Yung Miami Defends Diddy In Court Letter Calling Him “A Good Man” Ahead Of Sentencing

Sean "Diddy" Combs and Yung Miami

Yung Miami described Diddy as “a man of God” in a letter to the court, and pleaded with the judge to see the person she knew.

Yung Miami vouched for Sean “Diddy” Combs in a character reference letter submitted ahead of his sentencing, describing the embattled music mogul as “loving” and “supportive” while urging the judge to see the man she personally knew—not the headlines.

Writing under her legal name, Caresha Brownlee, the former City Girls rapper told the court she could not speak on past allegations against Diddy but wanted to share her personal experience from their three-year relationship.

I want to be clear that I cannot speak on or defend anything that may have happened before I met Sean Combs,” she wrote in the letter, which was published by The Shade Room, adding, ” I do not condone any wrongdoing. I can only speak from my personal experience and the man I’ve come to know over the past four years.”

The letter, filed Monday (September 22), also highlighted Diddy’s charitable side. Miami recalled the two feeding the homeless together on Thanksgiving in 2022 and said he often gave back privately.

She also pointed to his efforts to improve himself, writing, “He made the choice to check himself into anger management, start therapy, and commit to physical healing… He didn’t do it for show—he did it because he wanted to grow and to become a better person.”

Miami closed her letter with a direct appeal to the judge: “In my personal experience, Sean is not a danger or a threat to the community. He is a man of God, someone who uplifts, supports, and inspires those around him… But more than anything, he’s a father and his kids are the ones who look up to him the most. They need him.”

She ended with a simple plea: “Judge… That’s a good man.”

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Yung Miami Claims She Never Witnessed Diddy Abuse

Yung Miami has previously stated she never experienced abuse during her relationship with Diddy. “I can’t speak on something that wasn’t my experience,” she said last August. “I can’t speak on something I don’t know…that wasn’t my experience.”

Diddy is set to be sentenced on October 3 after being convicted of two federal charges related to transporting individuals for prostitution. The charges carry a maximum of 20 years in prison.

His legal team is requesting 14 months in prison followed by supervised release. Federal prosecutors are expected to recommend a sentence between 51 and 63 months. They must submit their recommendation by September 29.