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R&B superstar R. Kelly convicted in sex trafficking trialAssociated Presson September 28, 2021 at 4:10 am

NEW YORK — R. Kelly, the R&B superstar known for his anthem “I Believe I Can Fly,” was convicted Monday in a sex trafficking trial after decades of avoiding criminal responsibility for numerous allegations of misconduct with young women and children.

A jury of seven men and five women found Kelly, 54, guilty of all nine counts, including racketeering, on their second day of deliberations. Kelly wore a face mask below black-rimmed glasses, remaining motionless with eyes downcast, as the verdict was read in federal court in Brooklyn.

Prosecutors alleged that the entourage of managers and aides who helped Kelly meet girls — and keep them obedient and quiet — amounted to a criminal enterprise. Two people have been charged with Kelly in a separate federal case pending in Chicago.

He faces the possibility of decades in prison for crimes including violating the Mann Act, an anti-sex trafficking law that prohibits taking anyone across state lines “for any immoral purpose.” Sentencing is scheduled for May 4.

One of Kelly’s lawyers, Deveraux Cannick, said he was disappointed and hoped to appeal.

“I think I’m even more disappointed the government brought the case in the first place, given all the inconsistencies,” Cannick said.

Cook County State’s Attorney Kim Foxx said in a statement Monday, “This is the first step in a long journey towards justice and healing for many victims of these crimes. Without their bravery and courage, this outcome would not be possible.”

“It is my sincere hope that today’s verdict brings some form of closure and consolation, and sends a strong message to predators that one’s celebrity status will not shield them from the law,” Foxx said.

Several accusers testified in lurid detail during the trial, alleging that Kelly subjected them to perverse and sadistic whims when they were underage.

For years, the public and news media seemed to be more amused than horrified by allegations of inappropriate relationships with minors, starting with Kelly’s illegal marriage to the R&B phenom Aaliyah in 1994 when she was just 15.

His records and concert tickets kept selling. Other artists continued to record his songs, even after he was arrested in 2002 and accused of making a recording of himself sexually abusing and urinating on a 14-year-old girl.

Widespread public condemnation didn’t come until a widely watched docuseries, “Surviving R. Kelly,” helped make his case a signifier of the #MeToo era, and gave voice to accusers who wondered if their stories were previously ignored because they were Black women.

“To the victims in this case, your voices were heard and justice was finally served,” Acting U.S. Attorney Jacquelyn Kasulis said Monday.

U.S. Attorney Jacquelyn Kasulis speaks to the press on the guilty verdict of R. Kelly at the Brooklyn Federal Court House on Monday, Sept. 27, 2021, in New York.AP

Gloria Allred, a lawyer for some of Kelly’s accusers, said outside the courthouse that of all the predators she’s gone after — a list including Harvey Weinstein and Jeffrey Epstein — “Mr. Kelly is the worst.”

At the trial, several of Kelly’s accusers testified without using their real names to protect their privacy. Jurors were shown homemade videos of Kelly engaging in sex acts that prosecutors said were not consensual and became part of his personal “porn” collection.

The defense labeled the accusers “groupies” and “stalkers.”

Kelly’s lawyer, Cannick, questioned why women stayed in relationships with Kelly if they thought they were being exploited.

“You made a choice,” Cannick told one woman who testified, adding, “You participated of your own will.”

Kelly, born Robert Sylvester Kelly, has been jailed without bail since in 2019. The New York case is only part of the legal peril facing the singer. He also has pleaded not guilty to sex-related charges in Illinois and Minnesota. Trial dates in those cases have yet to be set.

At the trial, prosecutors painted the singer as a pampered man-child and control freak. His accusers said they were under orders to call him “Daddy,” expected to jump and kiss him anytime he walked into a room, and to cheer only for him when he played pickup basketball games in which they said he was a ball hog.

The accusers alleged they were ordered to sign nondisclosure forms and were subjected to threats and punishments such as violent spankings if they broke what one referred to as “Rob’s rules.” Some said they believed the videotapes he shot of them having sex would be used against them if they exposed what was happening.

Among the other more troubling tableaux: Kelly keeping a gun by his side while he berated one of his accusers as a prelude to forcing her to give him oral sex in a Los Angeles music studio; Kelly giving several accusers herpes without disclosing he had an STD; Kelly coercing a teenage boy to join him for sex with a naked girl who emerged from underneath a boxing ring in his garage; and Kelly shooting a shaming video of one alleged victim showing her smearing feces on her face as punishment for breaking his rules.

Of 14 possible racketeering acts considered in the trial, the jury found only two “not proven.” The allegations involved a woman who said Kelly took advantage of her in 2003 when she was an unsuspecting radio station intern.

She testified he whisked her to his Chicago recording studio, where she was kept locked up and was drugged before he sexually assaulted her while she was passed out. When she realized she was trapped, “I was scared. I was ashamed. I was embarrassed,” she said.

Other testimony focused on Kelly’s relationship with Aaliyah. One of the final witnesses described seeing him sexually abusing her around 1993, when Aaliyah was only 13 or 14.

Jurors also heard testimony about a fraudulent marriage scheme hatched to protect Kelly after he feared he had impregnated Aaliyah. Witnesses said they were married in matching jogging suits using a license falsely listing her age as 18; he was 27 at the time.

Aaliyah, whose full name was Aaliyah Dana Haughton, worked with Kelly, who wrote and produced her 1994 debut album, “Age Ain’t Nothing But A Number.” She died in a plane crash in 2001 at age 22.

Kelly had been tried once before, in Chicago in a child pornography case, but was acquitted in 2008.

For the Brooklyn trial, U.S. District Judge Ann Donnelly barred people not directly involved in the case from the courtroom in what she called a coronavirus precaution. Reporters and other spectators had to watch on a video feed from another room in the same building, though a few were allowed in the courtroom for the verdict.

___

Associated Press writer Michael R. Sisak contributed to this report.

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R&B superstar R. Kelly convicted in sex trafficking trialAssociated Presson September 28, 2021 at 4:10 am Read More »

Man killed in Gresham shooting: policeCindy Hernandezon September 28, 2021 at 3:11 am

A 31-year-old man was shot to death Monday in Gresham on the South Side.

About 6:30 p.m., the man was in the 8800 block of South Throop Street when he was struck by gunfire, Chicago police said.

He was shot in the head and was taken Christ Medical Center in Oak Lawn, where he was pronounced dead, police said. He hasn’t been identified.

