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R. Kelly Seeks Trump’s Help After Collapse in Prison, Cites ‘Murder Plot’ by Officials

R. Kelly is seen in a 2019 booking photo released by the Chicago Police Department. The singer is currently serving a 30-year sentence for sex trafficking and an additional 20-year sentence for child pornography. His legal team now alleges a government conspiracy to harm him in prison. 
The man who once called himself the “Pied Piper of R&B” is battling for both his health and freedom — amid allegations of a government conspiracy and a last-ditch appeal for presidential mercy.

R. Kelly was hospitalized after collapsing in solitary confinement at the Federal Correctional Institution in Butner, North Carolina, in what his legal team claims was an intentional overdose of prescription medication administered by prison staff.

The 58-year-old singer, born Robert Sylvester Kelly, was transported by ambulance to Duke University Hospital on June 13 after allegedly experiencing dizziness, fainting, and vision loss. His attorney says doctors discovered blood clots in his lungs and legs and recommended emergency surgery — but federal officers allegedly forced him to return to prison before the treatment could be completed.

Kelly had been placed in solitary confinement on June 10, the same day his legal team filed an emergency motion alleging that prison officials had solicited another inmate to attack him. The new filing claims the overdose occurred just three days later and accuses the Federal Bureau of Prisons of attempting to kill him.

Kelly’s attorney, Beau Brindley, has called on former President Donald Trump to intervene, saying, “President Trump is the only person with the courage to help us.” Brindley says he is seeking either a pardon or commutation on Kelly’s behalf.

Federal prosecutors dismissed the claims as a “fanciful conspiracy,” accusing Kelly of manipulating the courts to paint himself as a victim. “This is the behavior of an abuser and a master manipulator,” prosecutors wrote in their filing, adding that Kelly “has never taken responsibility for his years of sexually abusing children.”

Kelly is currently serving a 30-year sentence following his 2021 conviction in New York for racketeering and sex trafficking. In 2023, he was sentenced to an additional 20 years in Chicago for child pornography and enticement of a minor, with most of that sentence running concurrently.

Once one of the most influential R&B artists of the 1990s and early 2000s, Kelly won three Grammy Awards for “I Believe I Can Fly” and scored multiple chart-topping hits including “Bump N’ Grind” and “Ignition (Remix).”

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