R. Kelly Is Going On Trial For His “Sex Cult” This Week. Update (9/27) Guilty on all charges

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R. Kelly Trial Opens With an Accuser’s Searing Testimony
R. Kelly Trial Opens With an Accuser’s Searing Testimony

Aug. 18, 2021Updated 7:22 p.m. ET
A woman said Mr. Kelly sexually and physically abused her when she was 16 — the first time one the R&B star’s several accusers has ever taken the stand in a criminal case.

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R. Kelly, who is accused of harming women and girls through a mixture of sexual, physical and psychological abuse, is facing his first criminal trial since 2008.Kamil Krzaczynski/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images
When Jerhonda Pace first met R. Kelly, she was 16 years old and excited to be in the presence of someone she idolized, she said. But over the next six months, she testified in a Brooklyn courtroom on Wednesday, Mr. Kelly had sex with her while she was underage and physically and emotionally abused her.

After more than two decades of accusations, Ms. Pace, now 28, was the first of Mr. Kelly’s accusers to ever testify against the R&B star, whose long-awaited criminal trial began on Wednesday.

The singer, whose real name is Robert Sylvester Kelly, used his fame and musical talent to enable a sinister pattern of behavior, prosecutors said. Ms. Pace’s account offered an initial glimpse into the system of sexual and physical abusethat the once-prolific entertainer is accused of commanding for more than two decades.

As she testified, Ms. Pace described being forced to abide by rigid restrictions — what she called “Rob’s rules” — whenever she would visit Mr. Kelly’s home. She was forced to call him “Daddy,” she said, and acknowledge him whenever he entered a room.

But in one instance, she failed to do so.

“That’s when he slapped me and choked me until I passed out,” she said, recalling collapsing to the floor of Mr. Kelly’s Chicago-area home. “I remember him just putting his hand around my neck.”

She added: “He spit in my face and told me to put my head down in shame,” before Mr. Kelly forced her to perform a sex act on him.

The R&B singer’s appearance on Wednesday marked only the second time his fate will be decided by a panel of jurors in criminal court. The trial has been highly anticipated since Mr. Kelly’s sexual conduct came under fresh scrutiny during the height of the #MeToo movement.

Mr. Kelly has staunchly denied all of the accusations against him, and his lawyers on Wednesday described Ms. Pace and his other accusers as miffed fans and groupies seeking to capitalize on his fame.

The sweeping nine-count indictment he faces on charges of racketeering and violations of the Mann Act, an interstate anti-prostitution law, is centered on Mr. Kelly’s interactions with six women and girls, including Ms. Pace.

The other five women involved in the case include the singer Aaliyah, who died in a 2001 plane crash and whose brief marriage to Mr. Kelly at 15 years old was among the first revelations to fuel questions over his conduct, and four women referred to only by their first names or by pseudonyms at the trial.

“This case is about a predator,” Maria Cruz Melendez, an assistant U.S. attorney, told the jury during an opening statement. Mr. Kelly, she said, was a star whose public persona allowed him to use “his fame, his popularity and a network of people at his disposal to target, groom and exploit young girls, boys and women for his own sexual gratification.”

In her opening arguments, Ms. Cruz Melendez cast Mr. Kelly, 54, as a serial manipulator who used the access granted by his fame to prey on his fans. She said that he and his inner circle “used every trick in the predator handbook” to present himself as a mentor to girls and their families.

But once they entered into relationships with him, she said, they were often forced to abide by strict rules: being forced to receive his permission to use the bathroom; having sex with whomever he wanted, whenever he decided; demanding what Ms. Cruz Melendez called “absolute obedience.”

“He began collecting girls and women as if they were things,” she said, “hoarding them like objects that he could use however he liked.”

But over more than two and a half hours, Mr. Kelly’s defense team spun through a prolonged cascade of issues in the case that they said cast doubt on the entire base of accusations.

Those included arguments that his accusers had willingly traveled to see him and “knew what they were getting into”; that some became spiteful after their relationships turned tense and sought “revenge”; and that the racketeering charge against Mr. Kelly did not hold up because his music career was interrupted by a foray in professional basketball.