No one is in custody.

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Man killed in Gresham shooting: policeCindy Hernandezon September 28, 2021 at 3:11 am Read More »

Munoz joins what is becoming Chicago’s least exclusive clubSun-Times staffon September 28, 2021 at 2:11 am

Former Ald. Ricardo Munoz (22nd) is the latest member the Chicago City Hall of Shame.

With his guilty plea Monday to wire fraud and money laundering, Munoz becomes the 36th member of the City Council to be convicted of a crime since the early 1970s.

There’s no induction ceremony — other than any related to whatever penalty will be handed down when the former City Council member is sentenced, now scheduled for Jan. 5.

But either way, Munoz is the first former or sitting Chicago alderperson to be convicted since Ald. Willie Cochran’s 2019 guilty plea added him to the crowd of those who’ve been found guilty of a crime — extortion, embezzlement, tax evasion and bribery among them.

Since then, state law has changed the name of the office from “alderman” to the more general neutral “alderperson.”

But whether they like it or not, Munoz and the rest are just as likely to be remembered as “aldercrooks.”

Former Ald. Ricardo Munoz walks out of the Dirksen Federal Courthouse at 219 S. Dearborn St after his hearing in which he plead guilty Monday.Anthony Vazquez/Sun-Times

Munoz, incidentally, is the first current or former alderperson convicted from the Southwest Side’s 22nd Ward.

Cochran was the third from the South Side’s 20th Ward, following in the sad footsteps of his predecessors Arenda Troutman and Cliff Kelley. Even more sadly, two other wards — the Southwest Side’s 23rd and Northwest Side’s 31st — also count three former alderpersons on the list.

The ranks of the fallen also includes the father and son duo of William Carothers (28th) and Isaac “Ike” Carothers (29th), convicted nearly 30 years apart of unrelated crimes.

And there’s Ambrosio Medrano (25th), the Grover Cleveland of Chicago corruption, earning a place on the list three times for three separate corruption scandals.

The former Southwest Side alderman was first convicted in 1996 for accepting bribes. And then in 2014, two federal judges presiding over separate cases handed Medrano a total of 13 years in prison over corrupt deals involving bribes and kickbacks, although Medrano left prison last year as part of an effort to release inmates who are at-risk of contracting the coronavirus.

So, dating back to 1973, here’s Chicago’s Aldermanic Hall of Shame. Some on the list appear for crimes that occurred after their time in City Council, including James Laski, Ed Vrdolyak and William Beavers.

And the list only includes those actually convicted — not those indicted, but who have not yet gone, or never did go, to trial — in the interest of keeping it to a manageable number.

Fred Hubbard (2nd) – 1973
Pleaded guilty to embezzling.

Joseph Jambrone (28th) – 1973
Convicted of taking bribes.

Casimir J. Staszcuk (13th) – 1973
Found guilty of extortion by demanding $9,000 in exchange for allowing three zoning changes. Also convicted of mail fraud and income tax evasion.

Joseph Potempa (23rd) – 1973
Pleaded guilty to taking a $3,000 bribe to support a zoning change in his ward — and for failing to report that income to the IRS.

Frank Kuta (23rd) – 1974
Convicted of taking a $1,500 bribe from a builder to approve a zoning change and also for failing to report that income.

Thomas E. Keane (31st) – 1974
Convicted of mail fraud and conspiracy for a scheme involving the purchase and resale of tax-delinquent properties.

Ald. Thomas Keane leaves the federal courthouse in 1974 after he is sentenced to 5 years in prison.Chicago Sun Times file

Paul T. Wigoda (49th) – 1974
Convicted of tax evasion for failing to report a $50,000 bribe related to the rezoning of the Edgewater Golf Club. He also was Keane’s law partner.

Donald T. Swinarski (12th) – 1975
Pleaded guilty to filing a false tax return in connection with a $7,000 payoff for a zoning change. Later became a state senator.

Edward T. Scholl (41st) – 1975
Convicted of taking bribes.

Stanley Zydlo (26th) – 1980
Pleaded guilty to paying a bribe.

William Carothers (28th) – 1983
Convicted of attempted extortion.

Ald. William Carothers (28th), left, in 1981, and his son, Ald. Isaac “Ike” Carothers (29th), right, in 2010. Sun-Times file photos.

Louis P. Farina (36th) – 1983
Convicted of extortion.

Ald. Louis P. Farina (36th) in 1976.Ald. Louis P. Farina (36th) in 1976.

Tyrone T. Kenner (3rd) – 1983
Convicted of taking bribes.

Chester A. Kuta (31st) – 1987
As part of the Operation Phocus investigation of bribe-taking by city licensing and inspection officials, Kuta pleaded guilty to charges of filing a false income tax return and to extorting $5,370 from Leonard Kraus, a businessman who paid the bribes to maintain a flea market in Kuta’s ward.

Clifford P. Kelley (20th) – 1987
Pleaded guilty to taking bribes.

Wallace Davis Jr. (27th) – 1987
Convicted of extortion.

Perry Hutchinson (9th) – 1988
Pleaded guilty to taking bribes.

Marian Humes (8th) – 1989
Pleaded guilty to taking bribes.

Fred Roti (1st) – 1993
Convicted for bribery, extortion and racketeering.

Ambrosio Medrano (25th) — 1996, 2014
In 2014, a federal judge said Medrano pulled of an “unprecedented … corruption trifecta” that included his role in a scheme to take bribes and kickbacks to sell bandages to public hospitals, along with another conviction that year, after his 2 1/2 -year sentence in the 1990s for accepting bribes.

Ambrosio Medrano discusses his prison sentence with the Sun-Times in 2014.Jessica Koscielniak / Sun-Times file

Allan Streeter (17th) – 1996
Pleaded guilty to extortion.

Joseph Martinez (31st) – 1997
Pleaded guilty to holding a ghost-payroll job after he served as alderman.

Joseph Martinez, former alderman of the 31st Ward. Sun-Times Photo/ John White in 1981.John White/Sun-Times file

Jesse Evans (21st) – 1997
Convicted of racketeering and extortion.

Joseph Kotlarz (35th) – 1997
Convicted of theft and conspiracy for skimming $240,000 from a 1992 tollway land deal.

John Madryzk (13th) – 1998
Pleaded guilty to partaking in a ghost-payrolling scheme.

