The Korea Times

R. Kelly seeks appeals court relief from prison term

-

R. Kelly’s lawyer told an appeals court Monday that all kinds of legitimate organizati­ons — even college fraterniti­es — could be deemed racketeeri­ng organizati­ons under a law used to convict the R&B superstar at his Brooklyn trial of sexually abusing young fans, including children, for decades.

Attorney Jennifer Bonjean, seeking to reverse his 2021 conviction­s or to win him a new trial, tried to persuade three judges on the 2nd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in Manhattan that prosecutor­s improperly used a racketeeri­ng statute written to shut down organized crime to go after the singer.

She said it wasn’t fair that prosecutor­s charged Kelly, 57, with leading a Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizati­on (RICO) enterprise from 1994 to 2018 compromise­d of individual­s who promoted his music and recruited women and girls to engage in illegal sexual activity and to produce child pornograph­y.

“This was not a collection of people who had a purpose to recruit girls for sexual abuse or child pornograph­y,” Bonjean said.

“Whether they turned a blind eye, whether some of them suspected that some of these girls were underage, that’s a whole different matter.

“And once we get into that sort of territory, where we’re going to say that constitute­s a RICO enterprise, well we have a lot of organizati­ons — we have a lot of frat houses — we have all types of organizati­ons that are now going to become RICO enterprise­s,” she said in support of the Grammy-winning, multiplati­num-selling songwriter.

The judges did not immediatel­y rule, but they had plenty of questions for Bonjean and a prosecutor who defended the government’s handling of the case, which resulted in a 30-year prison sentence in June 2022.

Assistant U.S. Attorney Kayla Bensing said Kelly’s network of aides and employees were part of the singer’s “system in place that lured young people in to his orbit” before he “took over their lives.”

At trial, several women testified that they were ordered to sign nondisclos­ure forms and were subjected to threats and punishment­s such as violent spankings if they broke what one referred to as “Rob’s rules.”

Some of the judges questioned whether the employees knew about Kelly’s illegal activities with teenage girls.

The prosecutor responded by citing numerous instances of testimony, including one in which a woman testified that she told a member of Kelly’s entourage that she was 16 when he asked her age. Others knew some girls were not yet 18 because they booked flights for them and the girls had to provide their birth dates, she noted.

“So this is all evidence that the jury was entitled to infer that Kelly’s inner circle knew what was going on. That he was recruiting and maintainin­g underage women for sexual activity,” Bensing said.

 ?? AP-Yonhap ?? R. Kelly
AP-Yonhap R. Kelly

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Korea, Republic