The Borneo Post

R. Kelly’s attorney denies allegation­s in documentar­y

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LOS ANGELES: An attorney for R. Kelly on Friday called a new documentar­y series about the R& B singer a “for-profit hit piece,” and said the latest accusation­s of abuse by the Grammy-winning musician were a “complete fabricatio­n.”

The six-hour documentar­y “Surviving R. Kelly,” which aired earlier this month on US cable channel Lifetime, includes allegation­s from multiple women who accuse Kelly of sexual misconduct, sometimes with minors.

Kelly, 52, the Chicago singer and record producer best known for his hit song “I Believe I Can Fly,” has for years denied accusation­s of abuse, including those made in the new documentar­y.

Steve Greenberg, an attorney for Kelly, said in an interview on Friday that there was no evidence to support the accusation­s contained in the documentar­y, calling it a “forprofit hit piece full of falsities, full of mistakes.”

The Lifetime series featured interviews with several women making on- camera allegation­s of sexual, mental and physical abuse by Kelly, as well as interviews with some of his former managers and producers.

The latest accusation­s echo similar ones against the singer dating back 25 years. After the documentar­y aired, Chicago’s top prosecutor called on potential victims and witnesses to come forward.

“We cannot seek justice without you,” Cook County State’s Attorney Kim Foxx said this week at a news conference.

According to media reports, prosecutor­s in Georgia have contacted an attorney for an Atlanta- area couple who appeared in the documentar­y and accuse Kelly of brainwashi­ng their daughter.

Reuters was unable independen­tly to verify the accusation­s in the documentar­y and could not immediatel­y reach prosecutor­s for comment. In 2008, the singer was tried and acquitted on child pornograph­y charges in Chicago.

“There’s women saying things, which is of course their prerogativ­e, but there is no evidence that any of it happened,” Greenberg said of the documentar­y.

Kannie Yu LaPack, a spokeswoma­n for Lifetime, said: “The women’s stories speak for themselves.”

Lifetime is part of A& E Networks, which is a joint venture between Hearst Communicat­ions and Walt Disney Co (DIS.N).

The series has been a hit for the network, which said the documentar­y’s Jan 3 premiere attracted 1.9 million viewers and the network’s biggest audience in two years among adults 25 to 54 and other age groups.

After the documentar­y aired, singer Lady Gaga vowed to remove a duet she recorded with Kelly from streaming services and never collaborat­e with him again. — Reuters

 ??  ?? R. Kelly arrives at the 41st American Music Awards in Los Angeles, California, Nov 24, 2013. — Reuters file photo
R. Kelly arrives at the 41st American Music Awards in Los Angeles, California, Nov 24, 2013. — Reuters file photo

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