Larry Bloom (5th) – 1998
Pleaded guilty to a single felony tax charge stemming from the Operation Silver Shovel corruption probe. Admitted accepting $14,000 in bribes from an FBI mole.

Virgil Jones (15th) – 1999
Convicted of taking bribes.

Ald. Virgil Jones (15th) at the federal building in 1999.Chicago Sun Times file

Percy Giles (37th) – 1999
Found guilty of taking payoffs and tax evasion.

James Laski (23rd) – 2006
Pleaded guilty to accepting $48,000 in bribes related to the city’s Hired Truck Program. His criminal conviction stemmed from his role as city clerk.

Ed Vrdolyak (10th) – 2008 and 2019
Though he never was convicted for anything related to his role as an alderman, authorities have since convicted him twice in public corruption-related schemes.

Ald. Edward R. Vrdolyak talks on the phone on Election Night at the Bismarck Hotel’s Democratic Party Headquarters in 1982.Sun-Times archvies

Arenda Troutman (20th) – 2008
Pleaded guilty to bribery and tax charges, admitted to extorting developers seeking zoning preferences.

Isaac “Ike” Carothers (29th) – 2010
Pleaded guilty to bribery, mail fraud and tax fraud for accepting $40,000 in home improvements, meals and sports tickets from a West Side developer in exchange for zoning changes that netted the developer millions. William Carothers was his father.

William Beavers (7th) – 2013
Sentenced to six months and fined $10,000 after being found guilty of tax evasion.

Sandi Jackson (7th) – 2013
Both Sandi Jackson and her now ex-husband, former Rep. Jesse Jackson Jr., pleaded guilty to various schemes relating to the looting of his campaign committee. Sandi Jackson pleaded guilty to filing a false federal income tax return.

Willie Cochran (20th) – 2019
Cochran pleaded guilty to one count of wire fraud for spending money from a ward fund meant for charity on personal expenses.

Ricardo Munoz (22nd) — 2021
Pleaded guilty Monday to wire fraud and money laundering, admitting he took nearly $38,000 from the Chicago Progressive Reform Caucus to pay for personal expenses such as skydiving and a relative’s college tuition.

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Munoz joins what is becoming Chicago’s least exclusive clubSun-Times staffon September 28, 2021 at 2:11 am Read More »

Top Chicago radio personality accused of coercing staffer to perform sexual favorsMitch Dudekon September 28, 2021 at 1:04 am

Popular Chicago radio host Eric Ferguson allegedly coerced an assistant producer on his show into performing sexual favors, according to a lawsuit.

Cynthia DeNicolo accused Ferguson, who hosts WTMX-FM’s popular “Eric in the Morning” show, of coercing her to perform oral sex on him about twice a month between January and August of 2004, according to the suit, which was filed in Cook County in May.

DeNicolo is a former assistant producer on the show who screened callers, booked interviews and sometimes joined Ferguson on air.

“Ferguson used codewords to communicate his unwanted demands for oral sex. He would tell DeNicolo he ‘needed a backrub,'” the lawsuit states.

“This coerced sexual activity typically occurred after a company sponsored work event or after the workday in DeNicolo’s apartment,” according to the lawsuit.

Attempts to reach Ferguson were unsuccessful.

His attorney, Peter Donati, filed a motion to dismiss the suit last month in which he claimed it was “devoid of factual allegations” and intended to “smear” Ferguson’s reputation.

Ferguson “emphatically denies the existence of a sexual relationship with plaintiff as well as engaging in the other conduct alleged in the complaint,” according to the motion.

Until she was fired on May 1, 2020, “Ferguson continued to torment DeNicolo by continuing to ask for sexual favors” and by reminding her that he had power over her job, according to the suit.

DeNicolo, 43, alleges Ferguson was behind her firing, though cuts due to COVID-19 was the official reason she received, according to the suit.

DeNicolo isn’t alone in her claim, according to the suit.

In 2017, Ferguson told DeNicolo he feared another woman employed by WTMX (popularly known as The Mix) was preparing to make allegations of sexual harassment against him, according to the suit. Ferguson told DeNicolo “we need to circle the wagons” and “get our stories straight” and “told her to stay silent and to deny any allegations by other women that Ferguson had engaged in inappropriate behavior.”

According to the suit, Hubbard Radio, owner of WTMX, knew by 2019 that Ferguson was a “serial sexual predator” but “decided to protect Ferguson to avoid losing the financial benefit his top-rated ‘Eric in the Morning’ show brought to the station.”

Though Hubbard Radio is not a named defendant in the suit, DeNicolo blamed the company for failing to act.

“The employer’s decision to try to keep secret Ferguson’s serial misconduct emboldened Ferguson, who by then appeared to believe he was invincible,” the suit states.

“Because he is his station’s most successful on-the-air personality, the Mix treats Ferguson as though he is a ‘sacred cow’ the station must never offend,” the suit states.

Jeff England, vice president and market manager for Hubbard Chicago, said the company had looked into the claims.

“Hubbard Radio learned of complaints from a former employee, Cynthia DeNicolo, related to the conduct of Eric Ferguson while they were coworkers at The Mix,” England said in an emailed statement. “We take concerns about our workplace culture and the experience of our employees very seriously, and with the full support of Hubbard Radio Chicago and Hubbard Broadcasting we took steps immediately to investigate. An internal investigation and an independent external investigation found no evidence to corroborate allegations of illegal workplace conduct.”

DeNicolo was hired in 2000 after interning at the show during college. She was hired as an assistant producer and stayed at the position for two decades.

“Ferguson intended that DeNicolo suffer low wages and stalled career advancement as her punishment for refusing to succumb to his demands to resume the unwelcome sexual relationship she terminated in 2004,” the suit states.

Ferguson began flirting with DeNicolo “almost immediately” after she joined the station, according to the suit. Despite this, she was able to “keep the relationship professional for a few years.”

Things changed when Ferguson insisted he drive her home from a company event in 2003 and he tried to kiss her while alone in his car, the suit alleges.

DeNicolo “brushed him off,” but following the thwarted kiss, Ferguson “made it clear he would not take ‘no’ for an answer,” according to the suit.

He also began telling DeNicolo, in front of co-workers and one-on-one, that “she was replaceable and had to ‘pay her dues,'” according to the suit.

Ferguson also pressured DeNicolo from 2003 to 2013 to nanny his children, as much as six days a week, knowing she could not refuse, which led her to become known around The Mix as “Eric’s Babysitter,” according to the suit.