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The lawyer Gloria Allred, left, and Jonjelyn Savage, the mother of Mr. Kelly’s former girlfriend Jocelyn Savage, arrived at Mr. Kelly’s trial in Brooklyn on Wednesday.Eduardo Munoz/Reuters
Nicole Blank Becker, one of Mr. Kelly’s four lawyers, focused on the credibility and motivations of his accusers. She described them as once-enamored fans who each developed an “agenda” when faced with the prospect of media attention and financial gain.

“We believe their testimony will crumble,” Ms. Blank Becker told jurors. “There will be so many untruths told to you, ladies and gentlemen, that even the government won’t be able to untangle the mess of lies.”

As she took the stand on Wednesday, Ms. Pace, who was featured in the Lifetime documentary “Surviving R. Kelly,” described first meeting the R&B artist around the time of his first criminal trial in 2008. In that case, Mr. Kelly was acquitted of child pornography charges after the girl at the center of the case declined to testify.

Ms. Pace initially told him she was 19. But after Mr. Kelly performed a sex act on her one day in 2009, she revealed her age. “I felt uncomfortable,” she said.

But, she added, Mr. Kelly did not appear to care. “He asked me, ‘What is that supposed to mean?’ and told me to tell everyone I was 19 — and to act 21,” she said. :gucci:

When Ms. Pace told him that she was a virgin, “He said, ‘That’s good,’” she recalled, adding that he told her he would “train” her on how to sexually please him. The two had sexual intercourse, she said, and “he took my virginity.” :mindblown:

Mr. Kelly’s defense team described Ms. Pace, referred to as Jane Doe No. 4 in court documents, as a “superfan” and a “groupie” who was consumed by her obsession with the singer.

His trial follows several similar high-profile cases over accusations of sexual assault, including the trials of the Hollywood producer Harvey Weinstein and the comedian and actor Bill Cosby.

But the case also stands apart. In Mr. Weinstein’s case, which touched off a national reckoning around sexual abuse, many of the women who came forward were actresses and models, and they were mostly white — as were many of those at the center of accusations in the most prominent cases across business, politics, media and entertainment.

The majority of Mr. Kelly’s accusers are Black women.

“I do think it matters a lot — that this is the first high-profile MeToo-era trial where the accusers, for the most part, aren’t white women,” said Deborah Tuerkheimer, a professor of law at Northwestern University and former assistant district attorney in Manhattan.

“If you take these kinds of accusers who have traditionally been most dismissed, most disregarded, most cast aside — and those women are able to be believed and have jurors care enough to convict, that matters,” Ms. Tuerkheimer said. “And that would send a powerful message.”

Nicole Blank Becker, a lawyer for Mr. Kelly, said during her opening statement that she expected the evidence against the singer to “crumble.”Angela Weiss/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images
Ms. Pace is one of the six women at the center of the racketeering case against the entertainer. The defense cast doubt on whether the charge — which Ms. Blank Becker noted has been previously used to pursue Mafia bosses — would apply to Mr. Kelly’s case.

“The evidence will show that this is uncharted territory,” Ms. Blank Becker said.

Still, the charge allows prosecutors to introduce acts from any relevant time period, including Mr. Kelly’s brief marriage to Aaliyah in 1994. :ohhh:

During her opening statement, Ms. Cruz Melendez portrayed their union as a last-resort effort by Mr. Kelly to avoid legal prosecution, after one of his associates warned him on a tour that Aaliyah believed she might have been pregnant. :ohhh:

“This was, of course, a huge problem for him,” Ms. Cruz Melendez said. “If she was pregnant that meant there would be questions: At the very top of that list of questions — who is the father of that baby?”

He flew to Chicago and “got to work,” she said. His associates bribed a government employee in Illinois to obtain a fake ID for her, and in a hotel suite, he married her, Ms. Cruz Melendez said. Then, she said, he caught a flight and returned to finish his tour.

