R. Kelly’s trial has taken place behind closed doors, away from the press and the public. But even before his trial and conviction on Monday, the country had already heard the searing allegations of sexual, emotional and physical abuse leveled against the singer.
A 2019 Lifetime documentary series, “Surviving R. Kelly,” featured six hourlong episodes that included the stories of some of the women who said they were abused and manipulated by Mr. Kelly, often when they were underage.
“It makes a difference when there are cameras involved, and when people can actually see these women telling their stories and feel it,” said Dream Hampton, an executive producer of the documentary.
The trail of allegations against Mr. Kelly was first examined through reporting that first emerged in the early 2000s by Jim DeRogatis, a music critic at The Chicago-Sun Times. And in 2008, Mr. Kelly was tried and acquitted in a criminal court in Chicago in a high-profile child pornography case. Years later, Mr. DeRogatis went on to publish several more damning and widely shared articles.
But it was the documentary — emerging amid the broader Me Too movement’s reckoning over sexual abuse by powerful men — that finally derailed Mr. Kelly’s career.
The series was followed by criminal charges against the singer in Minnesota, Illinois and New York at the federal and state levels. RCA, Mr. Kelly’s record label, and its parent company Sony Music Entertainment cut him loose.
On Monday, Mr. Kelly was convicted on all charges. When he is sentenced in May, he faces life in prison.
But the case does not stop when a verdict is reached, Ms. Hampton said.
“Peer accountability really is the true end here,” Ms. Hampton said.
When the #MeToo movement began sweeping through Hollywood, politics and the business world in 2017, people in the music industry — where unsupervised contact between male stars and young female fans is so common as to be mythologized — wondered when accountability would reach their shores.
The music business has indeed had its share of scandals in recent years. The singers Marilyn Manson and Ryan Adams, and the hip-hop mogul Russell Simmons, have been accused of various kinds of misconduct.
But the criminal trial of R. Kelly, which ended with his conviction on Monday, has been by far the most high profile #MeToo moment in music. To a great degree, that is a result of the serious nature of the charges that federal prosecutors brought against him, and of the fact that Mr. Kelly was accused of engaging in sex acts with women as young as 13 or 14.
But similar accusations against Mr. Kelly have been public for decades, publicized through reporting in The Chicago Sun-Times in the early 2000s and at a child pornography trial in 2008, where he was acquitted. For years, Mr. Kelly remained signed to a major record label, where he sold millions of albums and maintained his status as a top-level hitmaker. Stars like Lady Gaga, Jay-Z, Usher and Chance the Rapper worked with him; in 2013, he performed at the Pitchfork Festival in Chicago, a home for hipster-approved indie rock.
That Mr. Kelly avoided banishment from the music world for so long — and, indeed, that he was embraced by that world — has been seen as a stain against the industry. It was only in 2017 that public opinion began to turn decisively against Mr. Kelly. That was when BuzzFeed News began to publish a series of investigative reports by Jim DeRogatis, a journalist who had chronicled the accusations against Mr. Kelly at The Sun-Times years before.
In early 2019, after the broadcast of the documentary “Surviving R. Kelly,” featuring stomach-turning firsthand accounts by numerous women, Mr. Kelly was finally dropped by RCA, his label. By then, Mr. Kelly had not had a hit in a number of years.
Today, Mr. Kelly has been largely shunned by the music industry at large; Lady Gaga, for example, apologized for working with him and removed the track they recorded together in 2013. But Mr. Kelly’s catalog is still available on streaming services. Its popularity there — on Spotify, his music draws 5.2 million listeners each month — suggests a fan base that has never left.
Sept. 27, 2021, 4:15 p.m. ET
Jerhonda Pace, the first accuser to testify against R. Kelly at the trial, was one of the earliest women to go public with her accusations in 2017. On Monday, she reacted with a simple message on Instagram, writing “Verdict? GUILTY.”
Sept. 27, 2021, 4:13 p.m. ET
Racketeering cases against individual defendants are rare. This racketeering charge against R. Kelly required prosecutors to prove that the singer was the leader of an ongoing criminal enterprise involving multiple enablers, even though he was the sole defendant on trial.
As he left the courtroom, R. Kelly’s lawyer said the defense team would consider appealing the verdict that could send his star client to prison for life.
