At Jussie Smollett trial, Osundairo brothers at centre stage | CBC News

Two brothers stand at the centre of the case that prosecutors will lay before jurors when the trial of Jussie Smollett begins this week.

The former Empire actor contends he was the victim of a racist and homophobic assault in downtown Chicago on a frigid night in January 2019. The siblings, who worked with him on the TV show, say he paid them $3,500 US to pose as his attackers.

Jury selection began Monday in a Chicago courtroom. Judge James Linn said he expects the trial to take about one week.

Smollett is accused of lying to police about the attack. He’s charged with felony disorderly conduct. A class-4 felony, the crime carries a sentence of up to three years in prison, but experts have said if Smollett is convicted, it’s more likely he would be placed on probation and perhaps ordered community service.

Whether Smollett, who is Black and gay, testifies remains an open question. But the siblings, Abimbola and Olabinjo Osundairo, will take the witness stand where they are expected to repeat what they have told police officers and prosecutors — that they carried out the attack at Smollett’s behest.

Jurors also may see surveillance video from more than four dozen cameras that police reviewed to trace the brothers’ movements before and after the reported attack, as well as a video showing the brothers purchasing a red hat, ski masks and gloves from a beauty supply shop hours earlier.

Considering key evidence

Smollett’s lawyers have not spelled out how they will confront that evidence — lead lawyer, Nenye Uche, declined to comment ahead of this week’s proceedings — but there are clues as to how they might.

Buried in nearly 500 pages of Chicago Police Department reports is a statement from a woman who lived in the area who says she saw a white man with “reddish brown hair” who appeared to be waiting for someone that night.

She told a detective that when the man turned away from her, she “could see hanging out from underneath his jacket what appeared to be a rope.”

Her comments could back up Smollett’s contention that his attackers draped a makeshift noose around his neck. Further, if she testified that the man was white, it would support Smollett’s statements — widely ridiculed because the brothers, who come from Nigeria, are Black — that he saw pale or white skin around the eyes of one of his masked attackers.

Defence lawyer Tina Glandian suggested during a March 2019 appearance on NBC’s Today show, that one of the brothers could have used white makeup around his eyes to make Smollett believe he was white. To address skepticism on the jury, Glandian could ask the brothers about a video she talked about on the program that she said shows one of them in whiteface reciting a monologue by the Joker character from a movie.

Watch: Smollett’s lawyer appears on NBC’s Today show in 2019:

Given there is so much evidence, including the brothers’ own statements, that they participated in the attack, it is not likely that Smollett’s lawyers will try to prove they did not take part. That could perhaps lead the defence to contend that Smollett was the victim of a very real attack at the hands of the brothers, perhaps with the help of others, who now are only implicating the actor so prosecutors won’t charge them, too.

The $3,500 cheque could be key. While the brothers say that was their fee to carry out the fake attack, Smollett has offered a different and much more innocent explanation: that he wrote it to pay one of them to work as his personal trainer.

“I would assume the defence is going to zero in on that,” said Joe Lopez, a prominent defence lawyer not involved with the case. “If they texted messages regarding training sessions, cheques he (Smollett) wrote them for training, photographs, the defence would use all of that.”

Arguments on credibility and fame

What they will almost certainly do is attack the brothers’ credibility — an effort that would include a reminder to the jury that the brothers are not facing the same criminal charges as Smollett, despite admitting to taking part in the staged attack.

“Everything Smollett is responsible for, they are responsible for,” said David Erickson, a former state appellate judge who teaches at Chicago Kent College of Law and who is not involved in the case. “They participated and they walk away? What the hell is that?”

Erickson said he expects prosecutors to confront that issue before Smollett’s lawyers do, as they won’t want to appear to be trying to hide something.

Finally, Smollett’s career could take centre stage. On one side, prosecutors could make the same point that then-Police Superintendent Eddie Johnson made when he announced Smollett’s arrest in 2019: that Smollett thought the attack would gain him more fame and get him a raise on a hit TV show.

But Lopez said the defence lawyers might ask the jury the same question he has asked himself.

“How would that help him with anything?” he asked. “He’s already a star.”

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