BBC News in court in New York
Twelve New York gamblers gathered the scene in a wooden pan-court room on Wednesday about “Didi” Comombs around 10:00 (14:00 GMT) that they did not find them guilty of running a criminal enterprise with employees, and smuggling their east-gerpers.
The humiliated hip-hop Mogul fell on his knees and buried his head on a chair on the defense table, where he spent only two months on a test for sex trafficking and racketing.
Before coming down the verdict, Combes quietly sat on his chair, looking forward, wearing the same off-white sweaters and pants he wore for his test.
The court calmed down as the Jury Forcerson handed over the chadar of the verdict to the deputy of the court. It was then handed back to Forcerson.
And they started reading.
The voice of “not guilty” came out in court for the first time, acquitting the comments of the most serious crime of racketering, the rapper kept his head low.
Until the Forcerson announced that Combes were not guilty of sex trafficking, Comombs had put his head in his hands.
The jury found people guilty on at least serious allegations of transportation to engage in prostitution. As he confirmed his decision, Combes buried his face in his hands.
A furious of small ceremonies for Comombs, which has been in a federal prison in Brooklyn since September. He indicated a prayer with the jury with his hands, then turned and made the same gesture to his family-the turtle daughters, sons and 85-year-old mother.
He appeared in the mouth: “I’m coming home.”
This moment looked equally emotional for many lawyers of Combes, including Ten Garagos, sitting next to them and wiped tears with a tissue after the decision.
The lawyers of Comombs did not waste any time to tell the judge that the decision reached after two days of deliberations, which means that Combes should be able to move out of an independent person from the Manhattan Courthouse.
His acquittal in the most serious allegations meant that he no longer needed to go to jail, his lawyer Mark Agnifilo told the court, seeing that his client’s plane was inaccessible – in Chartered and Mau.
“Mr. Comombs is given his life by this jury,” he said. “He will not run anything to impose this court on it.”
Then, for the Comombs, probably in the most emotional gesture of the day, he appeared to express his gratitude by pressing his head on his chair on the defense table.
He got up, clapping his hands loudly, hugging many of his lawyers. Many family members and supporters in the main court and joined a packed overflow room, cheering.
Then, a final hug for your lawyer and a wave for your family – a mass of people and blocked by court benches – he was thrown out of the court.
Hip-hop Mogul’s hopes of homecoming were later collapsed as Judge Arun Subramanian refused to bail him in another hearing on Wednesday afternoon.
Outside the Manhattan court, repeated calls of “free didi” were made in a large crowd behind obstacles.
But he will be behind bars by the end of this year.