Despite being locked up in the 4 North unit of the Metropolitan Detention Center (MDC) in Brooklyn, Sean Combs, AKA Diddy, apparently still has contact with women. According to two ex-convicts who have spent time in the jail, the low-security dorm facility has one feature that allows Diddy to feed his alleged deviant proclivities.
“There are grates in one of the rooms of 4 North,” Gene Borrello, a former mob enforcer who spent time in the Brooklyn jail, told the New York Post. “They have little holes. If you lay down, you can look through the holes and talk to the women one floor down and see them.”
When asked if this might allow Diddy to carry on with some form of his infamous “Freak Off” parties while in jail, Borrello replied, “He could if he wanted.”
Then again, would he really want to? Borello thinks it might be unlikely.
They’re gross,” he said about the women he has seen inside the jail. “Most of them are drug addicts.”
Plus, baby oil is not available for inmates to purchase inside the prison.
“They used to have it in the commissary,” said Borrello. “But no more.”
In an interview with cryptocurrency insider Tiffany Fong, another former MDC inmate who goes by the name G-Lock, told her that the female prisoners there will often “show their t— and play with their c——-.”
When he isn’t talking to or watching the female prisoners on the floor below him, Diddy, and his fellow inmate there, Sam Bankman-Fried, have the opportunity to play air hockey, board games, card games, ping-pong, or visit the gym. They also aren’t confined to cells.
“You envision them in small cells but they are actually in a unit that is set up like a dorm and designed for high-profile individuals,” said Fong. “The President of Honduras was there.” So was R. Kelly.
Also, according to Borello, “With the right cop, you can spend all night watching television.”
Fong added that prisoners like Diddy also “have access to tablets that are not connected to the internet. They can watch movies and play video games and listen to music. Apparently, there are books, but those are limited.”