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Illinois Supreme Court Overturns Jussie Smollett Conviction

Illinois Supreme Court Overturns Jussie Smollett Conviction

“Because the charges were dismissed in exchange for defendant’s community service and forfeiture of his bail bond and because defendant fully performed his end of the agreement, the State is bound by the agreement.”

The Illinois Supreme Court overturned actor Jussie Smollett’s 2021 conviction regarding his hate crime hoax.

“Today we resolve a question about the State’s responsibility to honor the agreements it makes with defendants,” wrote the court. “Specifically, we address whether a dismissal of a case by nolle prosequi [“we shall no longer prosecute] allows the State to bring a second prosecution when the dismissal was entered as part of an agreement with the defendant and the defendant has performed his part of the bargain. We hold that a second prosecution under these circumstances is a due process violation, and we therefore reverse defendant’s conviction.”

Nolle prosequi: “a legal notice or entry of record that the prosecutor or plaintiff has decided to abandon the prosecution or lawsuit.”

Smollett claimed he was a victim of a hate crime in Chicago in January 2019.

Cook County State’s Attorney Kim Foxx dropped 16 charges against Smollett in March 2019, which the Supreme Court pointed to in its decision.

This is important: In exchange for the dismissal, Smollett agreed to do 16 hours of community service and forfeit a $10,000 bond.

Foxx withdrew from the case due to personal contact with a Smollett relative.

In August 2019, Cook County Judge Michael Toomin appointed former U.S. Attorney Dan Webb as special prosecutor.

The second prosecution against Smollett led to a conviction on five of six disorderly conduct charges in December 2021.

The Court wrote (I eliminated the footnotes):

Because the charges were dismissed in exchange for defendant’s community service and forfeiture of his bail bond and because defendant fully performed his end of the agreement, the State is bound by the agreement. The State contends that the most relevant authority is Boyt. We disagree. Boyt involved a plea agreement that the State backed out of before defendant entered a plea in reliance on the agreement. As Stapinski explained, the due process considerations are different in the plea agreement setting. Moreover, the Boyt court distinguished Starks on the basis that the defendant in Boyt had “surrendered nothing” in reliance on the agreement. Here, defendant surrendered $10,000 to the City of Chicago.

Because this case involves an agreement to dismiss charges in exchange for defendant doing something and defendant did what the agreement required, Starks and Stapinksi provide the relevant precedent. Again, Starks involved an alleged agreement between the prosecution and the defendant whereby the State would dismiss the charges if the defendant took and passed a polygraph examination. This court stated that, “[i]f there was an agreement as alleged, and if Starks fulfilled his part of it, then the State must fulfill its part.” Stapinski involved a situation where the State agreed not to bring charges against the defendant if he assisted them in a drug investigation. This court held that the principle for enforcing agreements such as this is the due process clause of the fourteenth amendment and that, when a defendant acted to his detriment in reliance on an agreement with the State, the State is required to honor the agreement as a matter of fair conduct. Here, we have a fully executed agreement between defendant and the State. Both parties performed their part of the agreement, and the trial court enforced it. To allow the State to renege on the deal and bring new charges would be fundamentally unfair and offend basic notions of due process.

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Comments

So how soon before we round up a posse and start looking for the Ultra Maga lynch mob that almost sort of ‘attacked’ the totally innocent victim of the most heinous racist atrocity ever perpetrated and bring them to justice?
I think the Democrat machine is just trying to regain its status as the most corrupt organization in the country.

Disgusting outcome, but I think I agree (but I’m not a lawyer). A legal agreement should be binding on the parties involved. The person to prosecute is/was Kim Foxx.

    diver64 in reply to jimincalif. | November 21, 2024 at 3:55 pm

    I was initially angry at this as most are I think but after reading the entire thing here and at other places I have to agree with the ruling. The Government made a plea agreement with Juicy Sommelier, he did what was asked and then they tried to go after him again for the same thing. That’s not kosher.

      healthguyfsu in reply to diver64. | November 22, 2024 at 9:34 am

      Let’s not pretend like Smollett ever showed any contrition. I do agree legally. I disagree with painting this as some kind of great win for justice.

    ekimremmit in reply to jimincalif. | November 21, 2024 at 4:02 pm

    The important thing is that his grift was exposed to the max, and he was never going to serve the time he so richly deserved. Plus, the Illinois Supreme Court has now given new life to whole juicy escapade. Keep the reminders coming.

