R. Kelly sentencing to determine if he spends rest of life in prison
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[February 23, 2023]
By Daniel Trotta
(Reuters) - A U.S. judge in Illinois on Thursday is due to sentence
musician R. Kelly for child pornography and coercion, deciding whether
to tack more time onto a 30-year sentence from a previous case that
alone would keep Kelly in prison well into his 80s.
Kelly, 56, the Grammy-winning R&B artist, has been convicted in two
separate trials of luring multiple underage girls into sex by leveraging
his wealth and fame, in some case recording the abuse on video.
Prosecutors have argued in a sentencing memo that Kelly is so
incorrigible that "the only way to ensure Kelly does not reoffend is to
impose a sentence that will keep him in prison for the rest of his
life." They want to add another 25 years to his existing 30-year
sentence.
Defense attorneys say a 56-year-old African American man with diabetes
is already facing an effective life sentence with the existing 30-year
term. They acknowledge the judge must impose a minimum sentence of 10
years, but contend it should run concurrently.
They also question why federal prosecutors have dedicated so many
resources to prosecuting a Black artist when many of the biggest white
stars in rock 'n' roll history have been accused of abusing underage
girls and "none have been prosecuted and none will die in prison."
Last year a federal judge in the Eastern District of New York sentenced
Kelly to 30 years in prison based on his 2021 conviction for multiple
felonies including illegal sex with minors and sexual exploitation of
minors.
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R. Kelly leaves the Criminal Court
Building after pleading not guilty during a hearing on eleven new
counts of criminal sexual abuse, in Chicago, Illinois, U.S., June 6,
2019. REUTERS/Daniel Acker/
In a separate trial last year, he
was also convicted of multiple felonies in the Northern District of
Illinois, where Judge Harry Leinenweber will preside over the
sentencing hearing on Thursday.
Federal prosecutors label Kelly a serial sexual predator whose
"desire to sexually abuse children is insatiable. ... He cannot be
deterred."
Defense lawyer Jennifer Bonjean alleges a double standard for a
Black artist, naming 11 white rock stars in her sentencing memo who
have been accused of abusing underage girls and gone unpunished.
"There was a whole culture around it and so yes I do think there's a
disproportionate attention on Mr. Kelly," Bonjean said in a
telephone interview. "The '90s R&B star looks a lot different than
these old rock 'n' roll artists."
Kelly will not address the judge, Bonjean said, because he still
faces prosecution in other jurisdictions and any statement could be
used against him.
(Reporting by Daniel Trotta; Editing by Richard Chang)
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