“Of course we are disappointed in the verdict,” the lawyer, Deveraux L. Cannick, said as he walked through the courthouse. “I am even more disappointed in the prosecution for bringing this case,” he said, adding that it was “replete with inconsistencies.”
But jurors found the witnesses credible, and convicted Mr. Kelly on all charges.
Asked if Mr. Kelly was prepared for the conviction, Mr. Cannick said: “I don’t think anybody is ever prepared for an outcome like this.”
Mr. Cannick stepped outside the courthouse, where dozens of reporters and camera crews had been stationed all day in anticipation of a verdict. He and other members of the defense team strode past the microphones set up for a news conference and into the adjacent park, where he was quickly ambushed by cameras and microphones.
Speaking as he walked, Mr. Cannick told the cameras that “witness after witness had given three, four, five different versions” of their stories.
Sept. 27, 2021, 4:07 p.m. ET
One important takeaway from the verdict: What it could mean to the family of the singer Aaliyah, who died in 2001. Jurors found R. Kelly responsible for the bribe of a government employee that allowed him to marry Aaliyah in 1994 when she was 15.
Sept. 27, 2021, 4:03 p.m. ET
Jacquelyn M. Kasulis, the acting U.S. attorney in Brooklyn, thanked the 11 men and women who accused R. Kelly of misconduct at the trial: “No one deserves what they experienced at his hands or the threats and harassment they faced in telling the truth about what happened to them. We hope that today’s verdict brings some measure of comfort and closure.”
Sept. 27, 2021, 3:59 p.m. ET
A handful of reporters were allowed into the actual courtroom for the verdict, and we were able to see the jury and R. Kelly’s reaction. The only motion I could detect from Mr. Kelly was the occasional clench of his jaw; his eyes seemed to be looking straight ahead at the table. At the end, he stood and buttoned his suit as the jury filed out through a side door.
The singer Sparkle was hopeful that R. Kelly could elevate her 12-year-old niece, an aspiring rapper, to success when she introduced the girl and other family members to the R&B star.
But years later, she would testify at Mr. Kelly’s first criminal trial that a sex tape at the center of the case showed Mr. Kelly having sex with and urinating on her teenage niece.
It was not enough for jurors, and the singer was acquitted of child pornography charges in 2008. Twenty years after she was first approached by a lawyer over that sex tape, she said in an interview in the days before the singer’s conviction in New York on Monday that the case was “a big relief” and an enormous “release” of the regrets, hardships and frustrations she has held for decades.
“I have been carrying this since 2001,” Sparkle, whose real name is Stephanie Edwards, said in an interview in the days before the verdict arrived. “Finally, I can have some sense of normal — whatever normal looks like on the other end of this.”
She added: “This was really something that I took and put on my shoulders. I’m needing massages every other day, because this thing has been heavy.”
Sparkle was once R. Kelly’s protégée, providing backup vocals for Aaliyah’s debut album and releasing her own first album in 1998. The two records were both produced by Mr. Kelly, and hers went gold.
When Sparkle testified at Mr. Kelly’s first trial, her sister — the mother of her niece — maintained that the teenager in the sex tape was not her daughter. Her testimony fractured the family and her promising music career never fully recovered after the trial.
In its aftermath, Sparkle said her relationships with family members briefly recovered, before further deteriorating after she participated in the “Surviving R. Kelly” documentary.
“It’s just — I don’t want to say happy because it’s not really a happy moment. My family has gone through — you just can’t even understand what my family has gone through,” Sparkle said. “I don’t know that it will ever be the same.”
She said it was “mind-boggling” that the singer’s abuses spanned more than three decades, and emphasized that those around Mr. Kelly who allowed his behavior to continue were to blame. “They helped this man do all of this stuff to these young girls,” she said. “Shame on them.”
Her niece, now a woman in her 30s, has cooperated with federal prosecutors in Chicago in recent years in their own case against the singer. Sparkle said she was not sure how she had been processing the singer’s current trial.
“But I hope she’s able to live a little bit more,” Sparkle said. “Even if she gets recognized, to not have such a backlash. I’m just hopeful that it’s all over.”
She added: “I wish and I pray that moving forward that Black women are listened to.”
Sept. 27, 2021, 3:49 p.m. ET
Outside the courthouse, Gloria Allred, a lawyer for several of R. Kelly's accusers, praised the verdict and addressed the three decades of accusations it took for Mr. Kelly to be convicted: “We understand that justice moves at a glacial pace.”
