Scenes from Week 2 of the R. Kelly sex-trafficking trial
The second week of the R. Kelly sex-trafficking trial in New York City proved to be an exercise by the government in trying to paint the “I Believe I Can Fly” R&B star as a man-child control freak
Your support helps us to tell the story
From reproductive rights to climate change to Big Tech, The Independent is on the ground when the story is developing. Whether it's investigating the financials of Elon Musk's pro-Trump PAC or producing our latest documentary, 'The A Word', which shines a light on the American women fighting for reproductive rights, we know how important it is to parse out the facts from the messaging.
At such a critical moment in US history, we need reporters on the ground. Your donation allows us to keep sending journalists to speak to both sides of the story.
The Independent is trusted by Americans across the entire political spectrum. And unlike many other quality news outlets, we choose not to lock Americans out of our reporting and analysis with paywalls. We believe quality journalism should be available to everyone, paid for by those who can afford it.
Your support makes all the difference.The second week of the R. Kelly sex-trafficking trial in New York City proved to be an exercise by prosecutors to paint the “I Believe I Can Fly” R&B star as a man-child control freak and a compulsive sex offender who exploited vulnerable victims way less than half his age while ordering them to call him “Daddy.”
Defense attorneys for the now 54-year-old entertainer, born Robert Sylvester Kelly, countered by seeking to portray the accusers as lying opportunists trying to leverage Kelly’s fame.
Here are snapshots from week two of the case:
LIAR, LIAR
Two Kelly accusers, both testifying without revealing their true identities, said that at age 17 they sought his help launching their music careers, or those of others. But Kelly, they said, only feigned interest.
One told the jury Kelly invited her and a friend to his studio to hear the friend sing. But he quickly lost patience because “he wasn’t thrilled about my mom being with us,” she said.
Another witness who said she had formal training as a performer got a little further with Kelly — or so it seemed. Her edge was a professionally made music video for a single she wrote, titled “Liar Liar.”
Asked for input, Kelly “said that he did like it and that it was cute and that it wasn’t too grown or too sexy,” she said.
But prosecutors say Kelly was the liar. They allege his tutelage was merely a ploy to take advantage of the girls, leading them down a path of sexual degradation.
A prosecutor asked the woman what steps Kelly took to back up promises to help launch her career.
“None,” she responded.
THE NOT-SO-MAGIC KINGDOM
Many of Kelly’s draconian tendencies in running an empire headquartered in custom mansions and music studios were detailed by a former employee named Tom Arnold. One example was a failed attempt to organize a 2011 trip to Disney World for Kelly’s entourage that included, as always, “female guests.”
Arnold was ordered to pull the trip off on short notice, booking hotel rooms, arranging transportation and hiring a VIP tour guide for the theme park. He succeeded at the first two tasks. He ran into a glitch on the third.
Any time Kelly visited the Magic Kingdom there was an edict that he “needed a woman to be the guide,” Arnold told the jury. However this time, the only person available was a man. The witness said when his boss arrived, he abruptly canceled the outing and sent everyone home.
Arnold said his wife noticed his next paycheck was docked a week’s pay — $1,500 — as an apparent “fine” for the transgression. Quitting his job with Kelly was the only option, he said.
“At that point, I wasn’t happy, my wife wasn’t happy and Rob wasn’t happy,” he said.
TUG OF WAR
Much of the testimony of a key accuser focused on a tug of war between her parents and R. Kelly.
The woman testified that her parents had at first encouraged her relationship with Kelly and even pitched ideas for their own business ventures with him. She conceded on cross-examination that one idea was to market an R. Kelly-themed sex toy. Even for him, that went too far, she said.
Kelly “confided in me later it was not something he could ever do,” she said.
A complication for the woman was that, well before the trial, she had done an interview with Gayle King on “CBS This Morning” where she expressed her devotion to Kelly and disavowed her parents. She called her father “a manipulative liar” for suggesting she’d been brainwashed.
But on the witness stand, the woman claimed her statements were orchestrated by Kelly to give him cover.
She said behind the scenes, he once “pulled out an iPad and he told me to make a video saying that my father had molested me."
PROSECUTOR'S RETORT
In one of week's more dramatic moments, Assistant U.S. Attorney Elizabeth Geddes attacked the defense tactic of asking the witness about “all sorts of things that your parents did." The retort took the form of a relentless series of questions of her own — made over a defense objection — aimed at refocusing jurors on the most disturbing allegations against Kelly.
Among them: “Who exposed you to a sexually transmitted disease without your consent, your parents or the defendant?” “Who had sexual contact with you, including sexual intercourse with you, when you were 17 years old, your parents or the defendant?” and “Who made you film videos of you engaging in degrading conduct, including smearing and eating feces, your parents or the defendant?”
In a soft voice, she responded each time: “The defendant.”
___
For more coverage of the R. Kelly trial in New York, visit our hub: https://apnews.com/hub/r-kelly