possible bail terms.
The jury decided that Combsβ conduct, however reprehensible, did not amount beyond a reasonable doubt to a criminal racketeering organization or sex trafficking. Yet the caseβs impact on movements within music and other industries to hold abusers to account is uncertain.
Many civil suits against the music mogul are still moving through court and could affect his depleted finances. Combsβ reputation has been thoroughly tainted by the lurid details of the trial and strong condemnations from his many accusers.
Still, for victim advocates, the verdict was a bitter disappointment.
Reactions within the music world were swift and despairing. βThis makes me physically ill,β said Aubrey OβDay of Danity Kane, the band Diddy assembled on his popular reality TV show βMaking the Band,β on social media. βCassie probably feels so horrible. Ugh, Iβm gonna vomit.β
βCassie, I believe you. I love you. Your strength is a beacon for every survivor,β wrote singer Kesha, who in 2014 sued producer Dr. Luke, accusing him of assault. Kesha has frequently altered the lyrics of her hit single βTikTokβ in performances to lambast Combs.
Even longtime Diddy antagonist 50 Cent seemed to acknowledge his partial victory. βDiddy beat the feds that boy a bad man,β 50 Cent wrote on Instagram, before referencing a famous mobster notorious for evading convictions. βBeat the RICO he the gay John Gotti.β
Mitchell Epner, a former assistant U.S. attorney in New Jersey who prosecuted numerous sex trafficking and involuntary servitude cases, said that despite some recent high-profile sex trafficking cases that ended in convictions, Combsβ charges were never going to be easy to prove.
βIn recent years, weβve seen prosecutions of Ghislaine Maxwell in the Jeffrey Epstein case, Keith Raniere of NXIVM and R. Kelly, where they are trafficking in order to feed the traffickersβ sexual desire,β Epner said. βBut this indictment was all about Sean Combs sharing women with people he was paying. He wasnβt receiving money, he wanted to be a voyeur. That technically fits the definition of sex trafficking, but it wasnβt the primary evil Congress was thinking about.β
The hurdles for accusers to come forward with claims against powerful men, and for juries to discern between transgressive sexual relationships and criminally liable abuse beyond a reasonable doubt, make such cases difficult to prosecute.
In the absence of convictions, some recently accused artists have already mounted successful comebacks.
Shock-rocker Marilyn Manson had been under investigation by the Los Angeles County Sheriffβs Department since 2021, when several women accused him of rape and abuse including βWestworldβ actor Evan Rachel Wood and βGame of Thronesβ actor EsmΓ© Bianco.
Dist. Atty. Nathan Hochman said in January that the statute of limitations had run out on Mansonβs domestic violence allegations, and that prosecutors doubted they could prove rape charges.
βWhile we are unable to bring charges in this matter,β Hochman said in a statement then, βwe recognize that the strong advocacy of the women involved has helped bring greater awareness to the challenges faced by survivors of domestic abuse and sexual assault.β
Bianco told The Times that, βWithin our toxic culture of victim blaming, a lack of understanding of coercive control, the complex nature of sexual assault within intimate partnerships, and statutes of limitations that do not support the realities of healing, prosecutions face an oftentimes insurmountable hurdle. Once again, our justice system has failed survivors.β
Manson has denied all claims against him. He has since released a new album and mounted successful tours.
Meanwhile, R&B singer Chris Brown was recently the subject of βChris Brown: A History of Violence,β a 2024 documentary that shed new light on a 2022 lawsuit where a woman accused Brown of raping her on a yacht owned by Combs in 2020.
That lawsuit β one of many civil and criminal claims made against Brown over the years, beginning with the infamous 2009 incident in which he assaulted his then-girlfriend Rihanna β was dismissed. In 2020, Brown settled another sexual assault lawsuit regarding an alleged 2017 incident at the singerβs home. Brown currently faces criminal charges around a 2023 incident where he allegedly assaulted a music producer with a tequila bottle in a London nightclub.
Brown denied the claims in the documentary, and his attorneys called the film βdefamatory.β He sued Warner Bros. Entertainment for $500 million. He is currently on a stadium tour that will stop at SoFi Stadium in Inglewood in September.
Combs, meanwhile, may still face a range of criminal and civil consequences. He could be sentenced from anywhere up to the maximum of 10 years apiece on each prostitution charge, or to a far lesser sentence. Some experts said itβs possible he may be sentenced to time served and walk away a free man soon.
Though itβs too soon to know what kind of future awaits Combs should he return to public life, itβs hard to imagine a return to the heights of influence that defined his β90s tenure at Bad Boy Entertainment, or his affable multimedia-mogul personality in the 2000s. A fate similar to the former hip-hop mogul Russell Simmons seems most likely β reputationally tarnished and culturally irrelevant.
Still, his supporters thronged outside the New York courtroom waving bottles of baby oil β an infamous detail of the trial β in a pseudo-ironic celebration of his acquittal on the most serious charges.
If Combs wants to ever return to music, heβll have at least one ally in Ye, the embattled Nazi-supporting rapper who showed up in court to bolster Combs. Ye featured the incarcerated mogul on his song βLonely Roads Still Go to Sunshine,β and released clothing featuring the logo of Combsβ old fashion label Sean John.
President Trump, another convicted felon and alleged sexual assailant who quickly returned to the heights of power, has said he is open to pardoning Combs. βItβs not a popularity contest,β he has said, regarding a Combs pardon. βI would certainly look at the facts if I think somebody was mistreated.β