Three months ago, Sean Diddy Combs fell to his knees in a Manhattan courtroom after a New York jury acquitted him of charges of sex trafficking and racketeering.

I'm coming home, he said, turning around to face his family, who had supported him every day of the trial.

On Friday, a subdued version of the hip-hop mogul sat emotionless and still in his chair, as the judge sentenced him to over four years in prison.

After Judge Arun Subramanian finished reading his sentence, the rapper turned around to look at his family and appeared to mouth the words: I love you, I'm sorry.

It was a quiet moment to mark the end of a chaotic eight-week trial that forever altered the public's image of Combs - once one of the world's most famous rappers. The jury saw graphic videos of Combs' so-called freak offs - sex parties he had filmed featuring hired male escorts and his ex Cassandra Ventura and Jane, an anonymous victim. They also saw a video, that had previously gone viral, of him beating Ventura in a hotel hallway.

In July, a panel of 12 New Yorkers acquitted Combs, 55, of sex trafficking and racketeering charges - which carried the potential of life in prison - but found him guilty of transportation to engage in prostitution.

His attorneys hoped he would be out of prison in a matter of weeks, asking the court for a sentence of 14 months, 13 of which he had already served.

Prosecutors had accused Combs of running a criminal enterprise to coerce women into unwanted and drug-fuelled sex acts. Although he had been acquitted of those most serious of those charges, sex-trafficking and racketeering, they had asked for a sentence of over 11 years in prison.

Ultimately, Judge Subramanian told a downcast Combs that his crimes and abuse of his ex-girlfriends warranted 50 months in prison.

During the all-day hearing, the court listened to hours of speeches from several of his attorneys, his children, a pastor and a criminal justice reform advocate. They also watched a video compilation from his legal team showing him with his children and during the funeral of his former girlfriend Kim Porter, who died in 2018.

But the court did not hear from the victims themselves, after one person who planned to speak, Mia, a former assistant of Combs who testified anonymously, pulled out.

Subramanian read several of the victims' remarks from testimony, telling Combs: These were serious offences that irreparably harmed two women.

Combs himself addressed the court for the first time since the beginning of his trial.

Breathing a large sigh before standing to read his speech, he pleaded with the judge for mercy.

He broke into tears as he turned around to face his family and tell his mother: I failed you as a son.

The judge noted that while he had taken into account Combs' family ties, he also had to consider the damage caused to his victims. He emphasized, A history of good works can't wash away your record.

As the proceedings concluded, Combs was taken back to a federal jail in Brooklyn, reflecting on a life of fame and the consequences of his actions.