Dayton Daily News

R. Kelly avoids lengthy add-on to earlier 30-year prison sentence

- By Michael Tarm and Claire Savage

A federal judge on Thursday rejected a call from prosecutor­s to keep R. Kelly behind bars until he is 100, instead telling the Grammy Award-winning R&B singer he would serve all but one of his 20 years on child sex conviction­s simultaneo­usly with a previous sentence.

Handed down in a courtroom in Kelly’s hometown of Chicago, the sentence means Kelly could make it out of prison alive, when he is about 80. Prosecutor­s had asked Judge Harry Leinenwebe­r to sentence him to 25 years — and to not let him begin serving those until after he completed the first 30-year sentence, imposed on him last year in New York for federal racketeeri­ng and sex traffickin­g conviction­s.

“The nature of this offense is … horrific,” Leinenwebe­r said in explaining the 20-year sentence. He noted that Kelly’s sexual abuse victims would suffer from his crimes for the rest of their lives.

At the same time, he accepted defense arguments that Kelly might not even make it to 80, so handing him a consecutiv­e lengthy sentence, rather than allowing him to serve all but one year of it simultaneo­usly, didn’t make much sense.

“He has a life expectancy of not a hell of a lot more,” the judge said. “He is 56 years of age.”

Kelly’s defense lawyer celebrated the ruling as a victory, and some of the singer’s fans could be heard cheering outside the courtroom.

Kelly remained still, his eyes downcast, as Leinenwebe­r explained what was at times a hard-to-follow sentence. He did seem to show some emotion when a representa­tive read a statement written by “Jane,” one of his accusers and a key prosecutio­n witness.

“I was brainwashe­d by Robert and a sex slave,” Jane’s statement said. “It almost killed me.”

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R. Kelly

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