What A Day - R. Kelly Convicted
Episode Date: September 28, 2021After decades of allegations and investigations, a jury convicted R. Kelly, marking the end of a six-week federal trial. He was found guilty of all nine counts that he faced, including charges of sex... trafficking and racketeering.Republicans who claim the 2020 presidential election was stolen suffered a humiliating defeat in Arizona. But instead of admitting they were wrong, the Stop the Steal movement is leaning even more into its false, outrageous, completely-made-up claims that Trump actually won. And in headlines: Pfizer tests an oral antiviral drug that could prevent COVID-19 infections, children today will live through three times as many climate disasters as their grandparents, and Facebook delays its plan to launch an Instagram for kids.Show Notes:NY Times: “Goldman Sachs, Ozy Media and a $40 Million Conference Call Gone Wrong” – https://nyti.ms/3AZv35aFor a transcript of this episode, please visit crooked.com/whataday
Transcript
Discussion (0)
It's Tuesday, September 28th. I'm Gideon Resnick.
And I'm Josie Duffy Rice. And this is What A Day, where our ability to deliver the news
will never be affected by unprecedented global supply chain shortages.
Yeah, the takes on here are a renewable resource,
and they don't need to be shipped anywhere because they come straight from us.
It's true. They're not constrained by time, space.
Or reason, for that matter.
On today's show, audits of the 2020 election are spreading to several more states,
plus a compelling story about a company called Aussie Media. But first, yesterday, a jury convicted R. Kelly of all nine counts that he faced in federal court,
which included charges of sex trafficking and racketeering. Here's Jacqueline Casulis,
the acting U.S. attorney in Brooklyn, right outside the courthouse after the verdict was reached.
Today's guilty verdict forever brands R. Kelly as a predator who used his fame and fortune to prey on the young, the vulnerable and the voiceless for his own sexual gratification.
After decades of allegations and investigations, this was the end of a six week trial.
It included absolutely harrowing details and testimony of sexual abuse.
We're not going to delve into too much detail on today's episode, but if this segment is difficult
for you, skip ahead to the next, which will come up in just a few minutes.
Yeah, in terms of the verdict, the jury of seven men and five women found Kelly guilty after just
about nine hours of deliberation. And as we've mentioned on previous episodes, the prosecution
really set out to describe how Kelly, as well as a host of managers and various aides, all helped the singer meet
women and underage girls and keep them under his control. These people worked on Kelly's behalf to
trap victims so he could prey on them. The prosecution was laying out how this was essentially
an entire criminal enterprise, that it spanned other people beyond Kelly. So what were some of the takeaways from the trial itself?
Yeah, there were about 45 witnesses called by the prosecution, and many of the accusers,
including one man, testified that they were underage when they met Kelly. Additional testimony,
as the AP notes, focused on Kelly's prior relationship with the singer Aaliyah. He
allegedly sexually abused her
when she was a teenager and later lied about her age on a marriage license. There was also
testimony that he had married her underage in order for her to have an abortion. It is all
very, very horrific stuff. It's hard to hear. What was the general reaction to the verdict?
Is there any news on that? Yeah, so a lot of people have
commented on the fact that the Black women who had been sounding the alarm about Kelly had been
ignored for years and years until this moment. Right. Joranda Pace, the first accuser to testify
against Kelly during any criminal trial last month, wrote on Instagram yesterday, quote,
today my voice was heard. And others have pointed to the
consistent reporting from the few journalists who kept following this, like Jim DeRogatis,
who started reporting on this story for the Chicago Sun-Times over 20 years ago. He's,
among others, who really refused to let this story go.
So what do we know about a potential sentence here? What's going to happen to R. Kelly next?
Yeah, so Kelly could reportedly face anywhere from 10 years to life in prison.
That's given the racketeering count and the violations of the Mann Act, the anti-sex
trafficking law. And he is currently set to be sentenced on May 4th, 2022. So quite a bit of
time before we find out. And while this marks the first criminal conviction for Kelly, remember in
2008, he was acquitted in a child pornography case.
He also faces a number of other charges in Illinois and Minnesota for which he has pleaded not guilty.
We're going to dive into the story more in the days to come and also keep our eyes open for additional updates.
But Josie, let's shift gears now to a story that you've been watching.