Sept. 27, 2021, 3:47 p.m. ET
By accusing R. Kelly of running a criminal enterprise, prosecutors focused on his entourage — the managers, handlers and assorted employees who have helped him procure young women and avoid consequences. The sad truth is that this is not uncommon in the music world. One question is whether Mr. Kelly’s conviction will change that.
Sept. 27, 2021, 3:46 p.m. ET
A major question now: What happens to the other criminal cases against R. Kelly? He faces another federal case in Chicago — which could tack on decades to a prison term — along with state sex crime charges in Illinois and Minnesota.
Sept. 27, 2021, 3:44 p.m. ET
R. Kelly’s lawyers left the courthouse and were thronged by reporters and cameras. They were trailed by a few supporters of Mr. Kelly’s, one of whom spoke into a megaphone: “We are not giving up! No Justice!”
Sept. 27, 2021, 3:42 p.m. ET
Dressed in a blue suit and white mask, R. Kelly listened with his head down, eyes cast down. The jury looked up at the judge between each announcement of "guilty." When defense asked for a poll, each juror responded with a variety of "yes." Not a single one hesitated.
Sept. 27, 2021, 3:38 p.m. ET
The guilty verdict came swiftly, particularly given the complexity of the case against R. Kelly and the lengthy trial.
Sept. 27, 2021, 3:37 p.m. ET
R. Kelly’s sentencing hearing is scheduled for May 4, 2022. He could spend the rest of his life in prison, representing a remarkable downfall for the singer who once stood atop the world of R&B.
The singer R. Kelly could spend decades in prison after a jury convicted him of racketeering and eight violations of an anti-sex-trafficking law.
Here are a few takeaways from the verdict:
1. Prosecutors built a much stronger case than in 2008.
The government presented a sweeping case that featured 11 accusers, nine women and two men. Many of their accounts were bolstered by evidence, and the allegations spanned decades.
It gave jurors a low chance of reaching a full acquittal in the trial, legal experts said. When Mr. Kelly was acquitted of state child pornography charges in Chicago in 2008, jurors said that the absence of testimony from the girl at the center of the case spurred doubts.
2. An unusual approach to the accusations against Mr. Kelly proved successful.
Racketeering cases are often used against mob organizations. So when the charge was employed against Mr. Kelly, some legal experts viewed it as a potentially precarious approach: Would jurors believe that employees who promoted a music business also served as the henchmen of a criminal enterprise at the singer’s command?
Ultimately, they did. And some experts on sexual abuse saw value in placing the enablers around a powerful man at the center of his trial.
3. The jurors accepted the accounts of the government’s first main accuser, Jerhonda Pace.
Ms. Pace, who was one of the earliest women to go public with her accusations in a 2017 BuzzFeed article, told jurors that Mr. Kelly had begun having sex with her in 2009, when she was 16. She said he once choked her until she passed out after she disobeyed one of his rules, and then forced her to perform a sex act on him.
The singer’s defense team attempted to depict her as “a super-stalker,” “a super-hustler,” and “a groupie extraordinaire.” But jurors apparently disagreed, and found that prosecutors proved all three underlying accusations in the racketeering charge that pertained to Ms. Pace.
After the jury’s decision was announced, Ms. Pace posted a message on Instagram: “Verdict? GUILTY.”
4. A woman who spoke publicly for the first time was believed.
One of the six women at the center of Mr. Kelly’s trial had never spoken publicly about their accusations: Stephanie, who took the stand using only her first name. Her encounters with Mr. Kelly occurred in the late 1990s, and Mr. Kelly’s defense lawyers questioned why they did not come forward sooner.
But judging from the verdict, jurors believed her account. She testified that Mr. Kelly began sexually abusing her when she was 17.
5. One accuser initially defended Mr. Kelly after he faced legal troubles. But jurors saw her as his victim.
One woman, who testified under a pseudonym, initially had come to his defense in a television interview in 2019. Mr. Kelly’s lawyers spent more time cross-examining her than any other witness and homed in on discrepancies in her accounts over time.
But ultimately her testimony — which included some of the most graphic accusations against Mr. Kelly — appeared to be largely believed, with jurors finding Mr. Kelly guilty of all four counts related to her.
