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Prosecutors want R Kelly to serve more than 25 years

R Kelly (pictured in court in September 2019) faces a minimum 10-year term at his 29 June sentencing
R Kelly (pictured in court in September 2019) faces a minimum 10-year term at his 29 June sentencing

Prosecutors in the US have said the disgraced R&B singer R Kelly deserves to spend more than 25 years in prison after being convicted of sex trafficking.

In a filing in Brooklyn federal court on Wednesday, prosecutors said Kelly exploited his stardom and wealth over a quarter-century to lure women and underage girls for sex, demonstrating a "callous disregard" for his victims and showing no remorse.

"Indeed, the defendant's decades of crime appear to have been fuelled by narcissism and a belief that his musical talent absolved him of any need to conform his conduct - no matter how predatory, harmful, humiliating or abusive to others - to the strictures of the law," prosecutors said.

Kelly, 55, who has been jailed since 2019, remains a "serious danger" to the public, justifying keeping him behind bars until well into his 70s, prosecutors added.

Jennifer Bonjean, a lawyer for Kelly, has said he should spend fewer than 14 years in prison, and will in a filing next Monday explain why his "history and characteristics" justify a shorter sentence.

Bonjean's office declined to comment.

Kelly, whose full name is Robert Sylvester Kelly, faces a minimum 10-year term at his 29 June sentencing.

His five-and-a-half-week trial amplified accusations that he had repeatedly denied but which had surrounded him since the early 2000s.

Witnesses said Kelly would demand that his victims strictly obey rules such as needing his permission to eat or go to the bathroom, calling him "Daddy", and writing "apology letters" that purported to absolve him of wrongdoing.

"The defendant severely physically and psychologically scarred all of his victims repeatedly and consistently," prosecutors said.

"The government has little doubt that if afforded an opportunity to offend again, the defendant would."

Much of the case turned on accusations related to six women.

They included the singer Aaliyah, who prosecutors said Kelly fraudulently married when she was 15 to conceal abuse from when she was 12 or 13. Aaliyah died in an air crash in 2001.

Jurors needed a little over a day to convict Kelly last September on all nine counts he faced.

The charges included racketeering and eight counts of violating the Mann Act, which prohibits transporting people across state lines for prostitution.

Kelly also faces federal charges in Chicago on child pornography and obstruction, and state charges in Illinois and Minnesota.

Source: Reuters

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