The Day

R. Kelly conviction to stand after high court rejects appeal

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— R. Kelly’s sex-crime Chicago conviction and 20-year sentence in Chicago’s federal court will stand, an appeals court ruled Friday in a blistering opinion.

“For years, Robert Sylvester Kelly abused underage girls. By employing a complex scheme to keep victims quiet, he long evaded consequenc­es. In recent years, though, those crimes caught up with him at last,” Judge Amy St. Eve of the 7th Circuit U.S. Court of Appeals wrote in the terse, 14-page ruling.

“But Kelly — interposin­g a statute-of-limitation­s defense — thinks he delayed the charges long enough to elude them entirely. The statute says otherwise, so we affirm his conviction.”

The appellate court also denied Kelly’s request for resentenci­ng, saying they had no grounds to second-guess the 20-year prison term U.S. District Judge Harry Leinenwebe­r handed down.

“An even-handed jury found Kelly guilty, acquitting him on several charges even after viewing those abhorrent tapes,” the appellate ruling states. “No statute of limitation­s saves him, and the resulting sentence was procedural­ly proper and — especially under these appalling circumstan­ces — substantiv­ely fair.”

Kelly’s attorney, Jennifer Bonjean, told the Tribune on Friday that they were still weighing whether to request a rehearing before the full 7th Circuit panel — a move that is rarely granted.

Meanwhile, Bonjean says she plans to petition the U.S. Supreme Court on the statute of limitation­s issue, which centers on whether a new law passed after the underlying crimes in Kelly’s case should have been applied.

“We believe that is an appropriat­e issue for review by the Supreme Court,” Bonjean said.

Kelly, 57, is serving his time at a medium-security facility in Butner, N.C.

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