After Jussie Smollett verdict, more court cases await
https://www.yahoo.com/entertainment/...191142721.html
SARA BURNETT
Fri, December 10, 2021, 1:11 PM
CHICAGO (AP) — A jury’s 
guilty verdict  that Jussie Smollett faked a racist and homophobic attack isn’t the end  of legal proceedings for the former “Empire” actor or others.
Smollett, 39, was convicted Thursday of 
five counts of disorderly conduct  for lying to Chicago police about being the victim of a racist,  anti-gay attack near his home in downtown Chicago. He maintains his  innocence, and his attorney has said he will appeal the verdict.
While  the charges carry a possible sentence of three years in prison, legal  experts have said Smollett is unlikely to get prison time for the  low-level felonies, and is more likely to be sentenced to probation and  ordered to perform community service. Judge James Linn didn’t set a  sentencing date, but scheduled a Jan. 27 hearing for post-trial motions  and said he would schedule sentencing after that.
Meanwhile,  lawsuits that were on hold pending the outcome of the criminal case may  now move forward. They include a lawsuit the city of Chicago filed  against Smollett to recoup over $130,000 it spent investigating what  police initially believed was a terrible hate crime. 
Here's a look at some remaining cases: 
CITY OF CHICAGO VS. SMOLLETT
Chicago 
sued Smollett  in April 2019, after he refused to pay $130,106.15 to reimburse the  city for police overtime and other costs spent on the investigation. 
The city 
demanded the payment shortly after the Cook County State's Attorney's office 
dropped the original charges  against Smollett for lying to police about the attack. The move by  State's Attorney Kim Foxx infuriated then-Mayor Rahm Emanuel, who lashed  out at Smollett for dragging the city’s reputation “through the mud"  and wasting police resources on a hoax. 
The lawsuit says the city  “incurred significant costs” investigating the high-profile alleged  hate crime, and seeks reimbursement from Smollett for 1,836 hours of  police overtime. 
A federal judge stayed proceedings pending the outcome of the criminal case after a special prosecutor investigated and 
new charges were filed against Smollett in February 2020.
In April 2020, U.S. District Court Judge Virginia Kendall also 
 dismissed a countersuit 
filed by Smollett  against the city, former Chicago Police Superintendent Eddie Johnson,  detectives on the case and two brothers who told police he recruited  them for the fake attack.
His attorneys said Chicago couldn’t go  after Smollett for the cost of the investigation because the city  accepted his $10,000 bail as “payment in full in connection with the  dismissal of the charges against him” when the original charges were  dropped in 2019.
Smollett’s countersuit also said he was the  victim of a malicious prosecution that caused him humiliation and  extreme distress. They said Chicago police didn’t have probable cause to  arrest him for lying based off of “unreliable” accounts from Abimbola  and Olabingo Osundairo, the brothers who 
testified last week that Smollett paid them $3,500 to help him with the hoax, and because police didn’t pursue other evidence.
Kendall said in her ruling that Smollett could refile his suit if he was found not guilty in the criminal case. 
In  a statement after Thursday’s guilty verdict, the city’s law department  said the decision “confirms that the City was correct” in suing  Smollett. 
“The City intends to continue to pursue its lawsuit to  hold Smollett accountable for his unlawful actions and to demand that he  compensate the City for costs incurred by the Chicago Police Department  which took his false claims of harm seriously,” the statement read. 
A status hearing is scheduled for Dec. 16 in U.S. District Court in Chicago. 
OSUNDAIRO BROTHERS' LAWSUIT
The Osundairo brothers, who were 
star witnesses for the prosecution at Smollett's trial, filed 
their own lawsuit in April 2019 accusing Smollett's attorneys of defamation and seeking unspecified financial damages.
They  claimed that the attorneys accused the brothers of leading “a  criminally homophobic, racist and violent attack” against Smollett,  destroying their personal and professional reputations. The lawsuit  named as defendants celebrity attorney Mark Geragos, lawyer Tina  Glandian and Geragos’ Los Angeles-based law firm.
The lawsuit also  stated that Glandian made public statements that Abimbola Osundairo is  gay and participated in sex acts with Smollett. Osundairo said that was  untrue, and noted that he has family in Nigeria and travels often to the  country, where homosexuality is illegal and punishable by years in  prison or even death. Osundairo said the lawyer's statements put his  life and the lives of his family in danger. 
In a statement issued  after the lawsuit was filed, Geragos and Glandian called it  “ridiculous” and “a desperate attempt” by the brothers “to stay relevant  and further profit from an attack they admit they perpetrated.”
A  federal judge in Chicago put the case on hold until the completion of  the Smollett trial and asked the parties to file a status report with  the court by Feb. 1, 2022. 
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Check out the AP’s 
complete coverage of the Jussie Smollett case.