Librería Samer Atenea
Librería Aciertas (Toledo)
Kálamo Books
Librería Perelló (Valencia)
Librería Elías (Asturias)
Donde los libros
Librería Kolima (Madrid)
Librería Proteo (Málaga)
How does a hip-hop king become America’s most notorious criminal defendant?For three decades, Sean 'Diddy' Combs reigned as entertainment royalty-a self-made billionaire who transformed music, launched megastars, and built an empire worth over $1 billion. Behind the luxury yachts and champagne toasts, however, prosecutors allege a darker reality: a criminal enterprise built on coercion, violence, and systematic abuse.The Mogul’s Reckoning delivers an unflinching documentary investigation into the rise and fall of one of music’s most powerful figures. This meticulously researched exposé doesn’t just chronicle a celebrity scandal-it dissects how unchecked power corrupts absolutely, and why the music industry looked the other way for decades. Inside this provocative investigation, you’ll discover:How a Harlem teenager transformed himself into a cultural titan worth billionsThe federal indictment that shocked the world and detailed patterns of alleged sex trafficking and racketeeringVictim testimonies that finally broke decades of silenceThe 'freak offs' and disturbing allegations that emerged from court documentsBad Boy Records’ meteoric rise and the controversies that shadowed its successLegal strategies, witness accounts, and the evidence prosecutors say proves a criminal conspiracyThe industry enablers, complicit insiders, and systemic failures that allowed alleged abuse to continue uncheckedWhat this trial means for accountability in entertainment and beyondDrawing from federal indictments, court filings, investigative journalism, and public testimony, this book examines not just one man’s alleged crimes but the broader cultural reckoning around power, celebrity, and justice. From Harlem to Hollywood, from platinum records to federal prosecution, every chapter reveals how fame became a weapon and wealth became a shield-until the system finally said enough.