Another woman at the center of the case, referred to only as Zel, met Mr. Kelly at one of his concerts when she was 17, Ms. Cruz Melendez said. Mr. Kelly was 48.

She hoped to build a relationship with him to boost her career, Ms. Cruz Melendez said. But upon meeting him at a hotel, Mr. Kelly told her that “he needed to relieve himself” — and pressured her to have sex, Ms. Cruz Melendez said.

Mr. Kelly, she said, told the girl that he would “take care of her for the rest of her life” and vault her to becoming “the next Aaliyah.” She had sex with him, and contracted herpes — a disease that prosecutors say Mr. Kelly knowingly transmitted. :damn:

If he is convicted, Mr. Kelly could spend between 10 years and the rest of his life in prison.
 
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‘He took my virginity’: First witness in R. Kelly trial confronts singer and testifies she had sex with him at 16 after they met at Cook County courthouse

‘He took my virginity’: First witness in R. Kelly trial confronts singer and testifies she had sex with him at 16 after they met at Cook County courthouse
By Megan Crepeau and Jason Meisner
Chicago Tribune |

Aug 18, 2021 at 7:31 PM

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Singer Robert Kelly, known as R. Kelly, has been accused of various instances of sexual misconduct over the last 15 years.

(Abel Uribe / Chicago Tribune)
NEW YORK — Half her lifetime ago, Jerhonda Johnson Pace was a teenage R. Kelly superfan, a member of his MySpace fan club, so devoted that she went to the Cook County Criminal Courthouse in 2008 to show support during the singer’s first criminal case.

She would walk up next to him as he went in and out of court, she said Wednesday. She vied for glimpses of him near the spot where his tour bus would park. And he noticed her, thanked her for her support, and once wished her a happy early birthday. She was about to turn 15.

This week, 13 years later and 800 miles away, Pace faced Kelly at another courthouse. This time, as the first witness against him in a federal racketeering case that could see him locked up for life.

Kelly and Pace had sexual contact beginning in 2009 when Pace was just 16, she said under oath from the Brooklyn federal courthouse.

She had told him she was 19, but after their first sexual contact she felt uncomfortable and showed him her state ID card proving her true age.

“He asked me, what is that supposed to mean?” Pace, now 28, recalled from the stand. “He told me to continue telling people I was 19, and act like I was 21.”


So began, in Pace’s telling, six months of repeated sexual contact with the much older R&B star, and escalating instances of physical abuse and control.

Prosecutors allege it was part of a decadeslong operation that leveraged Kelly’s outsize fame to target young victims, groom them, abuse them, and manipulate or blackmail them to keep them under his control. He faces a racketeering charge more commonly used against mob bosses, drug cartels and the like.

“He began collecting girls and women like they were things, hoarding them like objects,” Assistant U.S. Attorney Maria Cruz Melendez said in opening statements Wednesday.

Pace’s testimony, as well as opening statements by both sides earlier in the day, placed many of the events alleged in the indictment squarely in Chicago, where Kelly got his start busking at “L” stations three decades ago.

In outlining their evidence for the jury Wednesday morning, prosecutors described the hotel in suburban Rosemont where Kelly married underage Aaliyah in the 1990s, the old Rock ‘n’ Roll McDonald’s in River North where he allegedly tried to pick up a teenager, and the studio on Chicago’s West Side that was the site of many of his alleged abuses.

Pace’s story is, by now, familiar, having been recounted in myriad media outlets since she went public with her allegations in 2017. And it combines many of the hallmarks of Kelly’s alleged criminal enterprise: sex with a minor, some of it videotaped; the strict “rules” he made his partners follow; isolation from friends and family; physical abuse; and finally, a hefty settlement payout in exchange for the accuser’s silence.

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Reporters and spectators wait in line outside the federal courthouse in Brooklyn for opening statements on Aug. 18, 2021, in R&B star R. Kelly's long-anticipated federal trial in New York arising from years of allegations that he sexually abused women and girls. (Mary Altaffer / AP/AP)

That makes Pace a compelling choice for prosecutors’ first witness; but in opening statements, the defense told jurors that such consistent patterns are in fact signs that the witnesses are unreliable — making it up because they know the accusations get good play in the media.