Republicans who claim the 2020 presidential election was stolen suffered a humiliating defeat recently, but instead of admitting that, it has only spurred them and
others around the country to amp up their rhetoric. So Josie, tell us a little bit more about where
things stand on this. Yeah, so another day, another story about the big lie, the big lie being that
Trump actually won the 2020 election, which did not happen.
As we mentioned yesterday, a quote, full forensic audit of over 2 million ballots in Maricopa County,
the most populous county in Arizona, an audit that cost taxpayers $6 million, proved once again that
Joe Biden was the decisive winner of the 2020 election and had in fact won by 360 more votes than previously
thought. We knew that Biden had in fact won, of course, because there had already been two audits
done in that county. But this result is notable because it was done by Trump devotees who had
all the reason in the world to find wrongdoing and prove that Trump won, and they really still
could not do that. Foiled again. So this will definitely just put everything to rest, I assume.
You'd think that, but we both know that's not the case.
Instead of retreating with their tail between their legs and admitting they were wrong, we now see the Stop the Steal movement leaning even more into their false, outrageous, spurious, ridiculous, baseless, completely made up claims that the 2020 election was stolen. For example,
the Cyber Ninjas, true name, the group of Trump supporters that conducted the Arizona audit,
despite no previous experience in election audits, wouldn't even believe their own results.
They are still claiming corruption, a claim that is entirely unsubstantiated.
Yeah. And so the audits are also continuing or they're starting in other parts of the country.
Where are some of the examples of that?
Yeah. So it's not just Arizona and Wisconsin. There are three investigations into the 2020
election happening right now. The highest profile one is being led by a conservative
former state Supreme Court justice and has a budget of seven hundred thousand dollars. Again,
all taxpayer funded. That audit began just days after Trump publicly criticized Republican
leaders in the state for not supporting the big lie. Meanwhile, in Pennsylvania,
Republican state senators have subpoenaed personal information on all of the 7 million voters in the
state, including driver's license information, a move seen by many as an alarming invasion of
privacy. And funny enough, the audits aren't only in states that Biden won.
After Trump wrote an open letter to Texas Governor Greg Abbott last Thursday
demanding that the state also conduct an audit of the election,
the Secretary of State's office ordered an audit in Dallas,
Harris, Tarrant, and Collin counties,
despite the fact that Trump did, in fact, win Texas.
Right. You find a couple hundred votes here or there if you'd like. I think we're still going
to be talking about the same result. Yeah. So, Josie, these audits aren't even the most
concerning thing that our listeners should watch for, really, as Republicans try to undermine the
past election. Yeah. Yeah, exactly. So in Republican led states across the country,
laws restricting voting rights are being passed.
I mean, left and right. In theory, at least the laws are to prevent voter fraud.
That's despite the fact that no remotely significant voter fraud has been proven to exist in this election or pretty much any other election.
What they actually do, of course, is make it harder for more people to vote, since Republicans know that higher turnout typically hurts them and helps Democrats.
These laws are wildly popular with Republican state leaders.
And even those who have publicly rejected the big lie are using that lie to, so we need more voting rights restrictions, or they're claiming that even though the election wasn't stolen, we need more voting rights
restrictions to ensure that there is trust in the system. Yeah. So either way, this is a big
problem, a scary one that we're dealing with. So what is the scope of this right now?
Well, Gideon, according to the Voting Rights Lab, almost 400 voter suppression laws have been
introduced this year alone, 400. And it's only going to get worse. Those few Republicans that
have been willing to say publicly that Biden won fair and square are facing tough odds for
reelection, meaning next time there might not be anyone willing to fight back against these lies.
What's more, Republican legislatures have not only passed voter suppression laws by the dozens, they've given themselves more power in the election certification
process as well. In Arizona, in fact, one bill says explicitly that the legislature can revoke
the certification of a presidential election. It's outrageous. There are also a number of bills
that aim to allow criminal charges to be brought against local election officials for tiny technical infractions.
So what we're seeing is a full assault on voting rights in this country.
And by the time we hit Election Day 2024, it could really be too late to stop it.
So despite the seemingly positive results from these election audits, at the end of the day, Republicans are still winning this fight.
They're still winning on voting rights.
And it's important for all of our listeners out there to be involved in their own local
politics and own state politics to stop these anti-democratic efforts on a grassroots local
level.