“Being forced to spend time with Ferguson’s wife added to the stress and humiliation,” the suit states.

The suit seeks unspecified monetary damages.

In 2017, Ferguson’s longtime co-host, Kathy Hart, exited the role after an unexplained absence from the show. Her departure came a year after both hosts were inducted into the National Radio Hall of Fame.

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Top Chicago radio personality accused of coercing staffer to perform sexual favorsMitch Dudekon September 28, 2021 at 1:04 am Read More »

R. Kelly’s conviction a victory, especially for Black women, in a battle we can never stop fightingCST Editorial Boardon September 28, 2021 at 1:05 am

The challenge when considering R. Kelly’s many offenses has always been sorting the criminal from the merely sordid.

Now, a jury in New York has done a good deal of work on that for us — there was a whole lot of flat-out criminal misconduct — and Robert Sylvester Kelly is sure to go off to prison for a good long time.

Among the only big questions we might still have are whether radio stations and music streaming services will continue to offer his music — hell, no, if we’re the DJs — and why so many big-named stars continued to collaborate with him over these many years when his criminality was not officially confirmed but his awful sordidness was beyond dispute.

What were you thinking, Jay-Z, Lady Gaga and Justin Bieber?

Kelly’s conviction is a victory for the #MeToo movement, we suppose, but it’s sure sad to think that a new social movement was required to condemn and bring to justice a pedophile who preyed on, controlled and exploited 13-year-old girls. We’re pretty sure our grandparents’ generation had issues with that, too.

Kelly conviction is more pointedly a victory, or at least a small kind of progress, for the rights and safety and dignity of Black women, who so often seem excluded from the conversation — and excluded from society’s sense of outrage — when we talk about male sexual predators.

Anita Hill to Kelly accusers

Some will argue otherwise, but we see a strong line connecting Anita Hill, the Black woman lawyer of great credibility who in 1991 was reviled when she accused her former boss, U.S. Supreme Court nominee Clarence Thomas, of sexual harassment and the young Black women who bravely came forward to call Kelly to account. They, too were reviled — there’s no stopping the internet — but they were heard and believed where perhaps it mattered most, before a federal jury in Brooklyn.

If shaming the R. Kellys of the world does nothing to turn the tide of misogyny and patriarchy that leave American women all too vulnerable, maybe a few decades behind bars for Kelly will send a stronger message.

Because, honestly, aren’t you just fed up with it? From Harvey Weinstein to Bill O’Reilly to Woody Allen to Charlie Rose to Matt Lauer to Steve Wynn?

To R. Kelly?

And did you hear this weekend about the allegations that a couple of fraternities at Northwestern University drugged people without their permission? If this is true, we have to wonder. Did these young men at a prestigious university never hear of Bill Cosby?

Sun-Times broke the story

It was this newspaper, the Chicago Sun-Times, that first broke the story of R. Kelly’s creepy life in the shadows with underage girls. The celebrated columnist Irv Kupcinet reported in 1994 that Kelly had married his protege Aaliyah Haughton, who Kelly said was 18. Haughton’s high school year book, Kup noted, put her age at just 15.

Then, in 2000, Sun-Times reporters Jim DeRogatis and Abdon M. Pallasch broke the first story that Kelly was having sex with teenage girls. They delved into several lawsuits filed against Kelly by women he targeted when they were underage.

But it would take years and decades and a sea-change of thinking before Kelly finally, on Monday, would be held to account in a court of law. An earlier trial in Illinois, on similar criminal charges, had ended in his acquittal. Not this time.

Other news outlets largely ignored the story for the better part of 20 years. Why was that? Feel free to speculate.

But one tenacious reporter above all, DeRogatis, never stopped digging, even after he moved on from this paper.

R. Kelly was found guilty. On all counts.

Good.

Send letters to [email protected].

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R. Kelly’s conviction a victory, especially for Black women, in a battle we can never stop fightingCST Editorial Boardon September 28, 2021 at 1:05 am Read More »

Top Chicago radio personality accused of coercing staffer to perform sexual favorsMitch Dudekon September 27, 2021 at 11:52 pm

Popular Chicago radio host Eric Ferguson allegedly coerced an assistant producer on his show into performing sexual favors, according to a lawsuit.

Cynthia DeNicolo accused Ferguson, who hosts WTMX-FM’s popular “Eric in the Morning” show, of coercing her to perform oral sex on him about twice a month between January and August of 2004, according to the suit, which was filed in May.

DeNicolo is a former assistant producer on the show who screened callers, booked interviews and sometimes joined Ferguson on air.

“Ferguson used codewords to communicate his unwanted demands for oral sex. He would tell DeNicolo he ‘needed a backrub,'” the lawsuit states.

“This coerced sexual activity typically occurred after a company sponsored work event or after the workday in DeNicolo’s apartment,” according to the lawsuit.

Attempts to reach Ferguson were unsuccessful.

His attorney, Peter Donati, filed a motion to dismiss the suit last month in which he claimed it was “devoid of factual allegations” and intended to “smear” Ferguson’s reputation.

Ferguson “emphatically denies the existence of a sexual relationship with plaintiff as well as engaging in the other conduct alleged in the complaint,” according to the motion.

Until she was fired on May 1, 2020, “Ferguson continued to torment DeNicolo by continuing to ask for sexual favors” and by reminding her that he had power over her job, according to the suit.

DeNicolo, 43, alleges Ferguson was behind her firing, though cuts due to COVID-19 was the official reason she received, according to the suit.

DeNicolo isn’t alone in her claim, according to the suit.

In 2017, Ferguson told DeNicolo he feared another woman employed by WTMX (popularly known as The Mix) was preparing to make allegations of sexual harassment against him, according to the suit. Ferguson told DeNicolo “we need to circle the wagons” and “get our stories straight” and “told her to stay silent and to deny any allegations by other women that Ferguson had engaged in inappropriate behavior.”

According to the suit, Hubbard Radio, owner of WTMX, knew by 2019 that Ferguson was a “serial sexual predator” but “decided to protect Ferguson to avoid losing the financial benefit his top-rated ‘Eric in the Morning’ show brought to the station.”

Though Hubbard Radio is not a named defendant in the suit, DeNicolo blamed the company for failing to act.

“The employer’s decision to try to keep secret Ferguson’s serial misconduct emboldened Ferguson, who by then appeared to believe he was invincible,” the suit states.

