Stamford Advocate

Woman weeps while testifying against R. Kelly

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She said Kelly — born Robert Sylvester Kelly — sometimes demanded she wear pigtails and “dress like a Girl Scout” during sexual encounters that Kelly often videotaped.

NEW YORK — A key accuser at the R. Kelly sex-traffickin­g trial returned to the witness stand on Thursday, first claiming Kelly had a Girl Scout fetish and then weeping when a prosecutor asked her to read out loud from a journal entry describing how he allegedly beat and choked her the last time they were together in 2010.

Jerhonda Pace, who had remained stoic during nearly two days on the witness stand, read how Kelly cursed at her and slapped her three times, telling her, “It’s not going to be an open fist next time.” She wrote that he choked her and sexually assaulted her before she “became fed up with him” and left.

Pace testified she believed Kelly gave her herpes, backing allegation­s by prosecutor­s that he broke the law by knowingly transmitti­ng the STD. They offered more evidence on that point by calling his personal physician to the witness stand later Thursday to testify the singer had a long history of treatment for herpes.

Pace, who is pregnant and only a few days from her due date, asked for a break so she could compose herself.

She resumed her testimony in Brooklyn federal court a day after telling jurors she was a 16-yearold virgin and a member of Kelly’s fan club when he invited her to his mansion in 2010. While there, she said, she was told to follow “Rob’s rules” — edicts restrictin­g how she could dress, who she could speak with and when she could use the bathroom.

She said Kelly — born Robert Sylvester Kelly — sometimes demanded she wear pigtails and “dress like a Girl Scout” during sexual encounters that Kelly often videotaped.

On cross examinatio­n, defense attorney Deveraux Cannick sought to show Pace hid her true motivation­s regarding Kelly and deceived him by lying about her age.

“You were in fact stalking him, right?” Cannick asked.

“That is not right,” she responded.

Pace had testified earlier the she told Kelly she was 19 when they met but had informed him she was only 16 by the time he sexually abused her.

Cannick confronted her with a lawsuit settlement she signed indicating she agreed she never revealed to Kelly that she was a minor. She said it was in exchange for hush money.

The questionin­g fit a theme that defense lawyers have repeatedly pushed early in the trial: Kelly was victimized by groupies who hounded him at shows and afterward, only to turn against him years later when public sentiment shifted against him, they allege.

To bolster their claims against Kelly, prosecutor­s showed jurors on Thursday screenshot­s from Pace’s phone showing several communicat­ions with Kelly in January 2010, including a text from him reading, “Please call.” There was also a photo of her with “Rob” tattooed to her chest. She said she’s since “covered it up with a black heart.”

Later, Dr. Kris McGrath told jurors that he had been prescribin­g herpes medication for Kelly since at least 2007 and became fast friends with him until 2019, sometimes examining the singer during house calls at his mansion. Kelly didn’t pay for treatment, but instead picked up the tab for the doctor to attend his concerts in Chicago, New York and elsewhere, he testified.

Pace, the trial’s first witness, was among multiple female accusers — mostly referred to in court as “Jane Does” — expected to testify at a trial scheduled to last several weeks. Other likely witnesses include cooperatin­g former associates who have never spoken publicly before about their experience­s with Kelly.

The Associated Press doesn’t name alleged victims of sexual abuse without their consent unless they have shared their identities publicly. Pace has appeared in a documentar­y and participat­ed in media interviews.

Kelly, 54, has denied accusation­s that he preyed on Pace and other victims during a 30-year career highlighte­d by his smash hit “I Believe I Can Fly,” a 1996 song that became an inspiratio­nal anthem played at school graduation­s, weddings, advertisem­ents and elsewhere.

The testimony comes more than a decade after Kelly was acquitted in a 2008 child pornograph­y case in Chicago. The reprieve allowed his music career to continue until the (hash)MeToo era caught up with him, emboldenin­g alleged victims to come forward.

The women’s stories got wide exposure with the Lifetime documentar­y “Surviving R. Kelly.” The series explored how an entourage of supporters protected Kelly and silenced his victims for decades, foreshadow­ing the federal racketeeri­ng conspiracy case that landed Kelly in jail in 2019.

The trial is occurring before an anonymous jury of seven men and five women. Following several delays due mostly to the pandemic, the trial unfolds under coronaviru­s precaution­s restrictin­g the press and the public to overflow courtrooms with video feeds.

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