# Diddy's Path to Freedom May Come Years Earlier Than Official Release Date Suggests Podcast Por  arte de portada

# Diddy's Path to Freedom May Come Years Earlier Than Official Release Date Suggests

# Diddy's Path to Freedom May Come Years Earlier Than Official Release Date Suggests

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Sean Combs, the hip-hop mogul known as Diddy, continues to dominate headlines as his legal battle takes significant turns. According to reporting from early March 2026, his prison release date was moved up to April 25, 2028, about six weeks earlier than his previous release date of June 4, 2028.

However, the situation is far more dynamic than those official numbers suggest. Diddy's legal team recently argued in federal appeals court that his 50-month sentence was overly harsh and based on conduct he was actually acquitted of. The three-judge panel of the 2nd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in Manhattan questioned the severity of his roughly four-year prison term during oral arguments. Federal appeals court judges raised serious concerns about whether the sentence properly considered only his Mann Act conviction, particularly since he was acquitted of sex trafficking and racketeering charges that could have carried a life sentence.

Behind the scenes, Diddy's path to freedom may be moving faster than the official release date indicates. According to exclusive reporting, Diddy was accepted into the Residential Drug Abuse Program, known as RDAP, which is considered crucial for federal inmates. If he successfully completes the 500-hour program, federal law allows up to twelve months to be shaved off his sentence. Additionally, under the First Step Act, federal inmates can earn up to 54 days of good time credit per year. Combined with his time already served since his September 2024 arrest and eligibility for home confinement during the final portion of his sentence, legal experts suggest his actual release could come significantly sooner than April 2028.

Diddy's legal team is pushing for a sentence of just fourteen months, arguing the current term is the most prison time ever given to someone convicted of similar charges with his criminal history. If that appeal succeeds, he could potentially be released immediately since he's already served nineteen months in custody.

Whether through his appeal or through accumulated credits and program participation, observers suggest the music mogul could be free as early as late 2026. The case represents an exceptionally difficult legal matter that raises questions of first impression not only for the appeals court but for the federal judiciary broadly.

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