WASHINGTON — Disgraced R&B singer R. Kelly has officially petitioned President Donald Trump to commute his 31-year federal prison sentence for multiple sex crime convictions.
According to records made public this week by the U.S. Department of Justice’s Office of the Pardon Attorney, the 59-year-old artist submitted a formal application for clemency. The request remains listed as “pending” on the agency’s website. Unlike a full presidential pardon, a commutation would shorten or eliminate his remaining prison time without erasing his underlying criminal convictions.
The filing marks a major escalation in a year-long campaign by Kelly’s legal defense team to bypass traditional judicial appeals. His attorney, Beau Brindley, previously sought emergency intervention from the courts, claiming that Kelly’s safety was in immediate danger behind bars.
Brindley alleged that federal correctional officers conspired to steal Kelly’s legal mail, manipulate witnesses, and recruit an inmate to assassinate the singer. A federal judge rejected those claims as unsubstantiated.
The Chicago-born performer, whose full name is Robert Sylvester Kelly, is currently serving a combined 31-year prison term at a federal facility in North Carolina. A Brooklyn jury found Kelly guilty of federal racketeering and sex trafficking in September 2021 following an extensive six-week trial. Prosecutors proved that Kelly leveraged his massive fame, wealth, and a network of enablers to systematically trap and abuse young women and teenagers.
He was subsequently sentenced to 30 years in prison for the New York convictions. A second federal trial in Chicago yielded an additional 20-year sentence for child pornography and the sexual exploitation of minors. The court ordered that all but one year of the Chicago sentence run concurrently, leaving Kelly with a net 31-year term. Barring executive clemency, his projected release date is in 2045, when he will be 78 years old.
White House Responses and Precedents
The White House has not stated whether President Trump will entertain the clemency petition. Legal experts note that the Office of the Pardon Attorney typically executes a multi-tiered review process before transmitting recommendations to the Oval Office. However, the president retains absolute constitutional authority to grant or deny commutations independently.
The request comes amid heightened public scrutiny regarding executive clemency for high-profile figures. During the May 2025 federal trial of hip-hop mogul Sean “Diddy” Combs, Trump noted that political or personal affiliations do not sway his decisions on pardons.
“If I think somebody was mistreated, whether they like me or don’t like me, it wouldn’t have any impact on me,” Trump stated at the time. Combs was eventually convicted of prostitution transport charges and sentenced to roughly four years in prison.
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