Actor Jussie Smollett indicted on 16
counts of lying to Chicago police
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[March 09, 2019]
By Suzannah Gonzales
CHICAGO (Reuters) - Television actor Jussie
Smollett, arrested last month on a single charge of perpetrating a
hate-crime hoax, has been newly indicted on 16 felony counts of falsely
reporting to police that he was assaulted by two strangers shouting
racist and homophobic slurs.
The indictment, returned by a Cook County grand jury on Thursday and
made public on Friday, greatly expands on the legal jeopardy faced by
Smollett, whose story of being attacked in Chicago by supporters of U.S.
President Donald Trump has drawn suspicion since it first surfaced in
late January.
Smollett, 36, who is black and openly gay and plays a gay musician on
the Fox network hip-hop drama "Empire," was charged last month in a
single-count criminal complaint with making a false report to police,
defined under Illinois law as a form of disorderly conduct.
The new indictment in the case contains 16 similar counts: eight related
to his interview with one police officer on the day of the purported
attack and eight more stemming from his interview with another officer
the same day.
Each count carries a maximum penalty of three years in prison and a
$25,000 fine.
Smollett's attorney, Mark Geragos, blasted the indictment in a statement
as "redundant and vindictive," adding that his client "adamantly
maintains his innocence even if law enforcement has robbed him of that
presumption."
He also said that leveling charges in an indictment spares prosecutors
the need to submit evidence and witnesses to defense cross-examination
in a preliminary hearing, where a judge decides if sufficient cause
exists for the case to proceed to trial.
At the time he was initially charged two weeks ago, Chicago Police
Superintendent Eddie Johnson said Smollett had paid two brothers $35,000
to stage an assault on him in a hoax orchestrated to somehow further his
acting career.
NO FURTHER ARREST
Smollett has remained free on $100,000 bond since his release hours
after surrendering to authorities on Feb. 21. He already was scheduled
to return to court on March 14. In the meantime, there is no warrant for
his arrest in connection with this week's indictment "because it's the
same case," Chicago police spokesman Anthony Guglielmi told Reuters.
No mention is made in the indictment of Smollett's claim, according to
police, that his attackers yelled, "This is MAGA country," referring to
Trump's "Make America Great Again" slogan, as they accosted him.
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Jussie Smollett exits Cook County Department of Corrections after
posting bail in Chicago, Illinois, U.S., February 21, 2019.
REUTERS/Joshua Lott/File Photo
But the 16-page document includes other elements of the account that
Smollett had stood by for weeks.
According to previous police recitations of Smollett's story, he
reported that two masked men approached him on the street in the
early hours of Jan. 29 shouting racial and homophobic slurs, struck
him in the face, doused him with an "unknown chemical substance" and
wrapped a rope around his neck before they fled.
News of the assault spread quickly on social media, with many
expressing outrage while others wondered whether the story was
fabricated even as Chicago police insisted their detectives were
treating the matter seriously.
In an interview with ABC's "Good Morning America" days before he was
charged, Smollett said he was angry that some people questioned his
story, and he suggested the disbelief might come from racial bias.
His attorneys said after his arrest on Feb. 21 they were conducting
a thorough investigation for purposes of mounting the actor's
defense.
Smollett himself, according to reports in media citing unnamed
sources, apologized last month to the cast and crew on the set of
"Empire" but maintained his innocence.
The release of the indictment came after the Chicago Police
Department said it started an internal investigation into how
information about the alleged hate crime against Smollett was
anonymously leaked to reporters.
Geragos said the indictment was designed, in part, "to distract from
the internal investigation."
"Empire" debuted on Fox in 2015 and has earned multiple Emmy
nominations. Smollett plays the character Jamal Lyon, a member of
the family that is the focus of the drama. Producers said in
February they were removing his character from the final two
episodes of the show's current season.
(Reporting by Suzannah Gonzales in Chicago; additional reporting by
Brendan O'Brien in Milwaukee and Alex Dobuzinskis in Los Angeles;
writing by Steve Gorman; editing by Leslie Adler and James
Dalgleish)
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