They suggested that after the brothers were questioned by police about the alleged attack, they asked Smollett for $1 million each to not testify against him at trial. Smollett said Monday that message was in reference to the illegal steroid, and he used language Osundairo had used previously.ĭefense attorneys have suggested the Osundairo brothers were motivated to accuse Smollett of staging the hoax because they disliked him and then saw an opportunity to make money. Osundairo testified that Smollett sent him a text message - which jurors saw last week - about talking “on the low,” and that during the conversation Smollett asked him about helping to stage the attack.
He said Osundairo told the actor he could get him some “on the low” - or secretly - while he was on an upcoming trip to Nigeria. Smollett also testified that Osundairo told him about an herbal steroid that encourages weight loss but is illegal in the U.S. Smollett said after news broke that everyone - including Trump - had an opinion about what happened, and that he hated the attention. He also said “absolutely not” when asked if he gave Osundairo and his brother $100 to pay for supplies for the fake attack. “No," Smollett said, “there was no hoax.” The attorney asked again if he planned a hoax. Asked by his defense attorney if he gave Osundairo payment for some kind of hoax, Smollett replied: “Never." Smollett also testified he wrote the $3,500 check for nutrition and training advice from Abimbola Osundairo while he was going to be out of town. “I am also a well known figure at that time and I am an openly gay man.” I do not trust the police,” Smollett said. Smollett said he was upset police had been called because he would never have done so.
Smollett said he removed the noose but a friend who was at his apartment called police and told him to put the noose back on so officers could see it. Smollett said he picked up his phone and told the person he had been talking to that he “got jumped.” He noticed he had a noose around his neck as he got up, grabbed his sandwich and went up to his apartment. Smollett said he assumed the person who attacked him was white because he used a racial slur and shouted it was “MAGA country,” an apparent reference to then-President Donald Trump's campaign slogan, “Make America Great Again.” The brothers, Abimbola and Olabingo Osundairo, who are Black, testified last week that Smollett instructed them to yell “this is MAGA country” during the fake assault. Smollett said he saw a second person - who he believes kicked him on his side - as that person ran away. He said he slipped and they tussled on the ground for up to 30 seconds. But I don’t know if it landed," Smollett said. Standing up in the Chicago courtroom, Smollett demonstrated how he said the man walked quickly toward him, then pointed to his left temple to show the jury where the man hit him. Smollett said he was angry and turned around to confront the person, who he said towered over him.
Smollett told jurors he had just returned from a trip and was walking home after buying a sandwich when someone yelled to him about the TV show then shouted a racist, homophobic remark. They also said Smollett gave them a $3,500 check to carry it out. They said Smollett, who is gay and Black, orchestrated the hoax to get publicity, giving them $100 for supplies and instructing them to place a noose around his neck and yell homophobic slurs. Smollett, who faces charges that he lied to Chicago police about the January 2019 attack, sought to refute damaging testimony from two brothers last week.
CHICAGO - Former “Empire” actor Jussie Smollett denied Monday that he staged an anti-gay, racist attack on himself in downtown Chicago, testifying at his trial that “there was no hoax.”