Daily Camera (Boulder)

People in the news

- R. Kelly

CHICAGO >> The superstart­urned-felon wouldn’t be eligible for release until 2066, a year shy of his 100th birthday, if a federal judge accepts prosecutor­s’ recommenda­tions at his sentencing hearing Thursday in his hometown of Chicago.

Kelly, 56, will be sentenced on his conviction­s from last year in Chicago of child pornograph­y and enticement. He is already serving 30 years for his

2021 racketeeri­ng and sex traffickin­g conviction­s in New York.

The central question for Judge Harry Leinenwebe­r is whether to order that Kelly serve a Chicago sentence simultaneo­usly with the New York sentence or that he start serving his Chicago sentence only after he completes the New York term.

If the singer is ordered to serve the sentences one after the other, that would practicall­y erase any chance of Kelly ever getting out of prison alive.

What are prosecutor­s asking for?

In a sentencing memo last week, they recommende­d Kelly serve 25 more years and that he serve it consecutiv­ely to the New York sentence.

What sentence does the defense want?

Kelly’s lawyer, Jennifer Bonjean, asked for a sentence of around 10 years — on the low end of the guideline range.

What are the criteria for a consecutiv­e sentence?

By statute, the default for judges is to allow defendants to serve their sentences simultaneo­usly — which courts call “concurrent­ly” — which effectivel­y means they serve only the longest sentence imposed.

Will Kelly address the court at sentencing?

It’s not clear he will, though he risks Judge Leinenwebe­r holding that against him. Judges often like to hear expression­s of remorse at sentencing. Most defendants do speak.

Kelly did not speak at his 2022 sentencing in New York.

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