TBS
Actualizado 04/11/2024 - 11:27 CST
Sean Diddy Combs will not be given any special food privileges whilst behind bars on his birthday as he turns 55 whilst awaiting trial for human trafficking and racketeering charges, as well as facing over 100 allegations of sexual, emotional and physical abuse.
The music executive was detained by the United States Department of Homeland Security in September on charges which also include sex trafficking and transportation to engage in prostitution, and will go on trial in January.
And whilst he currently professes his innocence and denies the allegations, he has been denied bond three times and thus will remain behind bars at the Brooklyn Metropolitan Detention Center in New York, where he will turn 55.
So on his birthday, he will not get any extra kindness from the guards and the warden, not even in the form of being allowed to have his favorite food.
The Federal Bureau of Prisons' national menu says he will be able to eat fruit, oatmeal, whole wheat bread, biscuits, "oven brown potatoes" and spreads like jelly and margarine to break his fast. Hardly anything spectacular.
And whilst there is a kind of "breakfast cake", it is not specifically for his birthday. He will not even be allowed coffee, which is only served at the weekend, nor will he be allowed pancakes or French toast.
Although lunch seems pretty decent, with the 55-year-old being allowed to eat Southwest chicken wraps, chicken tacos, cheese pizza or three-bean chili on the Monday menu, as well as some sides such as rice and salsa.
Then for dinner, at 16:00, he will have access to turkey roast, rice, green peas, gravy, whole wheat bread and beverage, and chicken or tofu fried rice, black beans, carrots and whole wheat bread - but no desert.
Combs struggling with food menu
With a net worth reported to be somewhere in the region of $600,000,000, it's quite a drastic change from the rich life to suddenly only be permitted to eat items such as bread or oatmeals foods.
And whilst Diddy can get some delicacies such as Nutella or Snickers, they must come out of his own pocket through his commissary account. So his attorney revealed the disgraced music mogul is struggling with the menu.
"I think the food's probably the roughest part of it," Marc Agnifilo told reporters before a Manhattan courthouse.