After that high-profile federal case that had everybody talking, Diddy ended up being sentenced to four years behind bars back in October. The trial itself stretched over seven weeks and centered around some serious accusations. In the end, the jury found him guilty of transporting sex workers across state lines tied to those so-called “freak-off” parties. But when it came to the heavier charges. sex trafficking and running a criminal enterprise, he wasn’t convicted. Through it all, he dented every accusation thrown his way.
When everything was unfolding, Yung Miami stood ten toes down behind Diddy. Before his sentencing, she actually wrote a letter to the judge speaking on his character.
During a recent sit-down on The Breakfast Club with Charlamagne Tha God, Miami kept it real about her perspective. She said, “I think that the man that I met and that I experienced was changed,” she continued in the interview posted Tuesday (March 24). “I’m not gonna justify some bulls–t or like, support some bulls–t. I felt like the person that I met was changed. It was a different experience, so that’s why I wrote the letter.”
She doubled down on the idea that her experience with him is all she can speak on:
“I can’t speak to nothing that I don’t know of,” Miami added. “I can only speak to the person that I met. And if I met this person that changed my life, that helped me grow, that treated me like a queen, that made me believe [in] myself … I can’t speak on nothing that I never was a part of, that I never knew. I can only judge who I met. I can only judge who I was in a relationship with.”
She went on to admit that riding for Diddy cost her: brand deals, supporters, and a whole lot of public love. But from her point of view, it came down to protecting her peace and figuring out what made sense for her life moving forward.
“You gotta look back and say, like, ‘What makes sense for me right now?’” she explained. “I can love this person, but I can love this person from a distance, or no, I can have a relationship with this person, but maybe I gotta come back to it. Like, maybe I gotta come back around, and I think that this was one of those situations.”
Whether people agree with her or not, Miami’s making it clear: she stood on how she felt then, and she’s still standing on it now.