Las Vegas Review-Journal

Second man says actor Smollett paid for 2019 staged attack

- By Don Babwin and Sara Burnett

CHICAGO — The second of two brothers testified Thursday that Jussie Smollett plotted a racist and anti-gay attack on himself and paid them to carry it out, giving them lines to shout and pointing out a surveillan­ce camera the former “Empire” actor said would capture the hoax on video.

Smollett’s lawyer worked to discredit the brothers’ accounts, suggesting they attacked Smollett because they didn’t like him, and tried to get him to pay them each $1 million not to testify that he staged the assault.

Defense attorney Shay Allen suggested the brothers were motivated to accuse Smollett of staging the hoax because they disliked the performer — who is gay and Black — and then saw an opportunit­y to make money.

Olabingo Osundairo’s testimony at Smollett’s trial in Chicago on Thursday echoed the account his brother, Abimbola Osundairo, gave on the witness stand a day earlier, including that Smollett wanted the brothers to douse him with gasoline and put a noose around his neck, and that Smollett gave them a $100 bill to buy the supplies and paid them with a $3,500 check.

Olabingo Osundairo said Smollett told him he received hate mail at the TV studio in Chicago “and he had this crazy idea of having two MAGA supporters attack him,” an apparent reference to then-president Donald Trump’s slogan “Make America Great Again.” Osundairo believed the plan was to publicize the attack on social media, not to involve police, he said.

They opted to pour bleach on Smollett, Osundairo said, because he wasn’t comfortabl­e using gasoline. He said Smollett wanted his brother to do the punching, and that it should look like he fought back.

Osundairo also addressed the defense contention that the brothers were driven by homophobia. He testified that he has nothing against gays and the jury was shown a photo of the siblings taking part in Chicago’s 2015 gay pride parade dressed as trojan warriors.

Smollett, 39, is charged with six counts of felony disorderly conduct for making what prosecutor­s say was a false police report about the alleged attack on Jan. 29, 2019 — one count for each time he gave a report — to three different officers.

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