A representative from Hubbard Radio did not immediately return a request for comment.

“Because he is his station’s most successful on-the-air personality, the Mix treats Ferguson as though he is a ‘sacred cow’ the station must never offend,” the suit states.

DeNicolo was hired in 2000 after interning at the show during college. She was hired as an assistant producer and stayed at the position for two decades.

“Ferguson intended that DeNicolo suffer low wages and stalled career advancement as her punishment for refusing to succumb to his demands to resume the unwelcome sexual relationship she terminated in 2004,” the suit states.

Ferguson began flirting with DeNicolo “almost immediately” after she joined the station, according to the suit. Despite this, she was able to “keep the relationship professional for a few years.”

Things changed when Ferguson insisted he drive her home from a company event in 2003 and he tried to kiss her while alone in his car, the suit alleges.

DeNicolo “brushed him off,” but following the thwarted kiss, Ferguson “made it clear he would not take ‘no’ for an answer,” according to the suit.

He also began telling DeNicolo, in front of co-workers and one-on-one, that “she was replaceable and had to ‘pay her dues,'” according to the suit.

Ferguson also pressured DeNicolo from 2003 to 2013 to nanny his children, as much as six days a week, knowing she could not refuse, which led her to become known around The Mix as “Eric’s Babysitter,” according to the suit.

“Being forced to spend time with Ferguson’s wife added to the stress and humiliation,” the suit states.

The suit seeks unspecified monetary damages.

In 2017, Ferguson’s longtime co-host, Kathy Hart, exited the role after an unexplained absence from the show. Her departure came a year after both hosts were inducted into the National Radio Hall of Fame.

Read More

Top Chicago radio personality accused of coercing staffer to perform sexual favorsMitch Dudekon September 27, 2021 at 11:52 pm Read More »

R&B superstar R. Kelly convicted in sex trafficking trialAssociated Presson September 28, 2021 at 12:10 am

NEW YORK — R. Kelly, the R&B superstar known for his anthem “I Believe I Can Fly,” was convicted Monday in a sex trafficking trial after decades of avoiding criminal responsibility for numerous allegations of misconduct with young women and children.

A jury of seven men and five women found Kelly, 54, guilty of all nine counts, including racketeering, on their second day of deliberations. Kelly wore a face mask below black-rimmed glasses, remaining motionless with eyes downcast, as the verdict was read in federal court in Brooklyn.

Prosecutors alleged that the entourage of managers and aides who helped Kelly meet girls — and keep them obedient and quiet — amounted to a criminal enterprise. Two people have been charged with Kelly in a separate federal case pending in Chicago.

He faces the possibility of decades in prison for crimes including violating the Mann Act, an anti-sex trafficking law that prohibits taking anyone across state lines “for any immoral purpose.” Sentencing is scheduled for May 4.

One of Kelly’s lawyers, Deveraux Cannick, said he was disappointed and hoped to appeal.

“I think I’m even more disappointed the government brought the case in the first place, given all the inconsistencies,” Cannick said.

Several accusers testified in lurid detail during the trial, alleging that Kelly subjected them to perverse and sadistic whims when they were underage.

For years, the public and news media seemed to be more amused than horrified by allegations of inappropriate relationships with minors, starting with Kelly’s illegal marriage to the R&B phenom Aaliyah in 1994 when she was just 15.

His records and concert tickets kept selling. Other artists continued to record his songs, even after he was arrested in 2002 and accused of making a recording of himself sexually abusing and urinating on a 14-year-old girl.

Widespread public condemnation didn’t come until a widely watched docuseries, “Surviving R. Kelly,” helped make his case a signifier of the #MeToo era, and gave voice to accusers who wondered if their stories were previously ignored because they were Black women.

“To the victims in this case, your voices were heard and justice was finally served,” Acting U.S. Attorney Jacquelyn Kasulis said Monday.

U.S. Attorney Jacquelyn Kasulis speaks to the press on the guilty verdict of R. Kelly at the Brooklyn Federal Court House on Monday, Sept. 27, 2021, in New York.AP

Gloria Allred, a lawyer for some of Kelly’s accusers, said outside the courthouse that of all the predators she’s gone after — a list including Harvey Weinstein and Jeffrey Epstein — “Mr. Kelly is the worst.”

At the trial, several of Kelly’s accusers testified without using their real names to protect their privacy. Jurors were shown homemade videos of Kelly engaging in sex acts that prosecutors said were not consensual and became part of his personal “porn” collection.

The defense labeled the accusers “groupies” and “stalkers.”

Kelly’s lawyer, Cannick, questioned why women stayed in relationships with Kelly if they thought they were being exploited.

“You made a choice,” Cannick told one woman who testified, adding, “You participated of your own will.”

Kelly, born Robert Sylvester Kelly, has been jailed without bail since in 2019. The New York case is only part of the legal peril facing the singer. He also has pleaded not guilty to sex-related charges in Illinois and Minnesota. Trial dates in those cases have yet to be set.

At the trial, prosecutors painted the singer as a pampered man-child and control freak. His accusers said they were under orders to call him “Daddy,” expected to jump and kiss him anytime he walked into a room, and to cheer only for him when he played pickup basketball games in which they said he was a ball hog.

The accusers alleged they were ordered to sign nondisclosure forms and were subjected to threats and punishments such as violent spankings if they broke what one referred to as “Rob’s rules.” Some said they believed the videotapes he shot of them having sex would be used against them if they exposed what was happening.

Among the other more troubling tableaux: Kelly keeping a gun by his side while he berated one of his accusers as a prelude to forcing her to give him oral sex in a Los Angeles music studio; Kelly giving several accusers herpes without disclosing he had an STD; Kelly coercing a teenage boy to join him for sex with a naked girl who emerged from underneath a boxing ring in his garage; and Kelly shooting a shaming video of one alleged victim showing her smearing feces on her face as punishment for breaking his rules.

Of 14 possible racketeering acts considered in the trial, the jury found only two “not proven.” The allegations involved a woman who said Kelly took advantage of her in 2003 when she was an unsuspecting radio station intern.

She testified he whisked her to his Chicago recording studio, where she was kept locked up and was drugged before he sexually assaulted her while she was passed out. When she realized she was trapped, “I was scared. I was ashamed. I was embarrassed,” she said.

Other testimony focused on Kelly’s relationship with Aaliyah. One of the final witnesses described seeing him sexually abusing her around 1993, when Aaliyah was only 13 or 14.

