Sean “Diddy” Combs was sentenced to 50 months in prison and five years of supervised release by Indian-origin District Judge Arun Subramanian for his conviction on two prostitution-related offences . Subramanian also imposed a $500,000 fine, the maximum allowed under the law.
Before announcing Combs’ sentence, Subramanian highlighted the repeated nature of his offenses and his history of violence toward former partners. He noted that even after Cassie Ventura filed a lawsuit and Combs issued an apology, the rapper continued to act violently toward Jane .
“The court is not assured that if released these crimes would not be committed again,” Subramanian said.
Subramanian said the sentence aims to send a message to survivors of domestic abuse that “violence against women is met with real accountability.”
The judge also thanked Cassie Ventura and “Jane” for their testimony. “You stood up to power,” he said. “The number of people who you reached is incalculable.”
Who is Arun Subramanian?
Arun Subramanian was born in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, to Indian immigrant parents. His parents, Tamil Brahmin engineers who moved to the US in the 1970s, emphasized education and public service. Subramanian earned a bachelor’s degree in computer science from Case Western Reserve University and a law degree from Columbia in 2004.
Appointed by former President Joe Biden in 2023, Subramanian serves as a judge of the US District Court for the Southern District of New York, becoming the first South Asian on the bench. He has gained a reputation as both a disciplinarian and a modernizer, qualities highlighted during one of the year’s most high-profile celebrity trials.
At 45, Subramanian is one of the youngest judges on the federal bench. During the Diddy trial , his conduct reflected a measured maturity, with reporters describing his approach as “adaptable yet firm.”
Subramanian’s early career followed a traditional elite path, including clerkships with Gerard Lynch of the Southern District of New York, Dennis Jacobs of the Second Circuit, and Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg.
He then joined the litigation firm Susman Godfrey , where he became a partner. His work spanned antitrust cases to civil rights class actions, representing both major corporations and individual plaintiffs.
In the Diddy trial, which involved complex issues of race, sex, celebrity, and violence, Subramanian faced the dual challenge of maintaining jury impartiality amid intense public attention and managing the theatrics of high-profile lawyers while upholding court decorum. Observers noted that he succeeded, not through strict authoritarian control, but by consistently guiding proceedings back to order when tensions escalated.
Before announcing Combs’ sentence, Subramanian highlighted the repeated nature of his offenses and his history of violence toward former partners. He noted that even after Cassie Ventura filed a lawsuit and Combs issued an apology, the rapper continued to act violently toward Jane .
“The court is not assured that if released these crimes would not be committed again,” Subramanian said.
Subramanian said the sentence aims to send a message to survivors of domestic abuse that “violence against women is met with real accountability.”
The judge also thanked Cassie Ventura and “Jane” for their testimony. “You stood up to power,” he said. “The number of people who you reached is incalculable.”
Who is Arun Subramanian?
Arun Subramanian was born in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, to Indian immigrant parents. His parents, Tamil Brahmin engineers who moved to the US in the 1970s, emphasized education and public service. Subramanian earned a bachelor’s degree in computer science from Case Western Reserve University and a law degree from Columbia in 2004.
Appointed by former President Joe Biden in 2023, Subramanian serves as a judge of the US District Court for the Southern District of New York, becoming the first South Asian on the bench. He has gained a reputation as both a disciplinarian and a modernizer, qualities highlighted during one of the year’s most high-profile celebrity trials.
At 45, Subramanian is one of the youngest judges on the federal bench. During the Diddy trial , his conduct reflected a measured maturity, with reporters describing his approach as “adaptable yet firm.”
Subramanian’s early career followed a traditional elite path, including clerkships with Gerard Lynch of the Southern District of New York, Dennis Jacobs of the Second Circuit, and Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg.
He then joined the litigation firm Susman Godfrey , where he became a partner. His work spanned antitrust cases to civil rights class actions, representing both major corporations and individual plaintiffs.
In the Diddy trial, which involved complex issues of race, sex, celebrity, and violence, Subramanian faced the dual challenge of maintaining jury impartiality amid intense public attention and managing the theatrics of high-profile lawyers while upholding court decorum. Observers noted that he succeeded, not through strict authoritarian control, but by consistently guiding proceedings back to order when tensions escalated.
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