Sept. 27, 2021, 3:32 p.m. ET
With R. Kelly found guilty, the big question for the music industry is whether his music will now be removed from major digital platforms like Spotify and Apple Music. Although most digital outlets have policies barring hate speech, they tend to take a hands-off approach when it comes to removing material, seeing themselves as neutral platforms and not censors.
Sept. 27, 2021, 3:32 p.m. ET
Depending on your view of tech companies, that decision can be high-minded and principled, or just a way to avoid the slippery slope of policing their platforms. Even when Spotify instituted a “hateful conduct” policy in 2018, they did not delete the artists’s songs. The policy came under fire as arbitrary, and disproportionately affecting Black artists, and was rescinded after a few weeks.
Sept. 27, 2021, 3:27 p.m. ET
Major figures in music — including A-list R. Kelly collaborators like Jay-Z, Lady Gaga, Justin Bieber and Chance the Rapper — have been largely mum about the trial. I’m eager to see how that calculus changes now that there’s a guilty verdict.
When the #MeToo movement erupted years ago, scores of women spoke out against the powerful men, igniting a national reckoning over sexual abuse and harassment.
But as cases of high-profile men like the Hollywood producer Harvey Weinstein put a spotlight on the accusations of white women, Black women often said they felt left out of the conversation.
For many, R. Kelly’s case and conviction offered the sense that the movement could serve them, too, giving them a chance to hold men accountable.
“This is culmination of the movement of so many women who having being trying so long to have their voices heard,” said Oronike Odeleye, the co-founder of the #MuteRKelly campaign. “We have never had full ownership of our bodies. And we’re at a moment where Black women are no longer accepting that as the price of being Black and female in America.”
The activist Tarana Burke started the original iteration of “Me Too” around 2007, using the phrase to raise awareness of sexual assault and connect victims to resources. But when the actress Alyssa Milano tweeted the words “me too” a decade later, initially without crediting Ms. Burke, some observers worried that Black women had been left out of the story and noted that Ms. Burke’s initial effort had not been supported by prominent white feminists.
Now, the jurors’ acceptance of the stories of Mr. Kelly’s accusers holds a deep significance, several experts say, particularly because Black women and girls have historically seen their accusations dismissed more often than others.
“When you have girls who aren’t famous, they’re not stars in their own right — and they’re Black — it becomes so easy for people to overlook their suffering and to cast it aside so the status quo can be preserved,” said Deborah Tuerkheimer, a professor of law at Northwestern University and former assistant district attorney in Manhattan.
Whitney Davis, 34, said she has followed other major #MeToo cases. But Mr. Kelly’s trial carried a distinct resonance for a confluence of a reasons, she said: The accusers at the heart of the case looked like her, and she had herself endured sexual abuse in childhood.
“To be honest, this was the first case that was predominantly Black girls, Black women, Black boys — and so it was intriguing to me to see if they would get justice,” said Ms. Davis, who is from Dallas. “To see justice for them, oh, my God, it will in a way mean justice for myself.”
Sept. 27, 2021, 3:23 p.m. ET
This is by far the highest-profile, post-Me Too conviction involving sexual abuse that we’ve seen in the music industry. Its impact — and the fact that the prosecution secured a guilty verdict across the board — is only heightened by the fact of R. Kelly’s first acquittal on child pornography charges in 2008 allowed for his career to keep flourishing in the years that followed.
Sept. 27, 2021, 3:21 p.m. ET
R. Kelly sat motionless in the courtroom as he was found guilty of all nine counts of the racketeering and sex-trafficking charges against him. His facial expression was hidden by a mask.
Sept. 27, 2021, 3:20 p.m. ET
The jury is now going through the 14 different acts of racketeering. The prosecution only had to prove 2.
Sept. 27, 2021, 3:13 p.m. ET
Relatively brief deliberations in a complex case can like this often indicate that the jury was fairly united in reaction to the trial.
The singer R. Kelly, who for years dominated the world of R&B music, was found guilty on Monday of being the ringleader of a decades-long scheme to recruit women and underage girls for sex.
After nine hours of deliberations, the jury in the singer’s criminal trial in federal court in Brooklyn convicted him of racketeering and eight violations of an anti-sex trafficking law, after beginning its deliberations Friday afternoon.
The high-profile trial was the first of the Me Too-era where a large majority of the defendant’s accusers were Black women, and the trial was widely seen as a test of the inclusivity of the broader movement to hold powerful men accountable for sexual misconduct.
