Diddy embraces chapel work and drug treatment in prison, but phone slip
Diddy embraces chapel work and drug treatment in prison, but phone slip
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Diddy embraces chapel work and drug treatment in prison, but phone slip

🕒︎ 2025-11-11

Copyright WJLA

Diddy embraces chapel work and drug treatment in prison, but phone slip

Sean "Diddy" Combs' prison stent includes chapel work and a drug treatment program -- as well as a disciplinary citation for making an unauthorized phone call. That's according to an exclusive report by CBS News. Citing prison documents, the media outlet reported that Diddy has been working as a chaplain's assistant at the Fort Dix Federal Correctional Institute in New Jersey. Through the position, he reportedly has access to a private office that has air conditioning, with chaplains also bringing in food for religious services that they are allowed to share with him. He works in the chapel library, where he describes the environment as warm, respectful, and rewarding," Combs' publicist, Juda Engelmayer, told CBS News. Diddy is also and enrolled in the Residential Drug Abuse Treatment Program (RDAP) unit, according to CBS News. Mr. Combs ... has taken his rehabilitation process seriously from the start," Engelmayer said, per the media outlet. "He is fully engaged in his work, focused on growth, and committed to positive change." But Diddy also faced disciplinary action at the prison, CBS News noted. He reportedly made an unauthorized phone call just days after he was transferred to Fort Dix -- an infraction that could result in him temporarily losing his phone and commissary privileges. This is a serious offense that shows a disregard for the rules," a source close to the investigation said, per the media outlet. The news comes about a week after TMZ reported that Diddy told his fellow inmates President Donald Trump is going to help him get out of prison. TMZ also previously noted that sources claimed Diddy was telling other inmates he "will take care of them when he's pardoned and set free." A few weeks ago, the White House denied TMZ's report that Trump was "seriously considering granting Diddy a pardon. In an email sent to The National News Desk on October 21, a White House official described it as "fake news." In early October, Diddy was sentenced to 50 months behind bars after he was convicted on two counts of transportation to engage in prostitution. He was acquitted of serious charges, including racketeering and sex trafficking. The 55-year-old former rapper and music mogul was recently relocated to Fort Dix, according to his listing in the federal Bureau of Prisons inmate database. He was moved from the Metropolitan Detention Center in Brooklyn, where he had been held since his arrest in September 2024. Diddy's lawyers previously asked a judge to “strongly recommend” transferring him to the low-security male prison so he could take part in the facility’s drug treatment program. If Trump doesn't end up pardoning Diddy, he is set to remain incarcerated until May 8, 2028. _____________

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