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R&B superstar R. Kelly convicted in sex trafficking trialAssociated Presson September 27, 2021 at 10:30 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.

In the audio of one of the recordings seen by jurors, a woman he had met when she was 18 or 19 could be heard weeping while calling herself a “stupid b—-” and telling Kelly, “Daddy, I want you to fix me.” He ordered her to “keep saying it.”

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.

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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 10:30 pm Read More »

Munoz joins what is becoming Chicago’s least exclusive clubSun-Times staffon September 27, 2021 at 10:36 pm

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.

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

Ald. William Carothers in 1981.Sun-Times file

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.

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.

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 27, 2021 at 10:36 pm Read More »

Ex-Ald. Ricardo Munoz pleads guilty in fraud case, admits he used caucus money for personal expensesJon Seidelon September 27, 2021 at 10:38 pm

Former Ald. Ricardo Munoz (22nd) 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 like skydiving and a relative’s college tuition.

The onetime veteran alderman entered his plea five months after a federal grand jury handed down a 29-page indictment that alleged Munoz’s behavior continued after the feds’ aggressive pursuit of public corruption had blown into full view in late 2018 and early 2019. It said he even used some of the money at Lover’s Lane in February 2019.

Munoz faces a likely sentence of around a year in prison. He is also expected to pay $6,891 in restitution “owed to the victim.” His sentencing is set for Jan. 5.

Richard Kling, Munoz’s defense attorney, said after court that Munoz “spent decades giving to the West Side community that elected him.”

“Sometimes good people do foolish or stupid things,” Kling said. “He’s admitted to this court that he did a foolish or stupid thing. He’s ready to accept responsibility and pay the price.”

Munoz, 56, declined to comment.

Attorney Richard Kling, left, speaks to the media about his client, former Ald. Ricardo Munoz, right, inside Dirksen Federal Courthouse.Anthony Vazquez/Sun-Times

Munoz announced his retirement from the City Council in 2018. He was charged in a domestic violence incident involving his wife early in 2019, but a Cook County judge found him not guilty of misdemeanor battery in June of that year. Munoz was also in counseling for alcoholism that year.

Before he entered his plea in federal court Monday, Munoz told U.S. District Judge John Kness he considers himself to be “retired” rather than unemployed. He said he has been living in Riverside, and he acknowledged he had three cans of Budweiser Sunday evening. However, he said he felt fully sober during Monday’s hearing.

After Munoz’s plea, Kness agreed to hold a sealed hearing regarding what prosecutors called an “outstanding bond violation.” The judge asked all members of the media and public to leave the room.

Three sitting members of the Chicago City Council also face separate federal indictments of their own. Ald. Edward M. Burke (14th) is charged with racketeering, Ald. Carrie M. Austin (34th) is charged with bribery and lying to the FBI, and Ald. Patrick Daley Thompson (11th) is charged with tax counts and lying to the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp.

Former Ald. Ricardo Munoz walks out of the Dirksen Federal Courthouse on Monday after pleading guilty in his fraud case.Anthony Vazquez/Sun-Times

A fourth, Ald. James Gardiner (45th), is the subject of a federal investigation revolving around potential bribery allegations, according to a source. He has not been criminally charged.

Munoz faced 15 wire fraud counts and one money laundering count in the indictment filed against him April 29. It accused him of trying to cover his tracks by repaying the money he took from the Progressive Reform Caucus or by claiming it was for “consulting” or “Election Day expenses.”

The former alderman’s plea agreement with prosecutors alleges he took $37,891 from the progressive caucus, including $16,000 he transferred in October 2016 to a joint account he held with a family member. He then used $15,254 from the joint account to pay tuition to an out-of-state university.

Munoz later used $16,000 from a Parent Plus loan to pay the money back.

He also bought jewelry from Louis Vuitton, women’s clothing from Nordstrom, three Apple iPhones and Chicago Bulls tickets, according to the plea agreement.

