By Status Ain't Hood Staff
•
February 3, 2026
Reshona Landfair, who testified anonymously as Jane Doe during R. Kelly’s 2022 federal trial, says publicly revealing her identity has been “very liberating.” Now 41, Landfair shared her story on CBS Mornings in her first television interview tied to her memoir, Who’s Watching Shorty?: Reclaiming Myself from the Shame of R. Kelly’s Abuse. She described wanting to “live in my true skin,” years after forming a relationship with the R&B singer when she was a teenager. Landfair, a former child rapper from a musical family in Chicago, said she met Kelly in the 1990s after being introduced by her aunt, R&B singer Sparkle. In her book, Landfair recounts being encouraged to ask Kelly to be her godfather, a moment she says marked a shift from a professional relationship to a personal one. She alleges that Kelly began grooming and sexually abusing her when she was around 13. Though Sparkle reportedly contacted social services, Landfair said there were no visible signs that led authorities to intervene. Kelly was later convicted of racketeering and sex crimes in federal trials in 2021 and 2022, following decades of allegations. Landfair said her life was shattered in 2001, weeks before her 17th birthday, when Kelly told her a sex tape filmed when she was 14 had been leaked and sold. Kelly was arrested in 2002 on child pornography charges but was acquitted in 2008 after Landfair testified falsely to a grand jury that she was not the girl in the video—something she now calls one of her deepest regrets. She said watching the 2019 docuseries Surviving R. Kelly compelled her to come forward, realizing she felt responsible for remaining silent while others were harmed. “That moment changed everything,” Landfair said, describing it as the beginning of reclaiming her voice and her life.