R. Kelly accuser says she saw a nearby gun while forced to have oral sex
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[September 02, 2021]
By Tyler Clifford
NEW YORK (Reuters) - A woman who accuses R.
Kelly of sexually abusing her told jurors at his racketeering trial on
Wednesday that she was unnerved when she saw a gun near where the R&B
singer forced her to perform oral sex on him.
In her second day of testimony, the woman, who identified herself as
Faith, said the Los Angeles encounter took place in January 2018, near
the end of an 11-month relationship during which Kelly flew her several
times to concerts or recording studios and trained her to please him
sexually.
Faith, who said she was 19 when she met the then-50-year-old Kelly at a
San Antonio concert in March 2017, testified that the gun left her
"intimidated" and fearful of what would happen if she tried to leave.
"I wasn't even going to step out of line," she told the jury of seven
men and five women in Brooklyn federal court.
On cross-examination, Kelly's lawyer Deveraux Cannick tried to poke
holes in Faith's testimony, trying to show jurors it was her choice to
keep seeing the singer despite her claims she did not always welcome his
sexual advances.
"You participated on your own will," Cannick said to Faith.
Kelly, whose full name is Robert Sylvester Kelly, has been on trial
since Aug. 18 for running what prosecutors called a decades-long scheme
targeting women and girls for sex, with the help of employees and
assistants in his entourage.
Known for the 1996 Grammy-winning song "I Believe I Can Fly," the
54-year-old Kelly has pleaded not guilty to one racketeering count and
eight counts of violating an interstate sex trafficking law.
Faith said her relationship with Kelly ended in February 2018 at a hotel
in Manhattan, where she resisted his desire for sex and made it
physically difficult for him to attempt intercourse.
"I know I had pissed him off," Faith said.
Soon after returning home to Texas, Faith said she tested positive for
type-1 herpes.
She blamed Kelly, and said he would not discuss it on a later phone
call, after she had hired legal counsel.
"I knew it was him," Faith said.
Cannick challenged some of Faith's recollections, asking how she could
remember so many details of her final interactions with Kelly in 2018
when "you don't remember what time you met with (prosecutors) on
Sunday."
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R. Kelly sits in court during his sex abuse trial at Brooklyn's
Federal District Court in a courtroom sketch in New York, U.S.,
September 1, 2021. REUTERS/Jane Rosenberg
Faith also said she did not like being labeled a "victim" of Kelly,
mirroring her comments from an earlier podcast.
"You're not a victim?" Cannick asked.
"Correct," Faith responded.
Kelly's indictment describes the alleged mistreatment of six women
and girls, including the late singer Aaliyah. A male accuser has
also said Kelly sexually abused him.
Several accusers, including Faith, and former employees have
testified that Kelly demanded strict obedience to his rules even as
he preyed on women and girls, including aspiring singers who hoped
he could advance their own music careers.
Other testimony for the prosecution came from Faith's mother, and
from the minister who oversaw Kelly's 1994 wedding to Aaliyah, when
Kelly was 27 and Aaliyah was 15. The marriage was annulled after six
months.
Coronavirus protocols have required the press and public to watch
the trial in overflow courtrooms with video feeds.
Before Wednesday's testimony, Assistant U.S. Attorney Nadia Shihata
said negative comments had been made on Tuesday in an overflow
courtroom, with one person calling a witness a "stupid bitch."
Kelly's lawyers declined to comment when asked if it wanted to
respond.
Many sexual abuse accusations against Kelly were discussed in the
2019 Lifetime documentary "Surviving R. Kelly." Kelly also faces
sex-related charges in Illinois and Minnesota.
(Reporting by Tyler Clifford in New York; Editing by Howard Goller)
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