Jurors also heard testimony about a fraudulent marriage scheme hatched to protect Kelly after he feared he had impregnated Aaliyah. Witnesses said they were married in matching jogging suits using a license falsely listing her age as 18; he was 27 at the time.

Aaliyah, whose full name was Aaliyah Dana Haughton, worked with Kelly, who wrote and produced her 1994 debut album, “Age Ain’t Nothing But A Number.” She died in a plane crash in 2001 at age 22.

Kelly had been tried once before, in Chicago in a child pornography case, but was acquitted in 2008.

For the Brooklyn trial, U.S. District Judge Ann Donnelly barred people not directly involved in the case from the courtroom in what she called a coronavirus precaution. Reporters and other spectators had to watch on a video feed from another room in the same building, though a few were allowed in the courtroom for the verdict.

___

Associated Press writer Michael R. Sisak contributed to this report.

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R&B superstar R. Kelly convicted in sex trafficking trialAssociated Presson September 28, 2021 at 12:10 am Read More »

Munoz joins what is becoming Chicago’s least exclusive clubSun-Times staffon September 28, 2021 at 12:29 am

Former Ald. Ricardo Munoz (22nd) is the latest member the Chicago City Hall of Shame.

With his guilty plea Monday to wire fraud and money laundering, Munoz becomes the 36th member of the City Council to be convicted of a crime since the early 1970s.

There’s no induction ceremony — other than any related to whatever penalty will be handed down when the former City Council member is sentenced, now scheduled for Jan. 5.

But either way, Munoz is the first former or sitting Chicago alderperson to be convicted since Ald. Willie Cochran’s 2019 guilty plea added him to the crowd of those who’ve been found guilty of a crime — extortion, embezzlement, tax evasion and bribery among them.

Since then, state law has changed the name of the office from “alderman” to the more general neutral “alderperson.”

But whether they like it or not, Munoz and the rest are just as likely to be remembered as “aldercrooks.”

Former Ald. Ricardo Munoz walks out of the Dirksen Federal Courthouse at 219 S. Dearborn St after his hearing in which he plead guilty Monday.Anthony Vazquez/Sun-Times

Munoz, incidentally, is the first current or former alderperson convicted from the Southwest Side’s 22nd Ward.

Cochran was the third from the South Side’s 20th Ward, following in the sad footsteps of his predecessors Arenda Troutman and Cliff Kelley. Even more sadly, two other wards — the Southwest Side’s 23rd and Northwest Side’s 31st — also count three former alderpersons on the list.

The ranks of the fallen also includes the father and son duo of William Carothers (28th) and Isaac “Ike” Carothers (29th), convicted nearly 30 years apart of unrelated crimes.

And there’s Ambrosio Medrano (25th), the Grover Cleveland of Chicago corruption, earning a place on the list three times for three separate corruption scandals.

The former Southwest Side alderman was first convicted in 1996 for accepting bribes. And then in 2014, two federal judges presiding over separate cases handed Medrano a total of 13 years in prison over corrupt deals involving bribes and kickbacks, although Medrano left prison last year as part of an effort to release inmates who are at-risk of contracting the coronavirus.

So, dating back to 1973, here’s Chicago’s Aldermanic Hall of Shame. Some on the list appear for crimes that occurred after their time in City Council, including James Laski, Ed Vrdolyak and William Beavers.

And the list only includes those actually convicted — not those indicted, but who have not yet gone, or never did go, to trial — in the interest of keeping it to a manageable number.

Fred Hubbard (2nd) – 1973
Pleaded guilty to embezzling.

Joseph Jambrone (28th) – 1973
Convicted of taking bribes.

Casimir J. Staszcuk (13th) – 1973
Found guilty of extortion by demanding $9,000 in exchange for allowing three zoning changes. Also convicted of mail fraud and income tax evasion.

Joseph Potempa (23rd) – 1973
Pleaded guilty to taking a $3,000 bribe to support a zoning change in his ward — and for failing to report that income to the IRS.

Frank Kuta (23rd) – 1974
Convicted of taking a $1,500 bribe from a builder to approve a zoning change and also for failing to report that income.

Thomas E. Keane (31st) – 1974
Convicted of mail fraud and conspiracy for a scheme involving the purchase and resale of tax-delinquent properties.

Ald. Thomas Keane leaves the federal courthouse in 1974 after he is sentenced to 5 years in prison.Chicago Sun Times file

Paul T. Wigoda (49th) – 1974
Convicted of tax evasion for failing to report a $50,000 bribe related to the rezoning of the Edgewater Golf Club. He also was Keane’s law partner.

Donald T. Swinarski (12th) – 1975
Pleaded guilty to filing a false tax return in connection with a $7,000 payoff for a zoning change. Later became a state senator.

Edward T. Scholl (41st) – 1975
Convicted of taking bribes.

Stanley Zydlo (26th) – 1980
Pleaded guilty to paying a bribe.

William Carothers (28th) – 1983
Convicted of attempted extortion.

Ald. William Carothers (28th), left, in 1981, and his son, Ald. Isaac “Ike” Carothers (29th), right, in 2010. Sun-Times file photos.

Louis P. Farina (36th) – 1983
Convicted of extortion.

Ald. Louis P. Farina (36th) in 1976.Ald. Louis P. Farina (36th) in 1976.

Tyrone T. Kenner (3rd) – 1983
Convicted of taking bribes.

Chester A. Kuta (31st) – 1987
As part of the Operation Phocus investigation of bribe-taking by city licensing and inspection officials, Kuta pleaded guilty to charges of filing a false income tax return and to extorting $5,370 from Leonard Kraus, a businessman who paid the bribes to maintain a flea market in Kuta’s ward.

Clifford P. Kelley (20th) – 1987
Pleaded guilty to taking bribes.

Wallace Davis Jr. (27th) – 1987
Convicted of extortion.

Perry Hutchinson (9th) – 1988
Pleaded guilty to taking bribes.

Marian Humes (8th) – 1989
Pleaded guilty to taking bribes.

Fred Roti (1st) – 1993
Convicted for bribery, extortion and racketeering.

Ambrosio Medrano (25th) — 1996, 2014
In 2014, a federal judge said Medrano pulled of an “unprecedented … corruption trifecta” that included his role in a scheme to take bribes and kickbacks to sell bandages to public hospitals, along with another conviction that year, after his 2 1/2 -year sentence in the 1990s for accepting bribes.

