Smollett case could jeopardize career of top prosecutor
CHICAGO — The decision by a grand jury to restore charges against Jussie Smollett could jeopardize the career of the first black woman to hold Chicago’s top law enforcement job.
The indictment drew a stinging public response from Kim Foxx, who quickly raised the spectre of a conspiracy against her. Foxx’s statement was also an acknowledgement that the renewed case accusing Smollett of staging a racist, anti-gay attack on himself could undermine her bid for a second term as Cook County state’s attorney.
The indictment issued Tuesday was ushered in by a special prosecutor who reviewed the decision by Foxx’s office 11 months ago to abruptly drop the initial charges against Smollett. That decision was unjustified, he said, in part because the evidence against Smollett seemed overwhelming and because he was not required to admit that the attack was a hoax.
Questions still linger about whether Foxx, 47, acted improperly by speaking to a Smollett relative and a onetime aide of former First Lady Michelle Obama before the charges were dropped, or by weighing in on the case after recusing herself. The special prosecutor said he planned to submit a report on whether there was wrongdoing by prosecutors in coming months.