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Suge Knight Thinks if Diddy Is Convicted ‘Trump’s Going to Pardon Him’

Written by on May 30, 2025

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Donald Trump is on a pardon spree and incarcerated former Death Row Records CEO Marion “Suge” Knight thinks Sean “Diddy” Combs could be the next celebrity on the president’s list to snag a get out of jail free card. In a new special edition of Laura Coates Live: Diddy on Trial, CNN chief legal analyst Laura Coates interviewed Knight from prison to get the one-time Combs rival’s take on Diddy’s New York sex trafficking and racketeering trial.

Knight’s name recently came up during testimony in the trial by Combs’ longtime girlfriend, singer Cassie Ventura, who told jurors about a 2008 incident in which Diddy abruptly left one of their “freak-off” sex sessions after learning that Knight was having dinner at a nearby diner in Los Angeles. “I was crying,” she said. “I was screaming, ‘Please don’t do anything stupid,’” she said she told Combs, who reportedly left he house in a black SUV with a security guard and multiple hand guns to seek out Knight, who had already left.

Knight and Combs famously squared off in the so-called East Coast/West Coast rap battles of the mid-1990s that came to a head with the still-unsolved murders of Death Row’s Tupac Shakur in 1996 and Bad Boys’ Notorious B.I.G in 1997.

Now, though, Knight is speaking out from federal prison in San Diego and he appears to have softened his stance on his one-time sworn enemy. “I mean, anytime somebody is fighting for their life and they have kids, you still got to show some type of, you know, sympathy for them. He might have allegedly did a lot of things but I don’t want to see the children locked up, you know, because when a man in prison or a woman is in prison, so is their family, you know,” said Knight of Combs, a father of seven.

Knight also said he was not surprised to hear about the over-the-top, drug-fueled sex parties at the center of the Combs case, saying that when he signed artists to Death Row it was all “weed, weed, weed, weed,” which turned to “doing powder cocaine” when those acts graduated to major labels. “Once you open that door up and play with the devil, you’re going to become the devil. So that’s when a lot of the problems came in. I’m quite sure for puffy and everyone else,” Knight said.

And while Knight managed to work in on one of his long-held complaints about how camera-loving Combs conducted his business as a label boss at Bad Boy — “I believe that as an executive or a record label owner, you supposed to make them the star. Once you start trying to be the star, that’s when the problem come in” — in the end he thinks his one-time enemy will walk free.

“I don’t feel that the prosecution wanted that bad, because a lot of stuff they had on him, they left out. It don’t seem like they really coming down hard at them,” Knight said about his opinion of the prosecution’s laying out of their case so far. “If he get convicted — if Puffy get convicted, Trump’s going to pardon him,” Knight predicted. “Trump is a president that stands up and do what he wants to do, and he’s going to do what he feels is best. So Puffy has nothing to worry about.”

Trump has been on an unusual pardon spree lately, springing convicted felons and fellow former reality TV stars Todd and Julie Chrisley this week, in addition to rapper NBA YoungBoy, after earlier including Lil Wayne and Kodak Black in a massive 143 pardon/commutation spree at the end of his first presidential term. To date, Trump — who in May 2024 became the first U.S. president to be convicted of a felony — has not publicly commented on the Combs trial to date.

Coates also asked Knight the billion-dollar question everyone is asking: will, or should, Combs testify in his own defense? “He probably was advised not to, but I feel if he do tell his truth, he really will walk,” said Knight. “He can humanize his own self and a jury might give him a shot. But if they keep him sitting down, it’s like he’s scared to face the music. He just have his faith in God, pull up his pants and go up there and tell his truth.”

Testimony in Combs’ trial continued on Friday (May 30) with the jury hearing from a former personal assistant (referred to by the pseudonym “Mia”), who said that she suffers from “severe complex PTSD” as a result of working for Diddy.

Watch some of Knight’s interview below.

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