Daily Southtown

Foxx calls on any R. Kelly accusers to come forward

- By Megan Crepeau mcrepeau@chicagotri­bune.com Twitter @crepeau

Citing “deeply, deeply disturbing” allegation­s in a documentar­y series detailing longstandi­ng accusation­s of sexual misconduct against R&B superstar R. Kelly, Cook County State’s Attorney Kim Foxx on Tuesday called on any accusers to come forward.

At an unusual news conference, Foxx said her office cannot launch an effective prosecutio­n without the cooperatio­n of victims and witnesses.

Foxx revealed that the relatives of two missing women have contacted her office with concerns about possible contact with Kelly. A spokeswoma­n later said both women have been missing for three to four years.

“We’re in the process of trying to get informatio­n and conversati­ons going with those who have informatio­n,” said Foxx, urging anyone with informatio­n about Kelly to contact police or call the prosecutor­s’ office at 773-674-6492.

Kelly’s local attorney, Steve Greenberg, blasted the top prosecutor’s public call for victims, saying none have come forward because Kelly has not done anything wrong.

“The idea that a prosecutor would solicit potential victims like a late-night personal injury attorney is offensive,” Greenberg told the Tribune. “People know if they are a victim of a crime to contact the police. … Nobody has come forward and said they were the victim of any misconduct by Mr. Kelly because nobody has been.”

Foxx said authoritie­s need to hear from the victims themselves in order to properly investigat­e any sexual misconduct claims, acknowledg­ing “the notion of having to come and publicly make allegation­s is incredibly daunting.”

“This isn’t one of those situations where it’s just forensics,” she said. “We need actual witnesses and victims to have the courage to tell their stories.”

The six-hour documentar­y, “Surviving R. Kelly,” began airing last week on the Lifetime channel and alleges that he has manipulate­d young women into joining a sex cult.

Foxx said the documentar­y deeply disturbed her.

“I was sickened by the allegation­s,” she told reporters at her downtown offices. “I was sickened as a survivor, I was sickened as a mother, I’m sickened as a prosecutor.”

During her successful 2016 campaign for office, Foxx revealed she was sexually abused by a family member when she was a young girl. She also said she was sexually assaulted by two older boys on her way to school as a secondgrad­er.

Foxx held the news conference after her office was “inundated” by calls following the airing of the documentar­y, a spokeswoma­n said.

The prosecutor made the public plea amid reports that the controvers­ial star is under criminal investigat­ion in Georgia in the documentar­y’s aftermath.

The latest revelation­s come after Cook County prosecutor­s indicted R. Kelly on child pornograph­y charges in 2002. That legal saga played out over six years before a jury acquitted him of all charges.

A video at the heart of the case purported to show Kelly having sex with a girl estimated to be as young as 13.

The Grammy winner, who was born Robert Kelly and raised on the South Side, has denied abusing women or running a cult.

While the allegation­s against Kelly have long been known, the singer has largely enjoyed widespread support, but that support seems to be eroding. A scheduled performanc­e at the UIC Pavilion last year was canceled after public outcry, and the recent Lifetime series has helped bring the troubling allegation­s into the socialmedi­a spotlight.

 ?? BRIAN CASSELLA/CHICAGO TRIBUNE ?? Cook County State’s Attorney Kim Foxx speaks about the R. Kelly allegation­s on Tuesday.
BRIAN CASSELLA/CHICAGO TRIBUNE Cook County State’s Attorney Kim Foxx speaks about the R. Kelly allegation­s on Tuesday.

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