And that is the latest for now.
It is Tuesday, WOD Squad, and today we're going to do a segment called WOD Recommends, where we share an under-the-radar news story, movie, book, or even a rude bumper sticker that caught our attention.
WOD Recommends.
Yep.
I will never tire, never tire of the intro sounds.
Josie, you were talking about this story in our news meeting yesterday that combines these sort
of high tech fraud with low tech voice modifiers. You want to try to make sense of this for people?
Sure. I'll give it my best shot. So this story was written by Ben Smith for the New York Times
and it was published on Sunday. It's about a media company called Ozzy that has raised tons
of money and valued itself at around $130 million as of last year. They host events like Ozzy Fest,
which have featured big name speakers like Hillary Clinton, Trevor Noah. But how successful
the company really is has always been somewhat questionable. Lots of online media companies
exaggerate their traffic, and it's not a very good way of measuring someone's influence. But
some of Ozzy's reported statistics seem too inflated to really even believe,
like inflated by the tens of millions. Yeah. If I have run across an Ozzy article,
video or podcast, it must have been by pure accident, and I do not remember it, and I am pathologically online. Right, exactly. So according to this article,
Ozzy was closing in on a $40 million investment from Goldman Sachs this past winter,
and it came down to a Zoom meeting that Ozzy arranged between the Goldman investors and
executives at YouTube, who were supposed to talk about how well Ozzy's content did on their
site. But then just before the meeting, a YouTube exec named Alex Piper says he can't log into the
Zoom. He suggested a conference call instead. And on the conference call, Piper talked up Ozzy and
the company's CEO, but his voice didn't really sound right. It sounded as if it were altered
digitally. And so someone on the
Goldman team followed up with Piper after the meeting, reaching him through his official
YouTube email address. And Piper responded that he had no knowledge of the call. He didn't even
know what they were talking about. Oh, this is very odd. Like no one's lived in that house for
100 years vibes, but for like two big time investors.
Wow. Right, right. Exactly. So YouTube launched a security investigation. And within days,
Ozzy CEO had apologized to Goldman, saying that the voice on the call was his co founder,
and explaining his actions by saying that he was experiencing a mental health crisis.
Goldman didn't pursue the investment further.
YouTube is following up, though, with its parent company, Google.
They've alerted the FBI since Ozzy may have committed fraud
by impersonating an executive to trick potential investors.
Yeah, the mistaken identities on Zoom that I had fun with and identified with
was when that lawyer, for instance, had the cat filter on his face and he kept saying over and over, I am not a cat.
That's that's the preferable outcome here, I think.
Yeah, exactly. This one is is on the list of the most yikes, along with like Jeffrey Toobin and others, you know?
Yep.
But I will say if the whole plan of this was to make me interested in what's going on in
Aussie media, it has worked on me.
I may even sign up for their newsletter now.
Yes.
Got to find out what happened.
I am intrigued.
We're going to link to that article in our show notes.
There's even more like a detail about the company marketing a show as quote unquote Amazon Prime's first talk show just because it was viewable on Amazon Prime.
It's wild.
That was WOD Recommends.
WOD Recommends.
We'll be back after some ads.
Let's wrap up with some headlines.
Headlines. Headlines.
Pfizer is dominating COVID news once again. Main character syndrome, much if you ask me.
Yesterday, the drug company announced that it is testing an oral antiviral drug that could prevent a COVID-19 infection after a person is exposed. The drugmaker plans to enroll over 2,600
healthy individuals who each live with a person with a symptomatic COVID case. The drug is designed
to block the main enzyme that is needed for the virus to multiply. During the trial, the healthy
person will take this drug, which has the easy-to-remember name PF07321332. I already memorized it.
Yeah, I have as well.
That would be in conjunction with ratonavir,
a medication that's widely used for treating HIV.
And in more Pfizer news,
the company's chairman and CEO told ABC News on Sunday
that it plans to seek authorization of a vaccine
for children five to 11 years old
in a matter of, quote, days, not weeks.
Once the company submits its trial data, the FDA and CDC are expected to review it swiftly.
The old people who had to walk nine miles in the snow to go to school have given way to
young people for whom snow is just an idea. A new study published in the journal Science
said that kids will live through three times as many climate disasters as their grandparents.
