In a stunning twist to his already controversial imprisonment, R&B singer R. Kelly was recently hospitalised after what his legal team describes as a deliberate overdose attempt orchestrated within prison walls—a claim that federal prosecutors have sharply dismissed as “deeply unserious” and a “fanciful conspiracy.” According to court filings submitted by Kelly’s attorney, Beau Brindley, the singer allegedly overdosed on anxiety and sleep medication while in solitary confinement at the Federal Correctional Institution in Butner, North Carolina, on June 12.
Brindley contends that Kelly awoke feeling dizzy, faint, and disoriented before collapsing to the floor and losing consciousness. The 57-year-old was then rushed to Duke University Hospital, where doctors reportedly informed him of the overdose and diagnosed life-threatening blood clots in his lungs—clots that, according to Brindley, require urgent surgery but have gone untreated. “He could die from this condition, and they are letting it happen,” the attorney warned in his court filing, emphasising that Kelly’s life is allegedly at grave risk without medical intervention.
These explosive allegations come just days after Brindley claimed that prison officials had solicited another inmate to murder Kelly in order to prevent him from uncovering alleged prosecutorial misconduct in his previous trials. Prosecutors, however, have categorically rejected the notion of any murder plot or medical malpractice, suggesting that Kelly’s team is attempting to manipulate public opinion and the court itself. “This court should not allow Kelly to turn its docket into a grocery store checkout aisle tabloid,” they wrote in response.
As the legal drama unfolds, a Chicago judge is set to hear Kelly’s motion for release on June 20. Meanwhile, Brindley has publicly appealed to President Donald Trump for a pardon—a move that underscores the desperate and extraordinary lengths Kelly’s camp is willing to pursue as he serves out his 30-year federal sentence for sex trafficking, racketeering, and other serious crimes.