Skip to content
Search

R. Kelly Asks Trump to Commute 30-Year Prison Sentence. White House Calls it ‘Random Submission’

The disgraced R&B singer was convicted of racketeering and sex trafficking

R. Kelly Asks Trump to Commute 30-Year Prison Sentence. White House Calls it ‘Random Submission’

R. Kelly, at Leighton Criminal Court Building in Chicago on June 6, 2019.

E. Jason Wambsgans/Chicago Tribune/Tribune News Service via Getty Images

Convicted sex offender R. Kelly has filed a formal request asking President Trump to commute his 30-year prison sentence, according to records visible on the Justice Department’s website.

The clemency request was made public this week, the Chicago Tribune first reported. It’s listed online as a matter that’s pending with the White House Office of the Pardon Attorney.


The Justice Department’s website identifies Kelly as seeking only a commutation, which would reduce his sentence, rather than a full pardon. Any documents he submitted in support of the request were not made public.

“This appears to be a random submission through the public portal which anyone can submit an application through,” a White House official tells Rolling Stone. “The submission of a pardon request should not be interpreted to mean anything other than an individual has chosen to submit a request. The team that reviews clemency requests at the White House is not tracking this request at this time. The White House has a thorough review process for all clemency requests, with the President being the ultimate decider.”

Kelly, 59, was convicted on all counts at a 2021 trial in federal court in Brooklyn. Jurors found him guilty of racketeering, sex trafficking, sexual exploitation of children, kidnapping, and forced labor.

In June 2025, his lawyer, Beau B. Brindley, filed a motion for a new trial that also asked for Kelly’s immediate release on bond due to health concerns and an alleged plot against his life. The lawyer claimed Kelly was denied treatment for dangerous blood clots in his lungs and that “an avowed white supremacist” had said prison officials recruited him to harm Kelly in custody.

At a news conference that month, Brindley said he planned to appeal directly to Trump for help. “R. Kelly does not have the time, with his life in danger, to go through the normal channels,” Brindley said, according to The Tribune. “I will ask President Trump to help us, because we need him.”

Brindley did not respond to Rolling Stone‘s request for comment on Wednesday.

At Kelly’s Brooklyn-based trial, the jury found that the singer had sex with underage girls and bribed a state employee to create a phony ID card so he could marry the 15-year-old singer Aaliyah because he believed she was pregnant and thought the marriage would save him from jail.

A federal judge in Chicago still hasn’t ruled on Kelly’s motion for a new trial, but his request for bond in the meantime was denied.

More Stories

Billy Joel Stopped Writing Songs Because He Didn’t Want to ‘Dilute’ His Legacy

Billy Joel's last rock album, 'River of Dreams,' was released in 1993.

Getty Images

Billy Joel Stopped Writing Songs Because He Didn’t Want to ‘Dilute’ His Legacy

It’s been more than three decades since Billy Joel released his last rock album, 1993’s critically acclaimed River of Dreams. The prolific songwriter has put down his pen since then, and in a recent interview, shared that it was because he didn’t want to “dilute” his legacy.

When speaking to fellow musician Rick Beato, Joel said that after releasing River of Dreams, he “felt like I was done.” “I was married [to Christie Brinkley], I had a child. I didn’t want to lock myself in a cave and devote myself like a monk to writing anymore,” he continued. He added that after making 12 albums, he thought, “‘You know what? The Beatles had 12 albums.’ And that was just enough for me.”

Keep ReadingShow less
David Bowie’s Rare Recordings From 1965 With Shel Talmy Will Finally Be Released

David Bowie, 1965.

Alisdair MacDonald/Mirrorpix/Getty Images

David Bowie’s Rare Recordings From 1965 With Shel Talmy Will Finally Be Released

A new compilation collects recordings David Bowie made in 1965, before he was famous with the already-famous producer Shel Talmy. Talmy had made a name for himself a couple of years earlier producing hits for the Kinks (“You Really Got Me,” “Tired of Waiting for You”), the Who (“I Can’t Explain”), and Chad and Jeremy (“A Summer Song”), so it made sense that Bowie (still using his real name, Davie Jones) would want to record his bands (variously known as the Lower Third and the Mannish Boys) with Talmy. The comp, The Shel Talmy Recordings, due Sept. 18, collects what Bowie was known to have recorded with the producer, sessions that occasionally featured Jimmy Page on guitar and Nicky Hopkins on piano.

Keep ReadingShow less
How Big Is Ella Langley Right Now? She’s About to Tie Whitney and Mariah

Ella Langley continues to make chart history with her song “Choosin’ Texas.” She now has Whitney Houston and Mariah Carey in her sights.

Christopher Polk/Dick Clark Productions via Getty Images

How Big Is Ella Langley Right Now? She’s About to Tie Whitney and Mariah

What do Ella Langley, Whitney Houston, and Mariah Carey have in common? If “Choosin’ Texas” holds its seemingly unstoppable momentum on the Billboard Hot 100, it will be the number 14: that is, the three artists will tie as the only women to have a song spend 14 weeks on top of the chart. For Carey, it was “We Belong Together”; for Houston, “I Will Always Love You.” (Only Carey’s consummate holiday classic “All I Want for Christmas Is You” has reigned longer, with 22 weeks.)

Right now, Langley shares a spot with Brandy and Monica’s “The Boy Is Mine,” which also reigned for 13 weeks back in 1998 — and which, like “Choosin’ Texas,” is also about two women battling over the same man.

Keep ReadingShow less
Does Noel Gallagher Truly Believe Phil Collins Is the Antichrist? Collins Doesn’t Think So

Phil Collins and Noel Gallagher

Gina Wetzler/Redferns/Getty Images; Alex Livesey - Danehouse/Getty Images

Does Noel Gallagher Truly Believe Phil Collins Is the Antichrist? Collins Doesn’t Think So

For more than three decades, OasisNoel Gallagher has been dunking on Phil Collins. He’s called the Genesis frontman the antichrist and humorously urged Britons to vote Labour as a means of keeping Collins out of England. Now that Gallagher, 59, and Collins, 75, stand to run into one another when they’re inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame this fall, Collins is speaking out. “I’m giving him the benefit of the doubt here, and assuming he doesn’t really think I’m the antichrist,” Collins recently told Mojo.

The magazine reports that in 1994, Gallagher called Collins “the antichrist of music” in an interview. The Oasis guitarist/songwriter said he drew that conclusion after attending a Genesis show in the Eighties while “completely out of it.”

Keep ReadingShow less
Mike D’s New Solo Album Contains Music Made With 1980s Beastie Boys Sampler

Mike D, June 2026.

Jim Dyson/Getty Images

Mike D’s New Solo Album Contains Music Made With 1980s Beastie Boys Sampler

If you listen closely to Mike D‘s upcoming solo album, Thank You, you might hear familiar sounds. When composing music, the rapper’s sons, Skyler and Davis Diamond, who comprise part of the band Mike D 5D, used an E-mu SP-1200 sampler, whose vintage is from sometime in the Eighties, on loan from Mike D’s Beastie Boys bandmate, Adam “Ad-Rock” Horovitz. The instrument came with floppy disks preloaded with Beastie beats.

In a New York Times interview, producer Tyran Donaldson, who has also worked with SZA, recalled chuckling at listening to the Diamonds work with the instrument. “It’s a time machine,” he said. “They’d be trying to find a sound, and you’d randomly hear a drum break that was on a Beastie Boys song.” (Nobody in the article said whether or not the group used any of the actual Beasties breaks on the album.)

Keep ReadingShow less