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The
media will have to be patient until after the trial, when the judge will unseal
the documents, to have access to R.
Kelly's files.
Cook
County Judge Vincent Gaughan wrote that he found the decision necessary in order to assure the defendant, Robert Kelly, a fair trial.
The media,
represented by The Chicago Sun-Times, the Chicago Tribune, the Associated Press
and Chicago Public Radio, said that the public had a constitutional right to
observe the process and asked for the records of the hearings to be released.
According
to the Chicago Sun-Times, although the judge recognized the importance of the
media and said that his intention was not to “inhibit the press,” he also said
that his ruling is “narrowly tailored” to keep intact Kelly's rights. To
sustain his point of view, Gaughan cited a 2004 ruling in Michael Jackson's
criminal case.
According
to The New York Times, the jury for the trial was selected. The final group
includes an African-American woman married to a Baptist preacher, a young white
woman who is on the way to become a police officer, a 68-year-old Romanian
immigrant and a college graduate who was once arrested for marijuana possession.
Artist
R. Kelly, 41, was indicted on June 5, 2002, after a videotape that showed the
artist having sex with a girl as young as 13 appeared. He pleaded not guilty
and the opening statements are scheduled for Tuesday.
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