When people talk about a quarter century of allegations against R&B singer R. Kelly, they usually point to one starting point: his relationship with his teenage protégée, the late singer Aaliyah. He mentored the burgeoning artist and produced her debut album, the coyly titled Age Ain't Nothing But A Number. He was 27 years old; she was just 15.

And then, on Aug. 31, 1994, Kelly married Aaliyah Haughton — with an official Illinois wedding certificate that stated that she was 18.

Now, 25 years later, federal prosecutors in the Eastern District of New York have filed a new charge against Kelly: that on the day before his wedding to Aaliyah, Kelly and others in his circle bribed a public official in Illinois to create a fake ID for "Jane Doe #1."

The new charge is an addition to a sweeping set of federal indictments filed against Kelly in July by prosecutors in New York and Illinois. Prosecutors have accused the singer of abusing women and girls for more than two decades, including kidnapping, forced labor and sending child pornography across state lines.

Kelly continues to deny all allegations, which now include 19 federal charges and numerous separate sexual assault charges in Illinois, as well as multiple ongoing civil lawsuits.

The allegation of a forged identity document made for Aaliyah is not new in itself. In journalist Jim DeRogatis' recently published Soulless: The Case Against R. Kelly, the singer's former tour manager and personal assistant, Demetrius Smith, said that he obtained a fake ID on Aaliyah's behalf. Smith repeated that assertion during an on-screen interview in the Lifetime docuseries Surviving R. Kelly, which aired in January. But Thursday's indictment is the first time that Kelly has faced criminal charges in relation to his marriage to Aaliyah.

Within months, the marriage was annulled, but it remained a subject of intense speculation directed at both Aaliyah, who died in a plane crash in 2001 at age 22, and Kelly, who has described their relationship as "deep friends," but has carefully avoided further comment. (For much of the 1990s, Kelly was managed by a man named Barry Hankerson, who was also Aaliyah's uncle.)

In 2016, Kelly told GQ, "Well, because of Aaliyah's passing, as I've always said, out of respect for her mother who's sick and her father who's passed, I will never have that conversation with anyone. Out of respect for Aaliyah, and her mother and father who has asked me not to personally. But I can tell you," he added, "I loved her, I can tell you she loved me, we was very close."

In a Good Morning America interview that aired in January in the wake of Surviving R. Kelly, the singer's lawyer, Steve Greenberg, shrugged off the controversy. "He was married to her when she was 15. Elvis was married to Priscilla," he said. (Presley was 14 when she met her future husband.)

"But my understanding," Greenberg continued, "is that she [Aaliyah] did not claim to be 15. And in order to get married, she had to lie about her age." Greenberg added that Kelly had "no idea" of Aaliyah's true age when they wed.

In most instances, 25-year-old allegations would be outside of legal statutes of limitations. Kelly, however, is facing racketeering charges, in which he is accused by New York prosecutors of being the leader of a mob-like criminal enterprise whose purposes, the government alleges, "were to promote R. Kelly's music and the R. Kelly brand and to recruit women and girls to engage in illegal sexual activity with Kelly."

Charging Kelly with racketeering allows prosecutors broad reach, and they can include allegations from any point in the existence of the purported enterprise.

Copyright 2019 NPR. To see more, visit https://www.npr.org.

300x250 Ad

300x250 Ad

Support quality journalism, like the story above, with your gift right now.

Donate