Among the many depressing stats, the study said the average six-year-old will live through twice as many wildfires and 1.7 times as many tropical cyclones as someone born in 1960.
It also found that these changes are especially dramatic in developing nations.
For example, infants in sub-Saharan Africa are projected to
live through at least 50 times as many heat waves as their ancestors born 150 years ago.
Such disparities underscore how the worst effects of climate change will be experienced in places
that contributed the least to global warming. This will happen if the planet continues to
warm at its current trajectory, and the authors of the study are calling on world leaders to
agree on more ambitious policies when they meet for the UN Climate Summit in Scotland next month.
Yes, please, dear Lord.
Seriously.
After the world collectively said, we hate that idea,
Facebook announced it will delay its plan to launch an Instagram for kids 13 and under.
The planned app called Instagram Kids was meant to address Instagram's past failures
to identify underage users and to protect them from predators and bullying.
It would do all that while also teaching kids some valuable lessons, like how to scroll through pics of people smiling until their thumbs stop functioning.
In a statement, Instagram's top executive defended the project but said the company would hear the concerns of parents and experts before proceeding any further.
And this is a rare change of heart from the company that has spent years
treating young people as a sort of all-you-can-eat data buffet.
It could be related to a congressional hearing that is happening this week,
where Facebook will be grilled on its own internal research
showing how negatively its products affected the mental health of teenage girls.
Hopefully, all this bad PR gives Facebook the chance to take a step back
and develop some new ideas just as good as Instagram for kids, like wine for babies or knives for balloons. Lastly, a few updates on
the treat beat. So be kind to the Green Apple Skittle fans in your life today, because Mars
Wrigley announced Monday the Lime Skittles will officially and permanently reclaim the Green
Skittle slot in the fall. If you haven't been paying attention, Lime Skittles have been MIA since 2013, when Obama was starting his second term.
And Corona was just something Dom and the family would drink after a long day of being fast and furious.
Also in snacks, Pokemon has teamed up with Oreo, selling sleeves of the classic cookie with 16 different character designs randomly dispersed throughout each package.
And it wouldn't be Pokemon if fans didn't interpret the game's slogan,
gotta catch them all, as a blood oath. Sellers on eBay are asking for prices as high as $100,000 for the mythical Mew cookie, the rarest design. If you want to run out to the store to
grab a package for way less than that, go for it. Nabisco, the company that makes Oreo cookies,
reached a contract with the unions after weeks of striking earlier this month. So no matter which
adorable Pokemon is printed on the cookie you eat, they'll all have this subtle flavor of hourly wage
increases and protected health insurance benefits. I really got to say, Gideon, I don't understand
how you buy that cookie from someone on eBay and they ship it and it doesn't break and you don't lose a hundred thousand dollars i don't understand that cookie is flying first class
seat back alone with supervision next to it on a private jet yeah you're probably right
yeah um no one sit in 12g uh you will crush the Mew cookie. And those are the headlines.
One more thing before we go. September is National Voter Registration Month and Vote
Save America is working to raise one and a half million through its No Off Years Fund.
Donations will go to help voter registration efforts in places where reaching new voters
will help make the difference in our ability to win next year and beyond, like Arizona, Florida, and more.
We know that's a big goal, but the sooner we get new voters registered, the sooner organizers can start building relationships and expanding their work to reach every lost voter.
To chip in, head to votesaveamerica.com slash donate and learn more.
That is all for today. If you like this show, make sure you subscribe,
leave a review, hoard green apple Skittles,
and tell your friends to listen.
And if you're into reading and not just a menu
at an all-you-can-eat data buffet like I am,
what a day is also a nightly newsletter.
Check it out and subscribe at cricket.com slash subscribe.
I'm Josie Duffy Rice.
I'm Gideon Resnick.
And enjoy your six-figure Pokemon cookie.
It took so much jet fuel to get that to you.
So the planet is angry.
I'm angry, but enjoy it.
I hope nobody listening is now realizing they ate one of the mere cookies.
What a Day is a production of Crooked Media.
It's recorded and mixed by Charlotte Landis.
Jazzy Marine is our associate producer
with production help from Jossie Kaufman.
Our head writer is John Milstein
and our executive producers are Leo Duran and me.
Our theme music is by Colin Gilliard and Kshaka.