For Mr. Kelly, the verdict represents the first criminal consequence after decades of murmurs and accusations of sexual abuse and other misbehavior.
Mr. Kelly, once one of the biggest names in popular music, now faces the possibility of life in prison, capping a remarkable reversal of fortune. As the verdict was read, he sat motionless in the courtroom, wearing a navy blue suit and glasses, while his facial expression hidden behind a mask.
His sentencing hearing is scheduled for May 4.
Mr. Kelly once evaded criminal punishment in 2008 when he was acquitted on 14 counts in a highly publicized child pornography case that loomed over the New York trial in the minds of many observers. But federal prosecutors in Brooklyn built a much stronger case against him this time.
The conviction is likely to further diminish the widespread public image that Mr. Kelly enjoyed through the early 2000s as a charismatic and genre-redefining lyricist. The persona began to collapse in the public eye as his conduct came under new scrutiny at the height of the Me Too movement.
Over the course of the six-week trial, prosecutors described in harrowing detail an ecosystem of torment and abuse, with evidence that extended from recent years as far back as 1991.
Prosecutors called nearly four dozen witnesses who testified about how the singer’s public persona as an infectiously charismatic virtuoso disguised a calculated and controlling predator. The witnesses included nine women and two men who accused Mr. Kelly of abuse or other misconduct, and eight of Mr. Kelly’s former employees.
The singer’s lawyers, homing in on minor changes in aspects of witnesses’ stories over time, sought to convince the jurors that any sexual activity involving him and his accusers was consensual and that the accounts of abuse and misconduct had been fabricated. The defense team tried to portray Mr. Kelly as an altruistic romantic partner who regarded the women around him as family and had been blindsided by their allegations.
But the seven men and five women on the jury ultimately sided with the government.
For two decades R. Kelly has been at the center of accusations that he sexually abused underage girls and young women. But for most of that time, the accusations were not enough to derail his music career.
Only in recent years, as Mr. Kelly has faced criminal charges in Illinois, Minnesota and New York, where he was found guilty on Monday of all counts, has a movement to boycott his songs, known as the #MuteRKelly campaign, taken hold.
Before then, Mr. Kelly’s career thrived, even as the accusations against him became widely known. Even before 2000, when The Chicago Sun-Times published the first major investigation into allegations of abuse by Mr. Kelly, he had settled lawsuits accusing him of having sex with underage girls; in 1994, at 27, he had married Aaliyah, who was 15 years old, allegedly using forged documents. Then in 2002, Mr. Kelly was indicted on child pornography charges after a video surfaced that authorities said showed the singer having sex with a teenage girl.
But Mr. Kelly continued to have success before, during and after the controversies, releasing 12 platinum albums in all. His fame was built on massive hits like “I Believe I Can Fly” in 1996 and “Ignition” in 2002. He collaborated with Jay-Z on two albums in 2002 and 2004. He was the featured artist on Lady Gaga’s single “Do What You Want” in 2013. And he was one of two featured artists on Chance the Rapper’s song “Somewhere in Paradise” in 2015.
After his acquittal of child pornography charges in 2008, it seemed as though Mr. Kelly’s career was impenetrable to criticism.
The tables began to turn in 2017 when grass roots campaign emerged aimed at stopping his music from being played on radio stations, streaming services, and at concert venues. Oronike Odeleye, a co-founder of the movement, said she started it “out of a feeling of outrage.”
“This is about child sexual abuse and trauma that was inflicted on some of these women for years and years and years,” Oronike Odeleye told The Times.
Mr. Kelly’s record label dropped him in 2019, after the broadcast of “Surviving R. Kelly,” a documentary with firsthand accounts from women who said he had sexually abused them. Tour dates have been canceled, and Mr. Kelly has been in custody. And while he still garners 5.2 million listeners monthly on Spotify, it is unusual to hear his music played on the radio or in public.
Amid the controversy and trial, fans of Drake were outraged to learn that Mr. Kelly had gained a writing credit on the Canadian rapper’s album “Certified Lover Boy.”
The backlash to Mr. Kelly’s role was so swift that Drake’s longtime producer, Noah Shebib, issued an explanation on Instagram: One of Mr. Kelly’s songs was playing, barely audibly, in the background of another clip in the song.
“We were forced to license it,” Mr. Shebib wrote. “Doesn’t sit well with me let me just say that.”
