Sport & Entertainment
USA | Sep 21, 2021

R. Kelly trial nears end, singer’s fate in jurors hands

/ Our Today

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R. Kelly listens as witness “Faith” is cross examined by Deveraux Cannick during Kelly’s sex abuse trial at Brooklyn’s Federal District Court in a courtroom sketch in New York, U.S., September 1, 2021. (Photo: REUTERS/Jane Rosenberg)

NEW YORK (Reuters)

R. Kelly’s sex trafficking trial entered the homestretch on Tuesday (September 21), with the presiding judge forecasting that closing arguments could begin the next day and jurors could soon deliberate the R&B star’s fate.

Kelly, 54, has been on trial in Brooklyn federal court since August 18 on charges he preyed on women and girls he lured into his entourage as far back as the mid-1990s.

The singer, whose full name is Robert Sylvester Kelly and is perhaps best known musically for his 1996 Grammy-winning song I Believe I Can Fly, has pleaded not guilty to charges of racketeering and illegally transporting people for prostitution.

Prosecutors spent 4-1/2 weeks offering testimony from several accusers, including women who claim they were underage when Kelly abused them, and people who worked for the singer.

Witness “Faith” is cross-examined by Deveraux Cannick during R. Kelly’s sex abuse trial at Brooklyn’s Federal District Court in a courtroom sketch in New York, U.S., September 1, 2021. (Photo: REUTERS/Jane Rosenberg)

They have sought to present Kelly as an intemperate predator who used his fame to attract admirers he would later coerce into unwanted sex.

Several witnesses have said Kelly also punished victims for breaking his rigid rules governing such banalities as when to eat or go to the bathroom, or who to look at or speak with.

Four witnesses have testified for Kelly since his defence began on Monday, in an effort to show jurors that the people Kelly employed knew nothing of his alleged abuses.

Two more witnesses may testify on Wednesday (September 21), including a friend of Jerhonda Pace, the first accuser to testify at the trial.

Jane Doe #5 shows on screen letters of apology she was forced to write to R. Kelly, as she testifies during Kelly’s sex abuse trial at Brooklyn’s Federal District Court in New York, U.S., August 24, 2021 in a courtroom sketch. (Photo: REUTERS/Jane Rosenberg)

Kelly is not required or expected to testify. His alleged victims also included the late singer Aaliyah.

U.S. District Judge Ann Donnelly told her courtroom that closing arguments could begin on Wednesday after testimony ends, with jury deliberations beginning as soon as Thursday.

One of Tuesday’s witnesses was Jeff Meeks, who told Kelly’s lawyer Calvin Scholar he never saw women locked in rooms or banging on doors in the approximately 15 years he worked for the singer in several roles, including at his studio.

Federal prosecutor Maria Cruz Melendez countered by trying to show jurors Meeks wasn’t ignorant of Kelly’s conduct, asking if he remembered once telling federal agents he had been “relieved” to see a girl leaving the studio.

Kelly, mother of the witness “Faith”, testifies during R. Kelly’s sex abuse trial at Brooklyn’s Federal District Court in a courtroom sketch in New York, U.S., September 1, 2021. (Photo: REUTERS/Jane Rosenberg)

“I’m not sure,” said Meeks. “I was a lot of things. Relieved is one.”

A former accountant for Kelly also testified for the defense, saying that girls in the singer’s entourage dressed “appropriately,” and that he did not recall Kelly angrily raising his voice in his presence.

Prosecutors also showed jurors an organization chart for Kelly’s management company RSK Enterprises, which was shaped like an octopus with tentacles reaching out to people owed money by the singer, whose tax bill once reached eight-figures.

Though Kelly has been dogged by abuse accusations for nearly two decades, his music career stalled only after scrutiny increased during the #MeToo movement, and after Lifetime aired the documentary Surviving R. Kelly in January 2019.

Kelly has been jailed for more than two years, and also faces sex-related charges in Illinois and Minnesota.

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