The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Georgia officials don’t want R. Kelly performing in Atlanta amid ‘cult’ allegation­s

- By Elahe Izadi

R. KELLY has been under intense scrutiny since an explosive BuzzFeed investigat­ive report about his treatment of women, and now officials in Georgia’s most populous county want Live Nation to cancel his upcoming Atlanta performanc­e there.

The Fulton County Board of Commission­ers on Wednesday directed the county attorney to ask the massive concert organiser to call off the Aug 25 R. Kelly show at the Wolf Creek Amphitheat­re in suburban Atlanta.

“We are writing you to express our grave concern” that Live Nation scheduled the R. Kelly concert, the letter from the county attorney reads. “Based on allegation­s reported in various news media regarding the artistee, the citizens of Fulton County have expressed their collective concerns that Live Nation would allow this artiste to perform at a venue that is supported in part by taxpayers.”

A spokeswoma­n for Live Nation said “the show is proceeding.” (While the county owns the venue, Live Nation has taken over the amphitheat­re’s promotions and operations this year.)

The BuzzFeed story, written last month by veteran music journalist Jim DeRogatis, cites named sources and documents to paint a portrait of the singer using his fame to lure young women and hold them under psychologi­cal control, with one set of parents telling police their daughter is “being held against her will” in what they dubbed a “cult.” Three former members of the singer’s inner circle, DeRogatis writes, “provided details supporting the parents’ worst fears.” All the women in his inner circle, DeRogatis writes, are of the legal age of consent.

According to the story, the young women’s movements and social media access are restricted while in his homes, including one in the Fulton County municipali­ty of Johns Creek.

R. Kelly has denied the allegation­s. His lawyer, Linda Mensch, provided a statement to media last month, stating the singer “unequivoca­lly denies such allegation­s and will work diligently and forcibly to pursue his accusers and clear his name.” When asked for an updated statement this week, she referred to R. Kelly’s publicist, who has not returned The Post’s inquiry. In a video published by

TMZ, one of the young women denied the allegation­s, saying “I’m not being brainwashe­d or anything like that.” Her parents held a press conference, saying they believe she is being “coached” to make such statements.

Petitions to cancel R. Kelly concerts and remove him from radio airplay have come and gone over the years. The Fulton County Board of Commission­ers’s six members unanimousl­y decided to send the letter, Chairman John Eaves told The Post. “When the concert of R. Kelly was announced, it coincided with the recent allegation­s of R. Kelly in our county, and a growing number of constituen­ts began contacting me directly, the chair, sharing their consternat­ion about him performing on Aug 25,” Eaves said. The emails to Eaves and his fellow commission­ers began about a week and half ago. The letter, at the least, is “a serving of notice of sorts to Live Nation now, and letting the public know their local government is concerned, without oversteppi­ng some sort of legal grounds,” given the county’s contract with Live Nation, Eaves added. “It’s just folks who are contacting me because they are concerned, and who are really connected to the issue of sex and human traffickin­g, dehumanisi­ng of women, exploitati­on of women,” Eaves said. “As I hear from my constituen­ts, they also see this narrative. It’s not just like this is a one-shot thing, but there’s a history of this type of conduct and it now has culminated in not only the most recent public allegation­s here in our own backyard, but doggone it, the man is also performing in our county.”

DeRogatis has been covering R. Kelly for two decades. He co-bylined the first major investigat­ive story into R. Kelly in 2000 at the Chicago Sun-Times, writing the singer “used his position of fame and influence as a pop superstar to meet girls as young as 15 and have sex with them, according to court records and interviews.”

R. Kelly would eventually face more than a dozen counts of making child pornograph­y after a video tape was anonymousl­y sent to DeRogatis at the SunTimes. The recording showed R. Kelly having sex, allegedly with an underage girl. Five years later, R. Kelly was found not guilty in a jury trial.

In 1994, a 27-year-old R. Kelly married Aaliyah, who was 15 at the time. The falsified marriage certificat­e, which listed her age as 18, was published by Vibe months after the ceremony. Months later, they annulled the marriage.

Throughout all the allegation­s and controvers­ies, R. Kelly has denied wrongdoing, maintained his formidable fan base and has experience­d major commercial success. In recent years, some of his performanc­es have been cancelled, but he’s managed to avoid being ostracised by the mainstream. He performed

on “The Tonight Show with Jimmy Fallon” in December, and starred in a 2017 Alexander Wang fashion campaign.

Oronike Odeleye, a managing director of an Atlanta arts organisati­on, has been leading some of the calls to remove R. Kelly from Atlanta-area radio stations and cancel his upcoming concert.

“The courts haven’t been able to do anything,” Odeleye told the Atlanta Journal Constituti­on. “It really kind of came to me. If we are going to shut this man down, we’re going to have to take things into our own hands.”

Since the BuzzFeed story, R. Kelly has cancelled four concerts, including ones in Dallas and Baton Rouge (and, according to TMZ, amid sagging ticket sales). A Los Angeles concert was also cancelled, with a source telling TMZ it had to do with a scheduling conflict.

Last week, R. Kelly posted a video on Twitter, saying, “Despite all of the crap y’all hearing, I will be coming to the East Coast to do my show, and believe me, y’all, it’s a bunch of crap.”

According to a Page Six report, his booking agency, Monterey Internatio­nal, was preparing to drop him. An agent at the firm said “no comment” when asked if he represente­d the singer. His artiste page is no longer available on the agency’s website, and he’s not listed in a roster of talent that’s dated July 27. Monterey referred questions to his lawyer (who, again, referred to his publicist). — WP-Bloomberg

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