The judge presiding over R. Kelly’s trial is best known for blocking former President Donald J. Trump’s executive order that barred refugees from entering the country in 2017. Judge Ann M. Donnelly ruled that the president’s order, which led to the detention of green card holders and other immigrants, would cause “irreparable harm” to the people displaced.
Before assuming her post in Brooklyn Federal Court, Judge Donnelly worked as a lawyer in the New York County District Attorney’s Office for 25 years, in roles including senior trial counsel, chief of the Family Violence and Child Abuse Bureau, and a post in a bureau that specialized in dealing with repeat offenders and violent felons.
In 2005 she won a conviction as lead prosecutor in a case finding Tyco chief executive L. Dennis Kozlowski guilty of looting almost $100 million from his company.
Four years later, she assumed her first judgeship in the New York Court of Claims and later moved on to several county supreme courts across New York City. Former President Barack Obama nominated Judge Donnelly to her current post in 2015.
Over the past six weeks, Judge Donnelly has presided over strange occurrences during Mr. Kelly’s trial, including a witness who tried to wriggle out of testifying despite a court order granting him immunity. After one of Mr. Kelly’s defense lawyers dwelled on the topic of “twerking,” Judge Donnelly reprimanded him in a sidebar away from jurors.
“You need to get yourself here into 2021 with the rest of us, OK?” she said.
Fifty witnesses took the stand over the course of R. Kelly’s six-week trial, but the foundation of the racketeering and sex trafficking case against him was based on his encounters with six women.
Aaliyah, Jane Doe #1
Believing she was pregnant with his child, Mr. Kelly, who was 27 at the time, illegally married the singer Aaliyah, 15, in a 10-minute ceremony in a Sheraton hotel room in the Chicago area in 1994. They wore matching jogging suits, each with one pant leg hiked to the knee. Mr. Kelly had been having sex with Aaliyah since she was 13 or 14, according to court testimony. One witness suggested he married her solely so that if she were pregnant, she would be able to obtain an abortion, which she otherwise could not have gotten without parental concent. Aaliyah died in a plane crash in 2001.
Stephanie, Jane Doe #2
A woman who testified as Stephanie said that she approached Mr. Kelly at a Nike store in 1999, when she was 17, to ask him for an audition for a friend, an aspiring singer. The superstar agreed — in return for sexual favors, she said. The next six months were “the lowest time of my life,” Stephanie told the jury, marking the first time she had spoken publicly about being sexually abused by the singer when she was underage.
Sonja, Jane Doe #3
A woman who testified under the name Sonja said she was a 22-year-old radio intern when she met Mr. Kelly outside a mall in Salt Lake City, and he invited her to come to Chicago for an interview in 2003. But when she arrived, she said, Mr. Kelly locked her in a room in his studio for days, letting her out only for escorted visits to the bathroom. After days without food, she said, she was brought something to eat. But after several bites, she began feeling drowsy, she said, and she later woke up to find Mr. Kelly pulling up his pants and her underwear draped over the couch.
Jerhonda Pace, Jane Doe #4
Jerhonda Pace took the stand on the first two days of the trial, becoming the first accuser to ever testify against Mr. Kelly. She told the jury that Mr. Kelly had sex with her in 2009, when she was 16 and he was 42. Ms. Pace is one of several women who said the singer knowingly gave her herpes. Years later, she spoke out against the singer on YouTube. She was also featured in the Lifetime documentary “Surviving R. Kelly” in 2019.
Jane Doe #5
This witness offered some of the most disturbing testimony of the trial. Until recently, prosecutors said, she was still in the singer’s clutches, and she gave a television interview defending him in 2019. But on the stand, the woman, now 22, said that over the course of nearly five years beginning when she was 17, Mr. Kelly coerced her to have sex with a man she did not know while he watched, beat her with a sneaker, forced her to get an abortion and knowingly gave her herpes.
Faith, Jane Doe #6
A woman named Faith said she was 19 when she began having sex with Mr. Kelly, then 50, in 2017. On one occasion, Mr. Kelly brought her into a room with a gun, grabbed her neck and directed her to perform a sex act on him. And a short time after another sexual encounter, she was diagnosed with herpes. Faith said Mr. Kelly never told her he had the incurable disease.
A 12-member anonymous jury decided the fate of R. Kelly, who faces a sprawling racketeering case and eight violations of the Mann Act, a law banning interstate sex trafficking.
