Sean "Diddy" Combs may be behind bars, but some sources who have served time in his unit inside the jail say that won't necessarily stop his alleged perverted ways.
The Bad Boy Entertainment boss is in the 4 North unit of the Metropolitan Detention Center (MDC) in Brooklyn, a dormitory that has around 20 inmates, which has more flexible rules than the general population and diversions for prisoners, including an air hockey table.
An unwanted feature also excites inmates interested in female attention.
"There are bars in one of the rooms on 4 North," Gene Borrello, a former mobster who spent time in the unit, told The Post. "They have little holes. If you lie down, you can look through the holes and talk to the women downstairs and see them."
Given that prosecutors claim that Diddy organised so-called Freak-Offs (orgies in which sex workers engaged in all sorts of carnal activities for the enjoyment of the rap mogul and his henchmen), the question arises as to whether he could put together a clandestine "big-house" version.
"He could if he wanted to," Borrello said.
Another ex-inmate, a gang member who goes by the name G-Lock, told cryptocurrency expert Tiffany Fong when she interviewed him on X that the inmates are not shy either.
"They'll show their tits and play with their asses," he boldly proclaimed.
The women of 4 North, far from the models who accompanied Diddy
Borrello warned that the women of 4 North are below the models, professional strippers and others who claimed to have been recruited by Diddy's team for the alleged Freak-Offs.
"They're disgusting," he said of the women on the third floor. "Most of them are drug addicts."
Diddy has pleaded not guilty to the racketeering and sex trafficking charges and has denied any wrongdoing. Even so, a judge rejected a $50 million bail offer made by his lawyers, although they remain hopeful and the court is considering a bail request.
Before it all fell apart, Diddy's life was full of private chefs, private jets, bedrooms as big as football fields and sycophants at his beck and call.
Today, life in the unit 4 North of the Metropolitan Detention Center in Brooklyn offers much less privacy.
"It can be very boring," said Jeff Nadu, host of the crime history podcast "The Sitdown with Jeff Nadu."
The dormitory is reserved for high-profile criminals like Sam Bankman-Fried, who is currently serving his sentence alongside Diddy, and, before being convicted, R. Kelly, as well as others who need close protection.
One positive piece of news for Diddy is that he has more freedom than inmates in other parts of the jail. "They're not in cells," Fong told The Post, who is a friend and frequent correspondent of Bankman-Fried.
"You imagine them in small cells, but they are actually in a unit set up like a dormitory and designed for high-profile people. That's where the president of Honduras was."
Bankman-Fried described the mold-ridden facility as "depressing". And he added: "It's not designed to force you to reform in some way. It's designed to tear you down."
One ingredient that will be missing from any attempt by Diddy to stage a Freak-Off behind bars is baby oil, of which the feds say they confiscated 1,000 bottles from Diddy's residences, but which is not available at the MDC.
"They used to have it at the police station," Borrello said. "But not anymore."