Munoz made $10,560 in cash withdrawals from the progressive caucus account in November and December 2018, including while he was on vacation in New York in late November 2018, it said.

Federal authorities famously raided Burke’s City Hall offices Nov. 29, 2018, a move that first revealed the feds’ public corruption investigations, which are still ongoing.

Between November 2018 and February 2019, Munoz used the progressive caucus debit card to spend $1,400 on a Southwest Airlines ticket from Los Angeles to Chicago for an acquaintance, Los Angeles Kings hockey tickets, a stay at the Los Angeles Crowne Plaza hotel, and at Lover’s Lane in West Dundee.

In March 2019, the plea agreement said, a contractor asked Munoz for the progressive caucus’ account balance so it could be reported at a meeting. Munoz told the contractor in an Apple iMessage the account had $11,000 in it.

It really only had $94.79, according to the plea agreement.

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Ex-Ald. Ricardo Munoz pleads guilty in fraud case, admits he used caucus money for personal expensesJon Seidelon September 27, 2021 at 10:38 pm Read More »

White Sox fans will be back in black for postseasonDaryl Van Schouwenon September 27, 2021 at 10:54 pm

Back in black?

That’s what the White Sox want to see when they bring playoff baseball back to their home ballpark for the first time since 2008 when they host at least one game in the American League Division series next week. In 2008, their 1-0 “blackout game” tiebreaker victory over the Twins for the division championship went down as one of the top team moments in recent history.

Fans were asked to wear all black then, and almost all of the sold-out crowd obliged. Jim Thome homered, 38-year-old center fielder Ken Griffey Jr. threw out a runner at home and John Danks and Bobby Jenks took care of the pitching.

The Sox are asking fans to do the same when the Sox play in the ALDS next week. Who they play and when is not official, although it’s looking like the Astros in a series that would open in Houston. The Astros lead the Sox by 2 1/2 games for home field and own the tiebreaker. The Sox have five games left, the Astros three apiece against the Rays and Athletics.

“We are going to be promoting and encouraging fans to wear black throughout the playoffs hoping we have an extended stay,” Brooks Boyer, Sox vice president for marketing, said. “We want to create a great, home-field atmosphere at games that our players will feed off of. It should be fun.”

Back rally towels will be given away for the first home game, which would be Game 3 on Sunday, Oct. 9, if the current standings stay the same. The Sox will announce more details Tuesday and promote the blackout it through all of their platforms.

The Sox have five games left in the regular season, all at home, after playing a makeup game in Detroit Monday. Trailing the Astros by three games for the No. 2 seed in the ALDS, the Sox will likely open the best-of-five series at Houston Oct. 6 and 7. After a travel day. Games 3 and 4 (if necessary) would be at Guaranteed Rate Field on Oct. 9 and 10, with game 5 (if necessary) Oct. 12 in Houston.

The ALCS starts Oct. 15 and will end Oct. 23 if it goes seven games. The World Series opens Oct. 26 and concludes Nov. 3 if it goes seven games.

The Sox are in the postseason in consecutive years for the first time in their history. They played all three games of the Wild Card series in Oakland last season, which they lost 2 games to 1.

Rodon is on for Wednesday

Manager Tony La Russa said All-Star Carlos Rodon’s bullpen session Sunday was “just OK” but he wants to start Wednesday against the Reds to test his fatigued left shoulder. It will be his last outing before a possible postseason start.

“He didn’t really let it go,” La Russa said. “But he said he’s good to try it.”

Rodon (12-5, 2.47 ERA) pitched three innings in his last start and his pitched 23 innings in August and September. La Russa will hope for five or six innings but won’t force it.

“We’re just going to watch him throw that first inning and see if it makes sense to send him out for the second. As always, you hope for the best and prepare for the worst.”