The group, which consisted of seven men and five women, was semi-sequestered, meaning they were able to go home at the end of each day.
Several members shared details about themselves during the in-person selection process. There is a mother of two school-aged children; a fraud investigator who said she was active in her church; a woman with several incarcerated family members; and a man who works at a hotel.
One of the jurors, a longtime flight attendant, said he believed “trial by the media is worse than a trial by jury.” The man told the judge that he has a friend in the family of Bill Cosby, whose 2018 conviction for sexual assault was recently overturned, but that he did not question the jury’s verdict. He said he had heard only minor bits of information about R. Kelly in the news.
The selection process began last month and took place over three days. Judge Ann M. Donnelly, who presided over the case, questioned prospective members to gauge their awareness of Mr. Kelly and the accusations against him, their views and personal experience on matters of sexual misconduct and their opinion of the #MeToo movement.
The criminal charges R. Kelly was convicted of included one count of racketeering based on sexual exploitation of children, kidnapping, forced labor and eight violations of the Mann Act, a sex-trafficking statute.
Racketeering is a charge often associated with organized crime, but it can be applied to any ongoing coordinated illegal scheme or criminal enterprise to carry out a common purpose. In this case, prosecutors said Mr. Kelly and his “inner circle” worked for more than two decades, in multiple states, to promote the singer’s brand, to recruit girls and young women for sexual exploitation, and to produce pornography.
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Within that single racketeering count were 14 individual acts, some of which themselves had separate parts — and some of those parts had additional questions — each of which the jury had to consider in turn. Those acts included bribery, kidnapping, forced labor and violations of the Mann Act. The racketeering count carried a sentence of up to 20 years.
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The jury separately considered eight Mann Act counts, related to transportation and coercion of two women, including a minor. Each of the Mann Act counts carried up to 10 years’ imprisonment.
Mr. Kelly, who pleaded not guilty, was convicted on all counts and could face up to life in prison.
This was not the first criminal trial against the R&B singer, who has been trailed by a steady stream of abuse accusations that span much of his career. In 2008, Mr. Kelly was the defendant in a high-profile child pornography case that was tried in Chicago. In that case, Mr. Kelly, who pleaded not guilty, was acquitted of all the charges.
The jury in the singer R. Kelly’s racketeering trial in New York has reached a verdict, according to a courts spokesman.
The seven men and five women on the jury have been in deliberations in federal court in Brooklyn, after U.S. District Judge Ann M. Donnelly gave them the case on Friday around 1:40 p.m.
The trial is widely viewed as a crucial test of the justice system’s ability to hold influential and powerful men accountable for sexual misbehavior: It is the first high-profile trial to emerge amid the Me Too movement in which a powerful man’s accusers are largely Black women.
And in a significant milestone, it featured women and men who took the stand to testify that the singer had abused them, including some of whom had not previously gone public with their accounts. Though accusations of sexual misconduct have trailed Mr. Kelly for decades, never before had one of his accusers testified against him in criminal court.
Mr. Kelly is charged with one count of racketeering and eight counts of violating the Mann Act, an anti-sex-trafficking statute, and has pleaded not guilty to all the accusations. He faces decades in prison.
During the six-week trial, the government and defense lawyers offered vastly different portraits of the man at the center of the case.
Prosecutors said Mr. Kelly served as the ringleader of a decades-long criminal enterprise that recruited women and girls for sex. Mr. Kelly’s defense team argued that the government’s case was built on a bed of fabrications, contending that while Mr. Kelly’s accusers appeared to be sympathetic, their stories could not be trusted and contained too many unanswered questions.
“Where’s the fairness to Robert? Where’s the integrity in the system?” one of Mr. Kelly’s lawyers, Deveraux Cannick, said in his summation. “Getting a conviction of R. Kelly is a big deal. But what’s a bigger deal is a system we can trust.”
But federal prosecutors presented a massive pile of evidence at the trial and depicted disturbing portrait of a predator who targeted women, girls and boys. They said Mr. Kelly indoctrinated underage women and forced them to follow a strict system of rules; physically attacked and abused them; isolated them from their friends and family; and depleted their “strength to say no” to a lasting pattern of abuse.
“The defendant’s victims aren’t groupies or gold diggers. They’re human beings,” Nadia Shihata, an assistant U.S. attorney, told jurors at the end of the trial. “They’re daughters, sisters, some are now mothers. And their lives matter.”
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