“All of their stories, all of their explanations, they’re all going to sound kind of similar,” Kelly attorney Nicole Blank Becker said during her opening, which stretched on for more than two hours. “Using those buzzwords like, ‘I couldn’t eat, it was a cult,’ they’re amazing in the media … that is audience-grabbing.”

Prosecutors on Wednesday previewed evidence about six alleged victims, referred to mostly by their first names or nicknames. Aaliyah, the now-deceased R&B ingenue whom Kelly allegedly married because she thought she was pregnant at just 15, is at the center of an accusation that an associate of Kelly bribed an official to get a phony ID showing she was 18.

Stephanie met Kelly at the Rock ‘n’ Roll McDonalds when she was a teenager; a year later, when she was 17, he had sex with her over the course of six to eight months, and Kelly filmed the encounters, making child pornography, Melendez said.

Sonja was a 22-year-old radio intern near Salt Lake City who flew to Chicago in hopes of an interview; instead she was confined to a room in Kelly’s studio for three days straight, then fell “immediately” asleep after drinking a warm Coke his associate handed her, Melendez said. She woke up with her underwear off, and saw Kelly in the corner doing up his pants, Melendez said.

“Zel” — known to be Azriel Clary — traveled with Kelly for five years, during which he “physically, sexually and psychologically abused her,” Melendez said, saying Kelly would sometimes violently beat her on a daily basis and make her have sex with strangers as “punishment.”

And Faith contracted herpes after having sex with Kelly
, Melendez said, and when she sued him he threatened to release compromising photos and video of her if she didn’t drop the lawsuit.

Throughout the proceedings, Kelly, 54, sat silently at the defense table, stone-faced except for an occasional, barely perceptible frown.

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R. Kelly's attorney Nicole Becker is surrounded by reporters as she arrives at the Brooklyn federal court for opening statements in the R&B star's long-anticipated federal trial on Aug. 18, 2021, in New York. (Mary Altaffer / AP/AP)

The overflow room for the press was crammed with reporters, who watched the livestreamed proceedings on television monitors. Across the hall was a similar room for spectators, including family members of Joycelyn Savage, who have long alleged Kelly abused their daughter and held her under his control.

Jonjelyn Savage, Joycelyn’s mother, told the Tribune after the proceedings she thought Pace “made a good witness.” The testimony Wednesday was not difficult for her to watch, she said. She has been researching the allegations against Kelly for five years, Savage said, and so she was quite familiar with Pace’s story.

Pace, now 28, married and expecting her fifth child, recounted on Wednesday the first time she and Kelly had sex: in the “game room” at his mansion in suburban Olympia Fields.

After he found out she was only 16, he told her he would “train” her on how to please him, Pace said.

“He took my virginity,” she said, in matter-of-fact terms
.

After that first encounter, she said, Kelly made her a blue drink he called a “Sex in the Kitchen” — a reference to one of Kelly’s popular songs. “It was delicious and then I started to feel a bit ill.” She recuperated in a bedroom for a while, and then someone in Kelly’s entourage gave her $50 and told her someone would take her to the train.

Pace said she did not recall how many times they were together in Olympia Fields, but it was always at his bidding, and when she was there she had to follow his “rules.”

At a certain point he took her phone away — letting her retrieve the memory card only after she said it had pictures of her dead niece on it. He gave her money for a new phone, and instituted a “rule” that she could not see a friend of hers who was also in his mansion in Chicago’s south suburbs.

“We were not able to leave out the rooms, whatever area we were in we could not leave out to meet up … It was part of the rules. Rob’s rules,” Pace testified.

She had to wear baggy clothes around him, had to call him “Daddy,” stand up and kiss him or look at him whenever he entered a room, and when she disagreed with him she got a slap in the face or worse, she said. He would record them having sex and watch the tape with her afterward, to critique her performance, she said. Ultimately, she contracted herpes, she said.