Ambrosio Medrano discusses his prison sentence with the Sun-Times in 2014.Jessica Koscielniak / Sun-Times file

Allan Streeter (17th) – 1996
Pleaded guilty to extortion.

Joseph Martinez (31st) – 1997
Pleaded guilty to holding a ghost-payroll job after he served as alderman.

Joseph Martinez, former alderman of the 31st Ward. Sun-Times Photo/ John White in 1981.John White/Sun-Times file

Jesse Evans (21st) – 1997
Convicted of racketeering and extortion.

Joseph Kotlarz (35th) – 1997
Convicted of theft and conspiracy for skimming $240,000 from a 1992 tollway land deal.

John Madryzk (13th) – 1998
Pleaded guilty to partaking in a ghost-payrolling scheme.

Larry Bloom (5th) – 1998
Pleaded guilty to a single felony tax charge stemming from the Operation Silver Shovel corruption probe. Admitted accepting $14,000 in bribes from an FBI mole.

Virgil Jones (15th) – 1999
Convicted of taking bribes.

Ald. Virgil Jones (15th) at the federal building in 1999.Chicago Sun Times file

Percy Giles (37th) – 1999
Found guilty of taking payoffs and tax evasion.

James Laski (23rd) – 2006
Pleaded guilty to accepting $48,000 in bribes related to the city’s Hired Truck Program. His criminal conviction stemmed from his role as city clerk.

Ed Vrdolyak (10th) – 2008 and 2019
Though he never was convicted for anything related to his role as an alderman, authorities have since convicted him twice in public corruption-related schemes.

Ald. Edward R. Vrdolyak talks on the phone on Election Night at the Bismarck Hotel’s Democratic Party Headquarters in 1982.Sun-Times archvies

Arenda Troutman (20th) – 2008
Pleaded guilty to bribery and tax charges, admitted to extorting developers seeking zoning preferences.

Isaac “Ike” Carothers (29th) – 2010
Pleaded guilty to bribery, mail fraud and tax fraud for accepting $40,000 in home improvements, meals and sports tickets from a West Side developer in exchange for zoning changes that netted the developer millions. William Carothers was his father.

William Beavers (7th) – 2013
Sentenced to six months and fined $10,000 after being found guilty of tax evasion.

Sandi Jackson (7th) – 2013
Both Sandi Jackson and her now ex-husband, former Rep. Jesse Jackson Jr., pleaded guilty to various schemes relating to the looting of his campaign committee. Sandi Jackson pleaded guilty to filing a false federal income tax return.

Willie Cochran (20th) – 2018
Cochran pleaded guilty to one count of wire fraud for spending money from a ward fund meant for charity on personal expenses.

Ricardo Munoz (22nd) — 2021
Pleaded guilty Monday to wire fraud and money laundering, admitting he took nearly $38,000 from the Chicago Progressive Reform Caucus to pay for personal expenses such as skydiving and a relative’s college tuition.

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Munoz joins what is becoming Chicago’s least exclusive clubSun-Times staffon September 28, 2021 at 12:29 am Read More »

Glenbard West senior Braden Huff commits to GonzagaJoe Henricksenon September 27, 2021 at 11:01 pm

The call from Gonzaga was a game-changer.

Braden Huff, a coveted high-major recruit with a surplus of offers at that level, started hearing from coach Mark Few’s high-powered program in July.

“When I got that first call, I remember I was at one of our AAU tournaments and I saw a call on my phone from Spokane, Wash., and I was immediately excited,” Huff said of that first contact from Gonzaga assistant coach Roger Powell.

The Zags soon checked off box after box as the Glenbard West senior became more familiar with Gonzaga and the coaching staff.

Following an official visit to Gonzaga this past weekend, Huff committed to Few, Powell and arguably the hottest basketball program in the country on Sunday.

A student of the game, Huff was familiar with more than just Gonzaga’s win totals and success. He was well aware of the type of players the Bulldogs have developed and won with over the years.

“I was excited immediately because I knew their track record and history with bigs like me — even before they started recruiting me,” said Huff. “I kind of understood how they developed those guys. I think having that understanding prior to them reaching out, along with them coming off the kind of season they had, led to a lot of excitement for me.”

Huff, who averaged 17.5 points, 6.5 rebounds and 2.8 assists in just 22 minutes a game this past season, is the quintessential Gonzaga big man. He’s blessed with a skill level you rarely see in players at his size. With his dribbling and passing ability, along with range out to the three-point line, he’s a 6-10 player teams can run an offense through.

Several Big Ten programs were locked in on Huff throughout the recruiting process. But in the end it came down to Gonzaga and Virginia Tech, where Huff took two official visits — one in June and a return trip to Blacksburg in September.

The high-profile Gonzaga program had some ground to make up and did just that over the past two-plus months.

“Coach Powell did a great job making me feel a part of it, even from a distance,” said Huff, who is the City/Suburban Hoops Report’s No. 2 ranked player in the state in the Class of 2022. “It felt like family pretty quickly, and they made me feel wanted and welcomed. Then I fell in love with it on my visit.”

Huff’s visit included watching a couple of practices and seeing the likes of preseason All-American big man Drew Timme and freshman Chet Holmgren, the projected No. 1 pick in the 2022 NBA Draft, up close.

“I really enjoyed watching them go live and go at it,” said Huff. “Watching guys like Drew Timme and Chet [Holmgren] and seeing them bring the ball up and do the things they did with the ball, that’s what I have to offer with my game. They give the players the freedom to do that and that really caught my eye.”

In addition to the quick connection he made with the coaching staff, the detailed Huff was impressed with the plan they showed in helping him develop into the player he wants to be.

“We met with the strength coach and he walked us through his process,” said Huff. “I definitely feel like he is someone who can help take my game to another level.

“And, honestly, just meeting with the coaches and players in person, I really felt like it was a group of guys that reminded me of kids on my high school team and AAU team with the Wolves. I felt like I fit right in and they were all about the right things.”

Roughly two years ago the City/Suburban Hoops Report tabbed Huff as “The state’s best unknown prospect.” Now he’s just over a month away from signing with Gonzaga, a program with a pair of national runner-up finishes in the last five years and an average of 33 wins a year during that time.

“If you would have told me this when I was a freshman, I wouldn’t have believed it,” Huff said of heading to a powerhouse like Gonzaga. “But now I’m just excited and want to get to work.”