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White Sox fans will be back in black for postseasonDaryl Van Schouwenon September 27, 2021 at 10:54 pm Read More »

Bulls guard Zach LaVine says contract talk is for a later dateJoe Cowleyon September 27, 2021 at 8:40 pm

The time for contract talk will come.

It certainly won’t be in a public forum, and definitely wasn’t going to play out during Monday’s media day, with training camp less than 24 hours away.

For now, the only talk Zach LaVine was interested in had to do with “hardhats” and getting to know his new teammates.

“My plan is to [Tuesday] get ready for training camp, get ready for the season, and try and help these guys win just like everybody else,” LaVine said, when asked about his pending free agency after the 2021-22 season. “I’m not worried about my contract right now. That will be a point and time in the future, and my agent I will sit down and discuss it, go from there, but right now it’s about the Bulls and getting better tomorrow.”

A much different sounding LaVine than the one from the end of a disappointing 2020-21 season, where LaVine’s contract “plan” then involved getting “what I deserve, and whatever that is I’ll have it coming to me.”

Why the softer stance now?

He can thank his front office for that.

Not only did they give him better pieces this offseason, but they kept him in the loop about those pieces, listened to his opinion on those pieces, and then reiterated how they also feel about LaVine in their long-term future plans.

“The one thing we know is that we’re committed to Zach,” Bulls executive vice president of basketball operations Arturas Karnisovas said. “We want him to be in Chicago for a very long time. I think the trade deadline and free agency moves kind of proved that.”

It proved something.

Karnisovas & Co. added Nikola Vucevic at the deadline last season, and then this offseason added Lonzo Ball, Alex Caruso and DeMar DeRozan.

That’s two All-Stars, an elite ball-handler/play-maker with Ball, and a guard in Caruso who thrives on doing the dirty work that LaVine hasn’t always wanted to get involved with.

But that also comes with expectations.

Bowing out when the postseason arrives like the Bulls have done for four straight seasons isn’t really an option. Especially if they are invested in LaVine as a max player, and a scenario in which they could have to pay him $201.3 million over the next five years.

LaVine, who has never reached the playoffs, is well aware of that, but also aware that his skillset does come with a hefty price tag. If he focuses on winning basketball games rather than winning the PR battle about his contract, someone will pay him.

Although he did like hearing Karnisovas insist that the organization was committed to LaVine.

“It means a lot hearing that from them,” LaVine said. “I think you guys know I’m a team-first guy, I’m excited with all the moves that were made, and really looking forward to getting into camp and getting to know these guys and getting the season started because we all have a lot to prove.

“This is the most excited I’ve been, especially with the talent of the team that we have here, the support [the front office has] given me, I’m extremely happy about that, and I’m ready to hit the ground running and go out there and just get it going. There’s an excitement around the city, but there’s a bigger excitement around the team as well because we know we can do something.”

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Bulls guard Zach LaVine says contract talk is for a later dateJoe Cowleyon September 27, 2021 at 8:40 pm Read More »

R&B superstar R. Kelly convicted in sex trafficking trialAssociated Presson September 27, 2021 at 9:08 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.

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.

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 tableaus: 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.

Some of the most harrowing testimony came from 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.

She said one of R. Kelly’s employees warned her to keep her mouth shut about what had happened.

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.

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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 9:08 pm Read More »

Man charged with attempted murder for allegedly wounding Chicago police officer in South Shore shootingDavid Struetton September 27, 2021 at 9:28 pm

After a gunman shot two teenagers last week in South Shore, he opened fire again and wounded a Chicago police officer who was applying a tourniquet to one of the young victim’s leg, Cook County prosecutors said Monday.

After Aaron Jenkins struck the 30-year-old female officer in both thighs Friday, she got into her police SUV and was driven to a hospital where she told colleagues “I’ll be back soon.”, prosecutors said.

One of Jenkins’ teenage victims, an 18-year-old, died. The younger victim, 16, was on a ventilator in critical condition, authorities said.

