APRIL TRIAL DATE SET FOR R. KELLY
But Judge Harry
Leinenweber left open the possibility of changing the date later after
Kelly attorney Steve Greenberg said having to prepare for trials in
three other districts meant the defense may not be ready by April.
In
all, Kelly faces 40 counts of state and federal sexual misconduct
charges in Illinois, Minnesota and New York, from sexual assault to
heading a racketeering scheme aimed at finding girls for Kelly.
Greenberg
told the judge Kelly’s legal team had “limited resources” and
“voluminous” potential evidence from four cases to wade through, saying a
single disc turned over in the New York case contained 9,000
subfolders.
Kelly, 52, stood in court during a
Wednesday status hearing in orange jail clothes and slippers, his hands
behind his back. Several supporters waved as marshals led him back to
jail and he nodded in their direction.
The
hearing came a day after Kelly was transferred from a restrictive unit
at a Chicago federal jail into the general inmate population despite
earlier concerns inmates might target him because he is a celebrity.
Another
defense attorney, Michael Leonard, told reporters after Wednesday’s
hearing that Kelly was in his best emotional state since his detention
in July because he was no longer isolated in jail.
“You can see a kind of unburdening of his spirit now that he is in general population,” Leonard said.
Leinenweber
didn’t address a defense motion to reconsider Kelly’s detention and to
release him pending trial, saying he’d rule at a Sept. 18 hearing.
Leonard
said Kelly, if released, wanted to reside with two women who lived with
him before his arrest, Joycelyn Savage and Azriel Clary. Savage’s
parents have alleged she was held against her will by Kelly. She has
denied that.
The 13 federal counts in Chicago
accuse Kelly of filming himself having sex with underage girls and of
paying off potential witnesses in his 2008 trial — at which he was
acquitted — to get them to change their stories. Kelly has pleaded not
guilty in all the cases but the one in Minnesota, where he will be
arraigned later.
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