Suge Knight Offers Diddy Tips About Being In Jail

Marion Suge Knight (L), with attorney Albert DeBlanc, pleads no contest to voluntary manslaughter in Los Angeles Superior Court on Thursday, September 20, 2018. The plea deal calls for Knight, 53, to serve 28 years in state prison. – Former rap mogul Marion “Suge” Knight pleaded no contest to voluntary manslaughter on Thursday and will serve 28 years in prison for running over and killing a man three years ago. Knight’s plea, which was unveiled in a Los Angeles courtroom, came just days before he was to stand trial for the death of 55-year-old Terry Carter, who was run down outside an LA restaurant in 2015 following a dispute over the movie “Straight Outta Compton.” (Photo by Gary Coronado / POOL / AFP) (Photo credit should read GARY CORONADO/AFP via Getty Images)

Suge Knight is offering Sean ‘Diddy’ Combs tips on surviving prison.

Earlier this week news broke that music mogul, Diddy, was arrested after a federal indictment. Following the news of Diddy’s new residency at Brooklyn’s Metropolitan Detention Center, Suge Knight sent him warnings and sage advice.

On Knight’s latest episode of his Collect Call with Suge Knight podcast, the Death Row Records co-founder shares his thoughts on Diddy’s sex trafficking case.

Knight, currently incarcerated, claims to possess “secrets” that could jeopardize Combs’ standing even further amidst these troubling allegations.

“I’ll tell you what Puffy, your life is in danger ’cause you know the secrets of who’s involved in that little secret room you guys are participating in.”

“When you go to prison, either you gonna be standing up p*ssing or squatting, sitting down p*ssing,” Knight added. “I advise you to try and take the first one.”

In the same audio clip, he suggested that Diddy changed his name while being incarcerated. “By the way, do not do your time going by ‘Brotha Love’. Brotha Love is not a good code name for prison.”

This isn’t the first time the West Coast executive has been vocal about Diddy’s controversies. In the TMZ documentary The Downfall of Diddy , Knight expressed how the scandals were a ‘bad day for hip hop’.

“The first thing that came to my mind was he had a son… he had his daughters. My first reaction was about the kids,” Knight told TMZ. 

“I feel it’s a bad day for hip hop. It’s a bad day for the culture… because it makes us all look bad.

“I’m not the type of guy to cheer for people’s downfall,” he said – adding that he’s not going to “pop champagne bottles” if someone gets killed. 

“If I have a problem with Puffy, that’s for him and I to sit down in a room and resolve it.”

Knight is currently serving 28 years in prison for voluntary manslaughter after a deadly hit-and-run in 2015, per The Guardian.