R. Kelly’s Chicago trial on federal sex charges set for August
CHICAGO — A federal judge on Wednesday ordered R&B superstar R. Kelly to stand trial in Chicago on child pornography and obstruction of justice charges next year after the scheduled sentencing for his conviction in an earlier sex trafficking trial in New York.
U.S. District Judge Harry Leinenweber appeared to have wanted the trial in Chicago to begin earlier, but he set it for Aug. 1 after one of Kelly’s attorneys, Steven Greenberg, said that he and another of Kelly’s attorneys will be in trial on other cases through July.
Accusers say it took so long to get to a guilty verdict against the R&B superstar in part because his targets were Black women.
Attorneys told the judge during the brief hearing that they estimated the trial of Kelly and co-defendants Derrell McDavid and Milton “June” Brown would last three to four weeks.
Kelly, who remains jailed in New York, was listening to the hearing on a conference call but did not speak. His sentencing there is scheduled for May 4 and he faces up to life in prison.
Kelly, who was born Robert Sylvester Kelly, also is facing four separate indictments alleging sexual abuse in state court in Chicago and a child prostitution charge in Minnesota.
From Lifetime’s bombshell docuseries “Surviving R. Kelly” to an explosive interview with Gayle King, TV helped bring the singer to justice. Finally.
Experts have said there is a possibility that prosecutors could drop the charges in state court if Kelly receives a lengthy prison sentence in New York. But there is virtually no chance that the federal charges in Chicago will be dropped.
Kelly, who has been jailed without bail since 2019, was convicted last month by a federal jury in New York on racketeering conspiracy charges and other counts. Greenberg said on Wednesday that after the trial, Kelly was placed on suicide watch but that has ended.
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