After the shooting, Jenkins, 26, went on to barricade himself in a nearby home in an hours-long standoff with police, prosecutors said. He surrendered on Saturday.

The initial shooting broke out after Jenkins and his girlfriend walked up to the back porch at his sister’s house in the 7200 block of South Jeffery Boulevard, prosecutors said. There, surveillance cameras captured the two teenagers come up from under the porch, prosecutors said. Jenkins had a brief interaction with pair before he allegedly opened fire.

The two teens retreated but then the older teen, who was hit several times, returned fire from the middle of the street, prosecutors said. That teen, who suffered gunshot wounds to the neck and shoulder, ran to an alley and collapsed, prosecutors said. Police later found a fully-loaded handgun discarded in a nearby brush pile.

The officer, who was later wounded, and her partner drove toward the scene after they heard the gunfire while on patrol a block away, prosecutors said.

The officers found the 16-year-old bleeding in the middle of the street, prosecutors said. The officer who was later shot opened her driver door. Then, she placed her left foot on the ground and began to apply a tourniquet to the 16-year-old’s leg, prosecutors said. Soon, more gunfire erupted from the south end of the street and the officer was hit, prosecutors said.

Shell casings and a fired gun were found in the street near the younger teen, who had been shot in the hip and chest, prosecutors said.

Jenkins was ordered held without bail Monday for attempted murder of a police officer and aggravated battery with a firearm.

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Man charged with attempted murder for allegedly wounding Chicago police officer in South Shore shootingDavid Struetton September 27, 2021 at 9:28 pm Read More »

Matt Nagy putting new Justin Fields plan in motionMark Potashon September 27, 2021 at 9:35 pm

The Bears’ miserable 47-yard offensive performance in a 26-6 loss to the Browns on Sunday exposed two failings of coach Matt Nagy: An inability to give his prized quarterback prospect a game plan he can win with. And an inability to adjust when that plan went awry.

You’d think at some point — just out of concern for Justin Fields’ health as the rookie was under siege while getting sacked nine times — that Nagy would have utilized Fields’ mobility and speed and called rollout-type plays that not only would get Fields out of harm’s way, but allow him to better use his 4.4 40 speed as a weapon. But it was rarely used.

“There were things that [the Browns] were not gonna allow him to do,” Nagy said. “Getting to the edge sometimes isn’t as easy as you would think.”

Maybe so, but Nagy is going to have to come up with a better plan. That’s another daunting issue for Nagy — he doesn’t seem very good at chess. He uses his queen more like a pawn.

Therein lies the challenge for Nagy if Fields starts again Sunday against the Lions at Soldier Field — putting his young quarterback in the best position to succeed. That means either protecting him better to run the Andy Dalton offense as best he can, or getting Fields out of the pocket to do what he does best — run, threaten, force the defense to make decisions, and improvise.

“There’s some times that you can [do that],” Nagy said. “They had a few times where they did have the edge. We weren’t able to get to the edge a few times. So there’s other times where you’ve got to go to something else. And that’s our job as coaches to make sure we do that.

“And that’s where … we learn too, some of that stuff — like how teams are going to attack Justin. So knowing that now, we’ve got to be able to counter, and that’s what we’ll do.”

Nagy seemed to indicate that he would be more aggressive in utilizing Fields’ strengths the next time. But at this point, you just never know.

“There’s a lot of things that we’re doing up there in the office right now that guys are looking at,” Nagy said. “We got together early this morning and you start really talking through how things went [Sunday]. And there are some things that you learn as you go through this. And when you learn that, what do you do that’s different and what do you do the same. And [using Fields on the move], is that part of it? It can be.”

Bears quarterbacks coach John DeFilippo wouldn’t address the issue of how to best utilize Fields. That’s Nagy’s territory — though DeFilippo has a say in how Fields is used. “We’re all involved in the game-planning process,” he said. “Matt is always open to ideas. He’s one of the best head coaches I’ve been around in terms of taking new ideas.”

