Christopher Gunn Wiki
Christopher Gunn Biography
Who is Christopher Gunn?
Christopher Gunn, 39, posts videos like ‘DeBoski Gunn’ on YouTube, several of which are titled ‘R Kelly Propaganda’ in an attempt to clear the singer’s name. His last video on the case was titled ‘R Kelly Propaganda PT 75’.
A YouTuber who has made videos defending R Kelly is now facing his own charges after allegedly threatening three women who prosecuted the singer, who will be sentenced today for s*x trafficking.
Charged
Gunn has been charged in the United States District Court in Brooklyn with making threats involving serious bodily injury or death.
The charge stems from a video streamed live to Gunn’s YouTube account in October, where he allegedly showed an image of the United States Attorney’s Office for the Eastern District of New York.
He told onlookers to “become familiar with this building,” according to the feds. He added: ‘if [Kelly] goes down, they all go down.’
Gunn then gives the names of the women who tried Kelly before showing a scene from the movie Boyz N’ the Hood that featured a character carrying a gun and included the sound of a gunshot. All of the women are referred to as ‘Jane Doe’ in the complaint.
He was previously arrested by the NYPD in September 2021 on the day he attended Kelly’s trial in New York, according to Buzzfeed. His name appears on a trial attendance record on September 3.
The complaint also says that Gunn was paid via CashApp from people who made comments like ’30 rounds…free to R Kelly’ and ’30 rounds to the haters.’
If convicted, Gunn faces up to five years in prison.
Investigation
The R&B star, 55, was found guilty of racketeering and other charges last year in a trial seen as a key moment in the #MeToo movement
Kelly said during 14 hours of interviews with psychiatric experts that her closest relationship growing up was with her mother Joanne.
She recalled seeing her perform with her Six Pack band and going to McDonald’s with fond childhood memories of her.
The singer never knew his father and said his mother’s death was the most tragic event of his life, and he often visited McDonald’s later to smell the coffee and remember her, said Renee Sorrentino, a clinical assistant professor in the School of Harvard Medicine, in a letter.
The future R&B star also saw his childhood sweetheart drown when he was a child, and several people claimed that he was repeatedly abused when he was six or seven years old.
His attorney claims his older sister and his landlord abused him “weekly,” and this may have contributed to his “hypers*xuality,” Sorrentino says.
US District Judge Ann Donnelly will impose the sentence today in federal court in Brooklyn after hearing testimony from the victims and possibly from Kelly himself.
They added: “Their victimization of him continued into adulthood where, due to his literacy deficiencies, the defendant has been repeatedly financially defrauded and abused, often by the people he paid to protect him.”
The jury convicted the I Believe I Can Fly hitmaker after hearing how he used his entourage of managers and assistants to meet girls and keep them obedient, an operation prosecutors said amounted to a criminal enterprise.
Several accusers testified that Kelly subjected them to perverse and sadistic whims when they were minors.
Kelly, whose birth name is Robert Sylvester Kelly, used his “fame, money and popularity” to “systematically prey on children and young women for his own s*xual gratification,” prosecutors wrote in their own filing earlier this month.







