R. Kelly ex-associate says bribed official for fake ID in Aaliyah marriage

R. Kelly ex-associate says bribed official for fake ID in Aaliyah marriage

Aaliyah -- whose debut album "Age Ain't Nothin' But A Number" Kelly produced -- died in a plane crash in 2001, when she was 22.

R. Kelly released from jail
Photo: AFP Singer R. Kelly is pictured after being freed from Cook County jail in Chicago, Illinois, Saturday, March 9, 2019 after paying child support following a previous detention on sex abuse charges.

R. Kelly's former tour manager on Friday said he bribed a worker at a public aid office to get false identification saying the late singer Aaliyah was of age, so she could marry the R&B star now on trial for sex crimes.


Testifying under a grant of immunity from later prosecution, Demetrius Smith -- who worked for Kelly for more than a decade in the 1980s and 1990s -- said he paid a worker $500 to secure the then-15-year-old Aaliyah Haughton a fake ID, used shortly thereafter to wed Kelly, who was then 27.


"I went to the welfare office, and I walked in, and I said, 'Hey wanna make some money?'" Smith, now 65, said during the dramatic afternoon at the Brooklyn courthouse where Kelly is on trial for crimes including racketeering, bribery and sexual exploitation of a child.


Smith told the jury Kelly and his associates hatched the wedding plan because Aaliyah had said she was pregnant -- and Kelly feared "jail."


He believed marriage could stop her from testifying against him if criminal charges were ever filed over his relationship with the teenager.


It was "to protect himself; to protect Aaliyah," Smith said.


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He testified that he and Kelly left his tour and flew back to Chicago for the whirlwind 1994 marriage, which was later annulled.


Smith said he had urged the star not to marry Aaliyah, then Kelly's protege with whom he forged a "playful" and "flirtatious" relationship, according to the witness.


I said "he couldn't marry her and she was too young," Smith said, adding that the singer's associates were encouraging the union as a solution.


"He asked me whose side I was on."


Smith said he feared "I was getting ready to be pushed out the loop" of Kelly's career, so "I wanted to make it happen."


The witness grew exasperated several times during the questioning, which will continue Monday, telling the court he wished to leave and saying "I feel like I'm on trial."


"I'm truly uncomfortable," he said. "We're continuously talking about Aaliyah. Her parents aren't here."


Aaliyah -- whose debut album "Age Ain't Nothin' But A Number" Kelly produced -- died in a plane crash in 2001, when she was 22.


The first week of the long-anticipated trial that included searing testimony from one of his accusers has offered a glimpse into the sprawling web of of physical, sexual and emotional abuse Kelly, now 54, is accused of steering for more than two decades.


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