The Sentinel-Record

R. Kelly’s manager faces trial over theater-emptying threat

- LARRY NEUMEISTER

NEW YORK — The trial of R. Kelly’s manager opened Tuesday on charges that he forced the cancellati­on of a screening of a documentar­y about the singer’s sexual abuse of women and girls by calling in a threat to the crowded Manhattan theater.

Assistant U.S. Attorney Lara Pomerantz told jurors that Donnell Russell made a terrifying brief phone call in December 2018 from his Chicago home to the theater, claiming that someone with a gun was planning to fire on the crowd watching Lifetime’s “Surviving R. Kelly” series.

“He knew his words would sabotage the event,” she said.

The phone call prompted an emergency call to police, who ordered an evacuation that forced the cancellati­on of the premiere, including a live panel discussion that was to include several women featured in the documentar­y.

“The defendant wanted to keep the women quiet,” Pomerantz said in Manhattan federal court. She added that Russell was motivated by a desire to protect the lucrative career of the Grammy-winning, multiplati­num-selling songwriter.

Kelly, who was sentenced to 30 years in prison last month, was convicted last year of racketeeri­ng and sex traffickin­g.

Defense attorney Michael Freedman told jurors that they would exonerate Russell if they study the evidence.

Freedman said there were a lot of phone calls to the theater on the day of the screening and jurors will “have to decide what it all means and what, if anything, it proves about my client.”

He said there was no recording of the phone threat so jurors cannot hear the voice that made it. But he added that there was not enough evidence to prove Russell committed a crime.

Adrian Krasniqi, who worked at the 25th Street venue, testified that he received the threatenin­g call less than an hour after a man claiming to be part of Kelly’s legal team called and said the documentar­y was violating Kelly’s copyright to his name and should not be shown. He said the caller had a low, profession­al sounding voice.

Krasniqi said the later call consisted of a deep voiced man with a “slang tone, like a thug,” saying in a very serious and very blunt manner that “someone had a gun and they were going to shoot up the place.”

On cross examinatio­n, Krasniqi said he believed the caller had a Brooklyn accent, which he was familiar with because he lived in Brooklyn. He said he also thought the caller was outdoors when he made the threat.

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