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Jussie Smollett's attack allegations are revisited in new documentary

Jussie Smollett's attack allegations are revisited in new documentary

Yahoo14 hours ago
Jussie Smollett, the former star of 'Empire,' has maintained that his account of being attacked in an alleged hate crime in 2019 has never changed, yet questions remain.
The upcoming documentary 'The Truth About Jussie Smollett?' features interviews with police, lawyers and officials familiar with Smollett's case, as well as journalists and 'investigators who claim to have uncovered new evidence,' according to a synopsis of the project. Smollett himself also appears.
The placement of the question mark in the title of the film, from the producers of 'The Tinder Swindler,' invites the 'audience to decide for themselves who is telling' the truth.
The case began early on January 29, 2019, when Smollett told police he was attacked near his Chicago apartment by two men shouting racial and homophobic slurs at him. Smollett said the men placed a noose around his neck and poured an unknown chemical substance on him, according to the Chicago Police Department at the time. Authorities initially investigated the incident as a hate crime.
Initial shock and sympathy turned to skepticism as emerging details led to public doubt about the actor's claims. It also sent his career into a spiral.
From there, the case began its circuitous legal journey, and Smollett went from being indicted on 16 counts of disorderly conduct in March 2019, to those charges being dropped shortly thereafter (Smollett pleaded not guilty to the charges), to again being indicted by a grand jury the following year.
Smollett was eventually found guilty in December 2021 of making false police reports to Chicago officers, but last year, that conviction was overturned, with the Illinois Supreme Court citing prosecutorial issues.
In an interview with Variety published this week, Smollett spoke of his public vilification.
'Every single other person's story has changed multiple times. Mine has never,' Smollett said. 'I saw firsthand how narratives are built. I saw firsthand the way that someone can take the exact opposite of who you are and literally sell it.'
'The Truth About Jussie Smollett?' will premiere globally on Aug. 22 on Netflix.
CNN's Ashley R. Williams, Sandra Gonzalez, Megan Thomas and Lauren Mascarenhas contributed to this story.
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Last drive-in movie theater in Allegheny County to celebrate major milestone
Last drive-in movie theater in Allegheny County to celebrate major milestone

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  • CBS News

Last drive-in movie theater in Allegheny County to celebrate major milestone

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Black Ops 6 Double XP Weekend Live During Battlefield 6 Beta
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Black Ops 6 Double XP Weekend Live During Battlefield 6 Beta

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Man yells for help as apparent ICE agents carry him from LA courthouse into unmarked car, video shows
Man yells for help as apparent ICE agents carry him from LA courthouse into unmarked car, video shows

CNN

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Man yells for help as apparent ICE agents carry him from LA courthouse into unmarked car, video shows

A man yelled for help as a group of men – one of whom said he was with Immigration and Customs Enforcement – picked him up and pushed him into a car outside a Los Angeles courthouse Wednesday, video shows. The detention has been condemned by the county's top judge and the man's lawyers, who said such operations will deter people from showing up to court. Video obtained by the Los Angeles Times shows the man being carried away with his hands bound behind his back. Those detaining him are in plainclothes, and some are wearing masks. The detained man repeatedly screams, 'Can you help me, please?' as his body flails. The man is then pushed into the back seat of an unmarked car. It's not clear where he was taken. Neither ICE nor the Department of Homeland Security responded to CNN's questions about whether ICE was involved in the detention or why the man was detained. 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Immigrant rights groups have said the increasing number of courthouse arrests by ICE reflect a broader trend of enforcement extending into places once considered out of bounds and no longer confined to border crossings or work sites. The Los Angeles County district attorney's office, which is prosecuting Reyes for the drug charge, said it had no prior knowledge of and played no part in Wednesday's detention outside of court. 'Our ultimate goal is to seek justice for victims and hold criminals accountable,' the district attorney's office wrote in a statement. 'Detaining a defendant before the judicial process has concluded interferes with our ability to prosecute cases and is not to the advantage of the pursuit of justice.' CNN's Holly Yan, Caroll Alvarado and Sara Smart contributed to this report.

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