Chicago Tribune

Long sentence in New York calls into question how R. Kelly’s Chicago cases might proceed

R. Kelly emerges from his studio before turning himself in to Chicago police on Feb. 22, 2019.

CHICAGO — The charges against R. Kelly came down like an avalanche: First, four indictments in Cook County. Another in Minnesota. Then a one-two punch of federal cases in Chicago and Brooklyn.

Three years later, the Chicago native, reputed sexual predator, and R&B legend received his first prison sentence: 30 years, handed down Wednesday in the New York case.

Soon enough, Kelly will be back in a federal jail in his hometown, with decisions to make about how to proceed on his other cases. The kind of hard time he got in New York could well change the calculus on how his lawyers and prosecutors in Chicago

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Chicago Tribune

Chicago Tribune3 min read
Commentary: New Barnes & Noble Stores In Chicago Signal That Books Are Back
CHICAGO -- Leafy, green shoots are sprouting up from the pages. A new Barnes & Noble bookstore is opening on Wednesday near the bustling corner of Clark and Diversey in Chicago. The Lincoln Park location will occupy about 8,000 square feet in a recen
Chicago Tribune4 min read
Freed After 12 Years In Prison, Man Sues City And Chicago Police Officers Over Murder Probe
CHICAGO — A recently freed man who spent more than 12 years in prison for a fatal South Side shooting in which a legally blind witness identified him as the perpetrator is suing the city of Chicago and several police officers over their handling of t
Chicago Tribune4 min read
Editorial: Americans Are Not All Economically Ignorant. They Just Mostly Care About Different Measurements Than Elites
On Wednesday, the left-leaning British newspaper The Guardian published a Harris poll about what Americans do and don’t know about the economy. It was catnip to President Joe Biden’s White House. According to the poll, 49% of us believe that the stoc

Related Books & Audiobooks