Chicago Sun-Times

Lawyer says Smollett plans to speak with police again, possibly Monday

- BY NADER ISSA AND TOM SCHUBA

As the Chicago police investigat­ion into the reported attack on Jussie Smollett enters new territory, the “Empire” actor’s attorney says Smollett plans to speak with detectives as soon as Monday.

One of Smollett’s newly retained attorneys, Todd Pugh, told the Sun-Times on Sunday that the actor and his legal team “expect to be back online tomorrow with the investigat­ors.”

Pugh said a possible sit-down would depend on “scheduling availabili­ty.”

After the police department spent weeks saying Smollett was the victim of a possible hate crime last month in Streetervi­lle, investigat­ors are now probing whether Smollett paid two brothers he knew from “Empire” to stage the attack, law enforcemen­t sources told the Chicago Sun-Times.

New evidence provided to police during interrogat­ions of the brothers — who are no longer considered suspects — “shifted the trajectory of the investigat­ion” and has detectives wanting to question Smollett in a follow-up interview, according to police spokesman Anthony Guglielmi.

“We have some informatio­n that needs to be corroborat­ed and verified with Mr. Smolette [sic],” another police spokesman, Tom Ahern, told the Sun-Times on Sunday.

Guglielmi said Sunday night, however, that police are not yet classifyin­g Smollett as an “offender.”

Detectives have discovered that one of the brothers bought the rope alleged to be used in the reported attack at a Crafty Beaver hardware store in Ravenswood, a law enforcemen­t source said.

Smollett has told police he was walking in the 300 block of East North Water Street about 2 a.m. on Jan. 29 when two men walked up to him, yelled racial and homophobic slurs, hit him in the face, poured a substance — maybe bleach — on him and put a “thin, light rope” around his neck. The incident has been investigat­ed as a hate crime.

Two men were taken into custody by police Wednesday night at O’Hare Airport after returning from a trip to Nigeria, their attorney Gloria Schmidt told reporters Friday. Detectives had believed they were the same men shown in a surveillan­ce image released by police days after the purported attack, Guglielmi said at the time.

They were released Friday night without charges.

Smollett himself denied allegation­s that the attack was a hoax in an interview broadcast Thursday with anchor Robin Roberts on “Good Morning America” and called allegation­s he was lying “ridiculous.”

 ?? FREDERIC J. BROWN/AFP/GETTY IMAGES ?? A lawyer for Jussie Smollett says a sit-down interview with Chicago police detectives depends on “scheduling availabili­ty.”
FREDERIC J. BROWN/AFP/GETTY IMAGES A lawyer for Jussie Smollett says a sit-down interview with Chicago police detectives depends on “scheduling availabili­ty.”

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