Despite the ongoing legal issues, Diddy and his family put on a unified front during Mother’s Day weekend with a group meal at Mr. Chow restaurant in Miami

When Diddy and his family went out for dinner at the fancy restaurant Mr. Chow on Saturday night in Miami, they put up a united front.

The 54-year-old Grammy winner, whose name has been in the news due to a federal sex trafficking probe that is still ongoing, looked content and at ease while enjoying a family outing.

On Saturday night, the New York City native was seen driving with five of his seven children: Quincy, 32; Christian, 25; Chance, 17; and the 17-year-old twins, Jessie and D’Lila.

Less than two months separate Diddy, who is also the father of one child, Love Sean, and a thirty-year-old son named Justin, from federal agents raiding his houses in Miami and Los Angeles on March 25.

The musician, who is also being sued on several occasions for alleged sexual assault, has refuted all of the accusations made against him.

The hip-hop mogul was photographed outside the South Florida restaurant wearing an all-black outfit consisting of a shirt, slacks, sneakers, and sunglasses.

Quincy wore black sneakers, patterned leggings, and a black sweatshirt with a white logo on it.

Christian wore black jeans, black sneakers, and a yellow zip-up sweater over a black shirt. He carried a gift bag and wore a necklace.

With her younger sisters Jessie and D’Lila after her, Chance was spotted grinning as she left.

Chance, who went to her prom last month with Chloe and Halle Bailey’s younger brother Branson Bailey, was dressed in a yellow outfit consisting of a skirt, shoes, and a shoulder-less blouse.

The twins wore matching midi dresses made of shimmering silver and black slippers.

The famous family seemed to be in high spirits despite the patriarch’s difficult few months, during which he has been occupied with answering accusations from numerous accusers.

Attorneys for the troubled rapper requested on Friday that a federal judge dismiss a complaint that claimed he and two other defendants had sexually assaulted a 17-year-old girl in a New York recording studio in 2003. They claimed the claim was “false and hideous” and had been submitted after the deadline.