The Sentinel-Record

Actor sentenced for staged attack

Smollett declares his innocence after he gets 150 days in jail

- DON BABWIN AND KATHLEEN FOODY

CHICAGO — Jussie Smollett maintained his innocence during his sentencing hearing Thursday after a judge sentenced the former “Empire” actor to 150 days in jail for lying to police about a racist and homophobic attack that he orchestrat­ed himself.

Cook County Judge James Linn sentenced Smollett to 30 months of felony probation, including 150 days in the county jail. Linn denied a request to suspend Smollett’s sentence and ordered he be placed in custody immediatel­y.

Smollett was also ordered to pay $120,106 in restitutio­n to the city of Chicago.

Smollett loudly declared innocence after the sentence. “I am innocent. I could have said I am guilty a long time ago,” Smollett shouted as sheriff’s deputies led him out of the courtroom at the end of an hourslong sentencing hearing.

Linn excoriated Smollett prior to delivering his sentencing decision and pronounced himself astounded by Smollett’s actions given the actor’s multiracia­l family background and history working on behalf of social justice organizati­ons.

“For you now to sit here, convicted of hoaxing, hate crimes … the hypocrisy is just astounding,” Linn said.

Before Linn handed down the sentence, Smollett’s defense attorney Nenye Uche asked Linn to limit the sentence to community service. He said Smollett “has lost nearly everything” in his career and finances and asked that Linn give him time to make restitutio­n if that is part of the sentence.

Witnesses for both the state and Smollett testified at Smollett’s sentencing at the Cook County Courthouse. Chicago Police Supt. David Brown submitted a statement that was read aloud by Samuel Mendenhall, a member of the special prosecutio­n team.

In the statement, Brown said Smollett’s false report of a hate crime harmed “actual victims” of such crimes. Brown asked that the city be compensate­d for its costs, saying the cost of investigat­ing his claim could have been spent elsewhere in the city.

“I ask you, judge, not to send him to prison,” Jussie Smollett’s grandmothe­r, Molly Smollett, 92, testifying for the defense, told the court. She later added, “If you do, send me along with him, OK?”

Smollett’s brother, Joel Smollett, Jr., told the court that Smollett is “not a threat to the people of Illinois. In my humble opinion he is completely innocent.”

Smollett’s attorneys also read aloud letters from other supporters, including an organizer with Black Lives Matter, the Rainbow PUSH Coalition and LaTanya and Samuel L.

Jackson that asked Linn to consider the case’s effect on Smollett’s life and career and to avoid any confinemen­t as part of his sentence.

Other supporters spoke about worries that Smollett would be at risk in prison, specifical­ly mentioning his race, sexual orientatio­n and his family’s Jewish heritage.

Smollett declined to make a statement at the hearing. His decision came after special prosecutor Dan Webb asked Linn to include “an appropriat­e amount of prison time” when sentencing the actor for his conviction.

Before the sentencing began, Linn rejected a motion from the defense to overturn the jury’s verdict on legal grounds.

Smollett faced up to three years in prison for each of the five felony counts of disorderly conduct of which he was convicted. He was acquitted on a sixth count.

Thursday’s sentencing could be the final chapter in a criminal case, subject to appeal, that made internatio­nal headlines when Smollett, who is Black and gay, reported to police that two men wearing ski masks beat him, and hurled racial and homophobic slurs at him on a dark Chicago street and ran off.

In December, Smollett was convicted in a trial that included the testimony of two brothers who told jurors Smollett paid them to carry out the attack, gave them money for the ski masks and rope, instructed them to fashion the rope into a noose. Prosecutor­s said he told them what racist and homophobic slurs to shout, and to yell that Smollett was in “MAGA Country,” a reference to the campaign slogan of Donald Trump’s presidenti­al campaign.

Smollett, who knew the men from his work on the television show “Empire” that filmed in Chicago, testified that he did not recognize them and did not know they were the men attacking him.

 ?? (AP/Chicago Tribune/Brian Cassella) ?? Actor Jussie Smollett appears at his sentencing hearing Thursday at the Leighton Criminal Court Building in Chicago. More photos at arkansason­line.com/311smollet­t/.
(AP/Chicago Tribune/Brian Cassella) Actor Jussie Smollett appears at his sentencing hearing Thursday at the Leighton Criminal Court Building in Chicago. More photos at arkansason­line.com/311smollet­t/.

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