Jury selection starts in Jussie Smollett trial - Chicago News Weekly

Monday, November 29, 2021

Jury selection starts in Jussie Smollett trial

Flanked by family and supporters, former “Empire” star Jussie Smollett walks into the Leighton Criminal Courthouse on Monday morning, Nov.29, 2021. Jury selection was expected to being Monday as the 39-year-old actor and singer is charged with lying to Chicago police in 2019 when he claimed he was the victim of a racist and anti-gay attack near his Streeterville apartment.
Flanked by family and supporters, former “Empire” star Jussie Smollett walks into the Leighton Criminal Courthouse on Monday morning, Nov.29, 2021. | Ashlee Rezin/Sun-Times

Former “Empire” actor arrived at Chicago courthouse flanked by family, legal team. Judge expects trial to last at least a week.

Jury selection began Monday in Chicago as the trial of Jussie Smollett began some three years after the former “Empire” actor first claimed he had been the victim of a hate crime attack.

Smollett arrived at the Leighton Criminal Courthouse around 9 a.m., walking past a phalanx of news cameras with his mother, Janet, sister Jurnee and brothers Jocqui and Jake. Arm and arm with his mother, the former “Empire” star stepped into Judge James Linn’s courtroom and took a seat at the defense table alongside the team of attorneys that will defend him against a half-dozen felony counts for allegedly making false statements to police.

Judge James Linn has limited the presence of media in the courtroom during the jury selection process, which the judge said should wind up Monday. The veteran judge said jurors would stay as late as 7 p.m. during the trial, which Linn said should end this week or early next.

Linn also said he expected he would be able to seat a jury from the pool of 50 prospective jurors despite the international publicity surrounding a case that has been the subject of countless news stories and late-night comedy punchlines.

Smollett made headlines in 2019 when he claimed a pair of white men assaulted him as he walked home from a sandwich shop near his Streeterville apartment, shouting that the actor was in “MAGA country” and hurling racial and homophobic slurs as they draped a noose over his neck and squirted an unknown chemical on him.

The Chicago police investigation of the attack turned its focus to Smollett himself, with investigators locating the two men who perpetrated the attack. The pair, brothers Olabinjo and Abimbola Osundairo, had worked as extras on “Empire,” and told police Smollett paid them to fake the attack as a publicity stunt. Smollett would go on to give a tearful interview on “Good Morning America,” recounting the attack and expressing outrage at those who questioned him.

Soon after, Smollett was charged with 16 counts related to making false statements to police about the attack, charges that were dropped by the Cook County State’s Attorney’s office at an unscheduled hearing less than a month after Smollett was indicted.

The unorthodox move by prosecutors allowed Smollett to clear his record without admitting guilt while he forfeited his $10,000 bond to the city of Chicago. State’s Attorney Kim Foxx, who announced she had recused herself from Smollett’s case the day before charges were announced, defended the deal as similar to deferred prosecution agreements made available to many defendants accused of nonviolent crimes, though she could produce no examples.

As outrage and conspiracy theories swirled around the case, a retired state Appeals Court judge petitioned for the appointment of a special prosecutor to investigate how Foxx’s office handled the case as well as reviewing the evidence against Smollett. Former federal prosecutor Dan Webb was appointed special prosecutor and convened a grand jury that in 2020 handed up a new, six-count indictment against Smollett alleging that the actor had indeed faked the attack. Webb’s team found no evidence of criminal conduct by Foxx or her staff but said the office had abused discretion in handling the case.

The Osundairo brothers’ testimony would appear to be crucial to the case against Smollett. The actor claims that a $3,500 check that the brothers say was payment for staging the attack was a payout for training sessions and illegal muscle-building supplements.



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