Not since Roman Polanski fled to Paris or Michael Jackson danced on the roof of his car outside court have alleged pedophiles felt more empowered: R&B megastar R. Kelly has been acquitted. Shockingly, stunningly, amazingly acquitted.
The initial vote after the case went to the jury was 10-2 in favor of acquittal.
A white female juror told the Chicago Tribune “…at some point we said there was a lack of evidence,” the woman said. “There was nothing concrete enough to say it was him or her on that tape.”
The jury also found Kelly not guilty of providing alcohol to a minor.
MTV.com was inside the courtroom and meticulously captured defense attorney Sam Adams Jr.’s opening and closing arguments. The defense appealed to the jury by claiming the man featured on the infamous video was not Kelly and that the tape was doctored, and ultimately, the girl featured on the tape did not testify on her behalf.
“In order to find R. Kelly guilty [of the 14 counts against him],” defense attorney Sam Adam Jr. said, “you’re going to have to call this girl a whore 14 times. Before the whole world, you’re going to have to say that [the prosecutors] proved it to you: that this girl is a whore.”
The prosecution made sure to say they considered the girl on the tape a victim of child pornography, not a prostitute, and that charges have to be leveled on child pornography charges brought before them.
Kelly’s attorneys also suggested the 27-minute tape had been doctored, going so far as to say someone could have edited the singer’s head onto another man’s body. A prosecution expert testified such editing trickery would take 44 years and still be obvious to viewers.
But it was not enough to convince the jury.
Raven Gengler is one of four close friends who grew up with the alleged victim in the west suburbs in the late 1990s, and identified her and Kelly on the tape in court. Gengler told the Chicago Sun-Times that she was coming to terms with the verdict.
Though she and 14 other witnesses said the alleged victim was the “13 or 14 year-old” girl on the notorious 27-minute sex tape at the center of the case, the jurors in the end said they couldn’t be sure.
The alleged victim refused to testify, and told a grand jury she was not the girl on the tape, putting friends and family members who believed it was her in a difficult position.
“I still love her, and even though she said it wasn’t her, I came forward out of love,” Gengler said, adding that she was still “sure” it was her friend and Kelly on the tape.
If the remix of “Ignition” isn’t enough R. Kelly vocal smoothness to un-ruffle any feathers that may have been knocked out of place at what may seem like a miscarriage of justice (Kelly’s lawyer Adams calls it “a triumph of the Cook County jury system”), check out his new song and video, “Real Talk,” now up on YouTube.
The song is another well thought out R. Kelly classic: Kelly calls his girlfriend who has accused him of cheating on her. He makes the argument that her friends saw him at a club with another girl, and with a group of guys. He then discredits her friends as “no-man having bitches” who “don’t eat with us, they don’t sleep with us, and besides, what they eat don’t make us shit.” Good advice for those feeling sickened by the verdict of the trial.
image via Reuters/John Gress