    Didn’t they try to pull a similar stunt with Cosby? “Here’s immunity for your testimony. Whoops, now that we have your testimony, we’re pulling immunity.”

      Milhouse in reply to georgfelis. | November 24, 2024 at 2:43 am

      In that case it was a genuine deal where both sides got something of value. In this case it was a corrupt deal where the state got essentially nothing, and the whole thing was deliberately engineered to let him off. In such a case it should be reasonable to reverse the “deal”, not years later but immediately upon it being exposed. The DA had no right to make such a deal on the state’s behalf.

The State must honor these agreements. Otherwise scum ball, dirtbags won’t cooperate.

The agreement was corrupt and the corrupt DA (or whatever) who made it should be fired or disciplined in some way.

Forget it Jake; it’s the Chicago Democratic Machine. Anyhow, it’s not like Jesse is going to be able to go back to work in Hollywood. Even THEY are not that dumb.

File a grievance with the bar against Foxx. She deserves to be disciplined. Too bad she cannot be forced to pay for the police hours spent.

I hope to see pictures of Jussie Smollett, penniless, that we will see him begging for change in the near future.

I hadn’t realized (or remembered) until reading this that she didn’t just dismiss the case (as I thought). Instead, she dismissed as part of kind of diversionary or ‘in lieu of prosecution’ program. There was no way this subsequent conviction was going to be sustained. I’m surprised this wasn’t resolved by interlocutory appeal. I’ve always been under the impression that immunity/double-jeopardy claims have to be resolved before trial can proceed. What a complete waste of money…and an underscoring of Kim Foxx’s incompetence.

    tbonesays in reply to TargaGTS. | November 22, 2024 at 4:12 am

    Seems similar to what happened to Bill Cosby. The state supreme court will not touch the DJ issue if there is a chance they won’t have to, so they had to conduct the trial. It seems very inefficient.

      TargaGTS in reply to tbonesays. | November 22, 2024 at 12:06 pm

      Interesting. In federal criminal law, double jeopardy and immunity issues have to be resolved before trial, which is how we got a Supreme Court decision in the Trump case LONG before that case ever made it to trial. I think the way the feds do it fairer to the defendant as well; the state shouldn’t be allowed to force a man to defend himself against a charge they’re foreclosed from filing.

How’s that for justice? A crooked prosecutor gets the lying crook off!

This was a major FUBAR by the prosecution. They should have dismissed the first case “without prejudice” which means they are dismissing it but are doing so without prejudice to the State, so they can still bring the case again later on. This is often used when the State can’t locate a material witness, needs more evidence, or some other extenuating circumstance arises.

    Alex deWynter in reply to JR. | November 22, 2024 at 9:40 am

    The prosecution deliberately tanked it. Foxx actively did not want to see Smollett punished as severely as he should have been, then or ever. She could simply decline to prosecute him, but that wouldn’t prevent some future DA reopening the case and going after him. So she did prosecute, but only to the extent of giving him a slap on the wrist plea deal. He was found guilty, ‘paid his (Foxx-defined) debt to society,’ and the case was closed. I don’t like it, but it is legal. Unethical and socially corrupt, but legal.

    TargaGTS in reply to JR. | November 22, 2024 at 12:16 pm

    This isn’t why the Supreme Court dismissed this case. It was dismissed because the DA entered into a plea agreement with the defendant (in which the defendant pays cash and does community service in lieu of prosecution) and that agreement was then ignored by the Special Prosecutor who was later assigned the case by the state. BTW, it’s not the prosecution that dismisses a case with or without prejudice. It’s the judge that determines of jeopardy attaches.

I didnt do nufin’, man.

thalesofmiletus | November 21, 2024 at 5:02 pm

Remember, it’s not a hoax if you believe it!

May all Smollett’s gerbils be rabid.

Well Bless his Heart! To bad no one really cared.

Not surprised in Felonnois that this happened, especially in Chicago. As corrupt as that state is, this was bound to happen. My friend the attorney said it was a matter of time because of that initial agreement that Foxx drew up, and despite the fact that a court later tossed that, it was still binding. I don’t know if Jussie has worked much since that time, and perhaps the best punishment for an attention-seeking person like him is complete obscurity to be followed by a bit on one of those “whatever happened to” shows in the distant future.

though his ” conviction ” was overturned, his guilt was confirmed by a jury of his peers– people know he’s a fraud