DeFilippo did acknowledge that Fields is “very well prepared” to take advantage of moving the pocket.

“He’s shown that in the past,” DeFilippo said. “He showed it [against the Browns] — we threw a pass going to his left and he did a nice job of passing the first progression, go to the No. 2, then back to the No. 1. So I think Justin’s very well-schooled in that and we’ll continue to work on that for sure.”

The sooner the better, because after Sunday’s fiasco, it sure looks like Fields should be the star of this offense, not Matt Nagy’s design of it.

“It will get better,” DeFilippo said. “And we’ll look back on this game at some point in the future here and — I don’t want to say laugh, because it’s not funny. But we’ll look back on it and say, ‘Wow, what a growing experience that was for us [from] where we were then to now.'”

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Matt Nagy putting new Justin Fields plan in motionMark Potashon September 27, 2021 at 9:35 pm Read More »

Deadly counterfeit pills containing fentanyl now ‘everywhere’ in Chicago, DEA saysFrank Mainon September 27, 2021 at 9:38 pm

Chicago’s drug addiction epidemic has taken a dangerous new turn, the federal Drug Enforcement Administration is warning with skyrocketing sales of counterfeit prescription pills containing the deadly synthetic opioid fentanyl.

Mexican drug cartels increasingly are manufacturing the pills with fentanyl, which is at least 30 times more potent than heroin and is fatal in doses of as little as two milligrams.

“It’s everywhere,” says Robert Bell, head of the DEA’s Chicago field division. “They’re available in street deals, for purchase online, in schools. It’s very scary.”

Unsuspecting people think they’re getting a pharmaceutical-grade pill like OxyContin or Xanax, Bell says.

“The cartels are exploiting the opioid pill problem,” he says.

Robert Bell, special agent in charge of the federal Drug Enforcement Administration’s Chicago field office.Pat Nabong / Sun-Times

This summer, the DEA had warned Lollapalooza concertgoers to avoid buying pills there because of the dangerous counterfeits. Bell says there’s a broad market for them — from recreational users to people addicted to opioids who buy drugs in the West Side’s open-air drug markets.

Mexican cartels have been ramping up fentanyl sales in the United States since about 2015. Chinese criminal networks are the primary suppliers of Fentanyl to the cartels, according to the DEA.

Until recently, most of that fentanyl was mixed into heroin to make it more potent — and more desirable — to regular users. It led to mass deaths in Chicago that were attributed to bad batches of the powerful drug combination.

Since 2019, the DEA’s seizure of fentanyl-laced pills has skyrocketed in Chicago and nationally. About 9.5 million such pills have been seized this year across the country, according to the DEA. About 269 kilograms of suspected fentanyl has been seized since October 2020 within the DEA’s Chicago field division, which includes Illinois, Indiana and Wisconsin.

“We’re talking about enough fentanyl to kill millions of people,” Bell says.

Last year, there were 912 overdose deaths in Chicago and 1,387 deaths in all of Cook County that involved synthetic opioids like fentanyl. Officials don’t know whether any involved counterfeit opioid pills.

Throughout Cook County, there were another 446 overdose deaths last year from naturally occurring opiates like heroin, according to the Cook County medical examiner’s office.

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Deadly counterfeit pills containing fentanyl now ‘everywhere’ in Chicago, DEA saysFrank Mainon September 27, 2021 at 9:38 pm Read More »

Ex-Ald. Ricardo Munoz pleads guilty in fraud case, admits he used caucus money for personal expensesJon Seidelon September 27, 2021 at 7:57 pm

Former Ald. Ricardo Munoz (22nd) 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 like skydiving and a relative’s college tuition.

The onetime veteran alderman entered his plea five months after a federal grand jury handed down a 29-page indictment that alleged Munoz’s behavior continued after the feds’ aggressive pursuit of public corruption had blown into full view in late 2018 and early 2019. It said he even used some of the money at Lover’s Lane in February 2019.