When prosecutors asked her if she remembered her last day in the Olympia Fields home, her voice grew quiet. “Yes. I do.”

It was January 2010, and she was preoccupied with texting her friend, so she did not notice Kelly entering the room, she testified.

When she did not acknowledge him, he grew angry, and he didn’t believe her when she said she was texting a friend, she said.

“That’s when he slapped me and choked me until I passed out,” she testified. When she came to, he spit on her face and directed her to give him oral sex, she testified.

Pace is expected to take the stand again for much of Thursday for more questioning from prosecutors. The defense has not yet had a chance to cross-examine her, but in opening statements, Becker reserved some of her harshest criticism for Pace, saying her story is a “snowball” of lies that keeps getting bigger.

“I can’t even count as high as the number of untruths, stories you’re going to hear from (Pace) on that stand,” she said. “The proverbial word ‘groupie’ is an understatement, you’ll see, when it comes to (her) … She’s going to claim she had this magnificent relationship with Mr. Kelly — until it was time to write a book.”

Becker’s opening statement, which ran for more than two hours, was so long that Judge Ann M. Donnelly recessed for lunch in the middle of it. Overall, it pointed to an argument that prosecutors overreached in charging him with racketeering, and Kelly is the victim of scorned women who want to make a name for themselves by accusing him.

“There will be so many untruths told to you that even the government will not be able to untangle the web of lies,” she said. “… (witnesses will) tell you all these negative things, they’re going to form a picture that basically Mr. Kelly is this monster.”

“Some of these relationships that Mr. Kelly had were beautiful,” she said. And many of the “rules” that prosecutors alleged Kelly forced his accusers to follow have benign explanations, she said.

The women wore baggy clothes because they didn’t want to attract harassment at Kelly’s concerts, and they urinated in cups not because they were denied permission to use the bathroom but because they were often on long tour trips in a van without a restroom, Becker said.

“Pee in a cup? Yeah, you might hear that,” she said. “It’s not illegal, ladies and gentlemen.”

At great length, she defended the use of the word “Daddy.”

“‘Daddy’ has now become equivalent to the worst word you could ever think of. ‘Daddy.’ Nobody was complaining about having sexual relationships with Mr. Kelly, but now you’ll hear a word from that stand (that) is a common word in sexual relationships and even not sexual relationships,” she said. “It’s a common, nice way of referring to someone, and that word is going to get slung in the mud.”

A few times, Becker praised Kelly’s mental acuity, his work ethic, his adoring fans and his beautiful music — until she had to stop when prosecutors objected or Donnelly called for a sidebar.

And repeatedly, she referred to the witnesses as “girls” before correcting herself to “women,” a fraught mistake in a trial that involves repeated allegations of sex with minors.

Megan Crepeau reported from New York and Jason Meisner from Chicago.

mcrepeau@chicagotribune.com

jmeisner@chicagotribune.com


Megan Crepeau is the Tribune's Cook County criminal courts reporter, covering trials, policy and legal affairs from her post at one of the nation's busiest courthouses.

Jason Meisner has covered the federal courts beat since 2013, writing about political corruption, terrorism and gang racketeering. In 2018, he was part of the Tribune's award-winning team covering the historic murder trial of Chicago police Officer Jason Van Dyke.
 

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Ms. Pace initially told him she was 19. But after Mr. Kelly performed a sex act on her one day in 2009, she revealed her age. “I felt uncomfortable,” she said.

But, she added, Mr. Kelly did not appear to care. “He asked me, ‘What is that supposed to mean?’ and told me to tell everyone I was 19 — and to act 21,” she said. :gucci:

When Ms. Pace told him that she was a virgin, “He said, ‘That’s good,’” she recalled, adding that he told her he would “train” her on how to sexually please him. The two had sexual intercourse, she said, and “he took my virginity.” :mindblown:
Ms. Pace Aka Ms. Fake ID:umad:
 
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