The program has been to the NCAA Tournament every year since 1999 and has a growing list of NBA big men who developed under Few, including Zach Collins, Kelly Olynyk, Domantas Sabonis and Rui Hachimura to name a few and Tille and Holmgren to come.

Before Huff heads off to the Pacific Northwest next summer and joins one of the winningest programs in college basketball, Huff will lead a Glenbard West team that should be the best in school history. The Hilltoppers will be fighting for a state championship in 2021-22.

“Now that it’s off my chest,” Huff said of his recruitment, “I am ready to focus on the high school season and lock in with my teammates and reach some of those goals that we have set for ourselves.”

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Glenbard West senior Braden Huff commits to GonzagaJoe Henricksenon September 27, 2021 at 11:01 pm Read More »

R&B superstar R. Kelly convicted in sex trafficking trialAssociated Presson September 27, 2021 at 11:35 pm

NEW YORK — R. Kelly, the R&B superstar known for his anthem “I Believe I Can Fly,” was convicted Monday in a sex trafficking trial after decades of avoiding criminal responsibility for numerous allegations of misconduct with young women and children.

A jury of seven men and five women found Kelly, 54, guilty of all nine counts, including racketeering, on their second day of deliberations. Kelly wore a face mask below black-rimmed glasses, remaining motionless with eyes downcast, as the verdict was read in federal court in Brooklyn.

Prosecutors alleged that the entourage of managers and aides who helped Kelly meet girls — and keep them obedient and quiet — amounted to a criminal enterprise. Two people have been charged with Kelly in a separate federal case pending in Chicago.

He faces the possibility of decades in prison for crimes including violating the Mann Act, an anti-sex trafficking law that prohibits taking anyone across state lines “for any immoral purpose.” Sentencing is scheduled for May 4.

One of Kelly’s lawyers, Deveraux Cannick, said he was disappointed and hoped to appeal.

“I think I’m even more disappointed the government brought the case in the first place, given all the inconsistencies,” Cannick said.

Several accusers testified in lurid detail during the trial, alleging that Kelly subjected them to perverse and sadistic whims when they were underage.

For years, the public and news media seemed to be more amused than horrified by allegations of inappropriate relationships with minors, starting with Kelly’s illegal marriage to the R&B phenom Aaliyah in 1994 when she was just 15.

His records and concert tickets kept selling. Other artists continued to record his songs, even after he was arrested in 2002 and accused of making a recording of himself sexually abusing and urinating on a 14-year-old girl.

Widespread public condemnation didn’t come until a widely watched docuseries, “Surviving R. Kelly,” helped make his case a signifier of the #MeToo era, and gave voice to accusers who wondered if their stories were previously ignored because they were Black women.

“To the victims in this case, your voices were heard and justice was finally served,” Acting U.S. Attorney Jacquelyn Kasulis said Monday.

U.S. Attorney Jacquelyn Kasulis speaks to the press on the guilty verdict of R. Kelly at the Brooklyn Federal Court House on Monday, Sept. 27, 2021, in New York.AP

Gloria Allred, a lawyer for some of Kelly’s accusers, said outside the courthouse that of all the predators she’s gone after — a list including Harvey Weinstein and Jeffrey Epstein — “Mr. Kelly is the worst.”

At the trial, several of Kelly’s accusers testified without using their real names to protect their privacy. Jurors were shown homemade videos of Kelly engaging in sex acts that prosecutors said were not consensual and became part of his personal “porn” collection.

The defense labeled the accusers “groupies” and “stalkers.”

Kelly’s lawyer, Cannick, questioned why women stayed in relationships with Kelly if they thought they were being exploited.

“You made a choice,” Cannick told one woman who testified, adding, “You participated of your own will.”

Kelly, born Robert Sylvester Kelly, has been jailed without bail since in 2019. The New York case is only part of the legal peril facing the singer. He also has pleaded not guilty to sex-related charges in Illinois and Minnesota. Trial dates in those cases have yet to be set.

At the trial, prosecutors painted the singer as a pampered man-child and control freak. His accusers said they were under orders to call him “Daddy,” expected to jump and kiss him anytime he walked into a room, and to cheer only for him when he played pickup basketball games in which they said he was a ball hog.

The accusers alleged they were ordered to sign nondisclosure forms and were subjected to threats and punishments such as violent spankings if they broke what one referred to as “Rob’s rules.” Some said they believed the videotapes he shot of them having sex would be used against them if they exposed what was happening.

Among the other more troubling tableaux: Kelly keeping a gun by his side while he berated one of his accusers as a prelude to forcing her to give him oral sex in a Los Angeles music studio; Kelly giving several accusers herpes without disclosing he had an STD; Kelly coercing a teenage boy to join him for sex with a naked girl who emerged from underneath a boxing ring in his garage; and Kelly shooting a shaming video of one alleged victim showing her smearing feces on her face as punishment for breaking his rules.

Of 14 possible racketeering acts considered in the trial, the jury found only two “not proven.” The allegations involved a woman who said Kelly took advantage of her in 2003 when she was an unsuspecting radio station intern.

She testified he whisked her to his Chicago recording studio, where she was kept locked up and was drugged before he sexually assaulted her while she was passed out. When she realized she was trapped, “I was scared. I was ashamed. I was embarrassed,” she said.

Other testimony focused on Kelly’s relationship with Aaliyah. One of the final witnesses described seeing him sexually abusing her around 1993, when Aaliyah was only 13 or 14.

Jurors also heard testimony about a fraudulent marriage scheme hatched to protect Kelly after he feared he had impregnated Aaliyah. Witnesses said they were married in matching jogging suits using a license falsely listing her age as 18; he was 27 at the time.

Aaliyah, whose full name was Aaliyah Dana Haughton, worked with Kelly, who wrote and produced her 1994 debut album, “Age Ain’t Nothing But A Number.” She died in a plane crash in 2001 at age 22.

Kelly had been tried once before, in Chicago in a child pornography case, but was acquitted in 2008.

For the Brooklyn trial, U.S. District Judge Ann Donnelly barred people not directly involved in the case from the courtroom in what she called a coronavirus precaution. Reporters and other spectators had to watch on a video feed from another room in the same building, though a few were allowed in the courtroom for the verdict.

___

Associated Press writer Michael R. Sisak contributed to this report.

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R&B superstar R. Kelly convicted in sex trafficking trialAssociated Presson September 27, 2021 at 11:35 pm Read More »