Yung Miami Calls Diddy ‘Loving and Supportive’ in Letter to Judge Before Sentencing

Diddy and Yung Miami (Credit: YouTube)

Yung Miami has written a letter to the federal judge in Sean “Diddy” Combs’ criminal case, asking him to sentence the music mogul next month to time served.

Diddy has been jailed at the Metropolitan Detention Center in Brooklyn, New York, since he was arrested in September 2024.

In the document obtained by New York radio station Power 105.1, Yung Miami, born Caresha Brownlee, insists he “belongs at home, with his family.”

The letter to Judge Arun Subramanian begins with the rapper noting that she “cannot speak on or defend anything that may have happened” before she met the Bad Boy Records founder.

Related: Diddy Remains ‘Hopeful’ He’ll Get Trump Pardon

The former City Girls member insists she doesn’t “condone any wrongdoing,” and says the mogul has been “loving” and “supportive” in the four years since they met.

“For three of those years, I was in a public relationship with Sean, and during that time, I witnessed — and came to know — a different person than the one often portrayed,” the letter states. “Behind the scenes, he was loving, genuine, supportive, and always encouraging.”

She says the mogul gave her a platform on the Revolt cable network, which he founded in 2013. “He motivated me, believed in me, and helped me grow both personally and professionally,” the letter says.

Yung Miami still hosts her “Caresha Please” podcast for Revolt.  Although the company cut ties with Diddy in June 2024.

In another part of her two-page letter, Yung Miami describes Diddy taking her to the Met Gala and elevating her profile.

She cites the event as an example that he “made it a priority to open doors for Black people, to make sure we are seen, heard, and valued in spaces where we were historically excluded.”

The rapper insists Diddy is dedicated to his family and calls him “a good man.”

Sean "Diddy" Combs and his mother Janice Combs at the 2022 BET Awards at Microsoft Theater on June 26, 2022 in Los Angeles, CA (Credit: Shutterstock)
Diddy and his mother Janice Combs at the 2022 BET Awards(Credit: Shutterstock)

Others who sent in letters include Diddy’s mother Janice Combs, his children, songwriter and producer Dallas Austin, former BET executive Stephen Hill, and music producer Stevie J.

Janice Combs, 84, admitted her son “has made some terrible mistakes in his life, which I know he recognizes.”

“On December 21, I will be 85 years old,” she wrote. “This separation for the past year while Sean has been incarcerated has been excruciatingly difficult and painful for me and his children. I would like to spend the last few years of my life with my son, Sean.”

A federal jury in Manhattan acquitted Diddy of racketeering and sex trafficking on July 2, but found him guilty on two counts of transportation to engage in prostitution involving his ex-girlfriends Cassie Ventura and a woman using the pseudonym “Jane Doe.”

In this courtroom sketch, Sean "Diddy" Combs reacts after he was convicted of prostitution-related offenses but acquitted of sex trafficking and racketeering charges that could have put him behind bars for life, Wednesday, July 2, 2025, in Manhattan federal court in New York. (Elizabeth Williams/AP)
In this courtroom sketch, Diddy reacts to the verdict on July 2, 2025 (Credit: Elizabeth Williams/AP)

The day of the verdict, the judge denied the mogul’s $1 million bail request after receiving letters from government witnesses, including Diddy’s former chef, saying the mogul is a danger to the community.

Chef Jourdan Cha’Taun Atkinson posted her letter on social media and said she is terrified of Combs and his associates, especially after she spoke out in the Investigation Discovery and HBO Max docuseries The Fall of Diddy.

“There has been a clear pattern of physical, sexual and financial abuse on his part for years. Releasing him now would be unjust,” her letter said.

Judge Subramanian also rejected Diddy’s $50 million post-verdict bail request in August.

Now the “Last Night” performer is fighting for a new trial on the two prostitution-related counts — hoping for an acquittal — and is due in court this Thursday, Sept. 25, for a hearing on the matter.

He is scheduled to be sentenced on those two charges Oct. 3.


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About Anita Bennett

Anita Bennett is the editor and founder of Urban Hollywood 411. She can be reached on Twitter @tvanita.