Miami Herald

Detective: Smollett was ‘upset’ camera didn’t record attack

- BY DON BABWIN AND SARA BURNETT

Jussie Smollett, who is accused of lying to police when he reported he was the victim of racist and homophobic attack in downtown Chicago, appeared troubled when he was told that a surveillan­ce camera did not record the alleged assault, a police detective testified Wednesday.

Chicago police detective Kimberly Murray said she interviewe­d the former “Empire” actor the morning of the January 2019 attack and that he told her he had been assaulted by two men — one white and wearing a ski mask, the other he couldn’t see — as he was returning home after buying a sandwich.

Murray also said Smollett told her he had received a threatenin­g phone call days earlier, but he refused to hand over his cellphone, which the detective said could help police piece together a timeline of what happened, and he wouldn’t consent to giving medical records or a DNA swab.

She also said Smollett was “upset” when she told him a surveillan­ce camera in the area didn’t capture the alleged attack because it was pointed away from the scene. Murray said she explained to the actor that the cover on the pod camera makes it impossible to know which way it is pointing.

A Chicago police officer testified Tuesday that investigat­ors tracked down two possible suspects in the assault — brothers who also worked on the “Empire” set in Chicago — using surveillan­ce video and taxi and rideshare records. When taken into custody, they detailed for police how Smollett orchestrat­ed the fake attack, including buying supplies and doing a “dry run” with them.

A detective who interviewe­d Smollett two weeks after the alleged assault — and after the brothers, who are Black, had been taken into custody — said Smollett started to change his story.

Defense attorney Nenye Uche has said the brothers attacked Smollett, who is Black and gay, “because of who he is” and suggested Tuesday that the brothers were homophobic.

Smollett is charged with six counts of felony disorderly conduct for making what prosecutor­s say was a false police report – one count for each time he gave a report, to three different officers. The class 4 felony carries a prison sentence of up to three years, but experts have said if Smollett is convicted he likely would be placed on probation and ordered to perform community service.

Jurors were shown surveillan­ce video Tuesday of the brothers buying supplies, including a red hat they told police Smollett wanted them to wear to resemble supporters of then-President Donald Trump, and a piece of clotheslin­e police said was later fashioned into the noose. Jurors also saw a still image from a video that Theis said showed Smollett returning home the night of the alleged attack, with the clotheslin­e draped around his shoulders. The clotheslin­e was wrapped around his neck when officers arrived, Theis said, leading detectives to believe Smollett may have retied it.

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