(pictured around the time of the event). "
It Wasn't Me" by
reggae musician
Shaggy was released in September 2000 as the first single from his fifth album
Hot Shot, eventually reaching number 1 on the
Billboard Hot 100 in the United States and in other countries. The
lyrics of the song depict a man asking his friend what to do after his girlfriend catches him having sex with another woman. His friend's advice is to deny everything, despite clear evidence to the contrary, with the phrase "It wasn't me". On February 3, 2002, a video surfaced showing popular
R&B musician
R. Kelly raping and urinating on an underage girl. The story was sent to the
Chicago Sun-Times on February 8, 2002. This news surfaced on the day Kelly was to perform at the opening ceremony of the
2002 Winter Olympics. In interviews with
WMAQ television of Chicago and
MTV News, Kelly said that he was not the man in the video. In June 2002, Kelly was indicted on 21 counts of child pornography and arrested. The case earned media attention, and Kelly's insistence that he was not the man in the video as his only line of defense earned mockery. When the case went to trial in 2007, Kelly based his defense on denying that it was him in the video, which led
Slate writer
Josh Levin to coin the term the "Shaggy defense" in reference to the song to describe Kelly's strategy: "I predict that in the decades to come, law schools will teach this as the 'Shaggy defense'. You allege that I was caught on camera, butt naked, banging on the log cabin floor? It wasn't me." Levin repeated the term on
NPR. Ultimately, Kelly was found not guilty on those charges. The prosecution witness Lisa Van Allen was easily impeached as a witness due to her clearly sordid history with R. Kelly, others, and even soliciting a bribe from an investigator in the case. One juror told the
Chicago Tribune, "At some point we said there was a lack of evidence." ==Use==