Munoz faces a likely sentence of around a year in prison. He is also expected to pay $6,891 in restitution “owed to the victim.” His sentencing is set for Jan. 5.

Richard Kling, Munoz’s defense attorney, said after court that Munoz “spent decades giving to the West Side community that elected him.”

“Sometimes good people do foolish or stupid things,” Kling said. “He’s admitted to this court that he did a foolish or stupid thing. He’s ready to accept responsibility and pay the price.”

Munoz, 56, declined to comment.

Attorney Richard Kling, left, speaks to the media about his client, former Ald. Ricardo Munoz, right, inside Dirksen Federal Courthouse.Anthony Vazquez/Sun-Times

Munoz announced his retirement from the City Council in 2018. He was charged in a domestic violence incident involving his wife early in 2019, but a Cook County judge found him not guilty of misdemeanor battery in June of that year. Munoz was also in counseling for alcoholism that year.

Before he entered his plea in federal court Monday, Munoz told U.S. District Judge John Kness he considers himself to be “retired” rather than unemployed. He said he has been living in Riverside, and he acknowledged he had three cans of Budweiser Sunday evening. However, he said he felt fully sober during Monday’s hearing.

After Munoz’s plea, Kness agreed to hold a sealed hearing regarding what prosecutors called an “outstanding bond violation.” The judge asked all members of the media and public to leave the room.

Three sitting members of the Chicago City Council also face separate federal indictments of their own. Ald. Edward M. Burke (14th) is charged with racketeering, Ald. Carrie M. Austin (34th) is charged with bribery and lying to the FBI, and Ald. Patrick Daley Thompson (11th) is charged with tax counts and lying to the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp.

Former Ald. Ricardo Munoz walks out of the Dirksen Federal Courthouse on Monday after pleading guilty in his fraud case.Anthony Vazquez/Sun-Times

A fourth, Ald. James Gardiner (45th), is the subject of a federal investigation revolving around potential bribery allegations, according to a source. He has not been criminally charged.

Munoz faced 15 wire fraud counts and one money laundering count in the indictment filed against him April 29. It accused him of trying to cover his tracks by repaying the money he took from the Progressive Reform Caucus or by claiming it was for “consulting” or “Election Day expenses.”

The former alderman’s plea agreement with prosecutors alleges he took $37,891 from the progressive caucus, including $16,000 he transferred in October 2016 to a joint account he held with a family member. He then used $15,254 from the joint account to pay tuition to an out-of-state university.

Munoz later used $16,000 from a Parent Plus loan to pay the money back.

He also bought jewelry from Louis Vuitton, women’s clothing from Nordstrom, three Apple iPhones and Chicago Bulls tickets, according to the plea agreement.

Munoz made $10,560 in cash withdrawals from the progressive caucus account in November and December 2018, including while he was on vacation in New York in late November 2018, it said.

Federal authorities famously raided Burke’s City Hall offices Nov. 29, 2018, a move that first revealed the feds’ public corruption investigations, which are still ongoing.

Between November 2018 and February 2019, Munoz used the progressive caucus debit card to spend $1,400 on a Southwest Airlines ticket from Los Angeles to Chicago for an acquaintance, Los Angeles Kings hockey tickets, a stay at the Los Angeles Crowne Plaza hotel, and at Lover’s Lane in West Dundee.

In March 2019, the plea agreement said, a contractor asked Munoz for the progressive caucus’ account balance so it could be reported at a meeting. Munoz told the contractor in an Apple iMessage the account had $11,000 in it.

It really only had $94.79, according to the plea agreement.

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Ex-Ald. Ricardo Munoz pleads guilty in fraud case, admits he used caucus money for personal expensesJon Seidelon September 27, 2021 at 7:57 pm Read More »