
Scandal in Diddy Combs's trial: this is what they found in his room after the arrest
During the trial, images taken after his arrest and the contents of his room in New York were displayed
During the federal trial against Sean "Diddy" Combs, dozens of photographs from inside his room at the Park Hyatt Hotel in New York were presented as key evidence. The images, taken by agents after his arrest on September 16, 2024, exposed a series of items that strengthened the accusations against him.
Among the seized items, federal authorities highlighted the presence of drugs, large sums of cash, and intimate use products. The scene captured in the photos painted a disturbing picture for the jury.

Synthetic drugs and cash: the evidence in the spotlight
During the trial, Department of Homeland Security agent Yasin Binda presented a series of items found in the room. Among them, two Ziploc bags inside a prescription bottle. One contained a pink solid that tested positive for ketamine; the other, a mixture of MDMA and ketamine.
Both bags were shown in the courtroom, passed hand to hand among the jury members, at a key moment in Binda's testimony.

The agent also showed a fanny pack seized in the room, which contained $9,000 in cash. This sum, added to the seized substances, was exhibited as part of the narrative of drug use and possession.
Baby oil, clonazepam, and a suspicious alias
Another finding that drew attention was a bottle of clonazepam, a controlled prescription medication. The bottle bore the name "Frank Black," an alias that—according to the testimony of Cassie, Diddy's ex-partner—was used by the artist himself.
This was joined by bottles of Astroglide lubricant and Johnson's baby oil, also found in the room and visibly depicted in the photos incorporated as evidence.

These items, although legal, caused concern due to the context in which they were discovered and the type of private life they suggested to the jury.
The case against Diddy, which began after his arrest in September 2024, continues to accumulate compromising elements. The photographs presented at the trial not only documented the scene but became a high-impact visual resource for the prosecutors.
The defense has not yet issued a detailed public rebuttal regarding the content of the images.
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