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Jim, excellent post. I was previously uncritical of the decision to drop charges against Smollett. This post has changed my mind.
This a fine demonstration of what looks like collaboration and conspiracy between a corrupt Democratic political establishment and a corrupt press, in order to forward a false, propagandistic Left-wing narrative. Kudos to John Kass and the Tribune for honest journalism. Shame on the NY Times and Charles Blow.
It is hard to conclude from the facts we have that the actions of Ms. Foxx were anything but corrupt. Of course not all the facts are in, but the situation smells. Very, very bad smell.
Thank you for the exhaustive breakdown.
I just assumed it was corruption because that is how it goes. Once you get groups like this into power, it is all will to power, and not rule of law. Very tribal. The Clintons are masters of it.
Thank you very much–it is good to know that at least a few of my advocacy skills have survived the assault of the years!
I thought you and our other colleagues who are following this miserable story might appreciate this cartoon from the inimitable Ramirez:
Like “recusal,” maybe they’re using “ethics” in the colloquial-sense, too.
Well said, @addictionisachoice! We dealt with a number of lawyers who had only the vaguest sense of ethics; I guess your wording would apply perfectly to them! Jim
A moderate celebrity with connections to the Democrats much less the Obama was unlikely to ever see jail time. Add gay and black and it was never going to happen. Justification for doing what they where alway going to do can always be found.
The writer of that article at your link is mistaken when he says that it was “meaningless in the grand scheme of things.” Had the hoax not been exposed, it could very well have spawned race riots in Chicago and in other cities. Ferguson was also caused by something that never happened. And an entire movement (BLM) grew out of the “Hands up, don’t shoot” lie.
I’m getting pretty tired of the Left’s usual dismissal of hate crime hoaxes, which is to say that “Oh well, even if it didn’t happen, it could have happened.”
That’s exactly what I meant when I concluded that this building sense of a double standard of justice can very quickly reach dangerous proportions– just saw some good news, however, and that is the newly elected Mayor, a former Assistant US Attorney, has announced that her very first priority after being sworn in will be to get to the bottom of this entire pit of corruption. Jim
PS: love your analogy– like saying “Well I could have been a billionaire but I wasn’t but it could have happened.” :-)
Also, from some reports I’ve read Smollett was ready to go to a line-up and pick out his “attackers”. He changed his tune when the police brought in his hired help. So, it seems that Smollett was willing to blame innocent people for his hoax. Not meaningless. Didn’t these people read the Boy Who Cried Wolf growing up?
Apparently not.
Is this the sort of thing the FBI has jurisdiction over?
Smollet’s a piece of [CoC violation] and likely deserves jail time and superfine fines, but I’d really like to bring down the entrenched and connected corrupt.
Jim, brilliantly written and researched.
I really like the surface of Chicago: the Navy Pier, the shiny Bean, the grand hotels, etc. I used to go there each year to run the Chicago Marathon, whose route ran through five interesting neighborhoods.
I don’t particularly care for the underbelly of Chicago: its politics, its dangerous neighborhoods, etc.
Kent, not sure I have the words to adequately express my appreciation for this appraisal of my piece — a trial lawyer, even one out of the game for a while, at a loss for words is a rarity, indeed! Thanks!
One of our dearest friends, with whom we were very active in a National legal organization, was, until his passing some years ago, one of the top rated White Collar criminal defense attorneys in the city; he and his wife lived way up in that high rise at the foot of Navy Pier. We had some of the best times of our life in that city; to us, and we admittedly are not artists such as yourself, the Art Institute is one of our favorite places to visit in the entire country. And, the restaurants— even to South Louisianans used to some seriously good cuisine — laissez le bon temps rouler!– are just superb. We loved the times we spent there; not sure it would be very high on our list to return, if it was even still on our list at all. What a shame.
Thanks again, and all the best, Jim
@robtgilsdorf, it would be my most humble opinion, and it is humble for the best reason of all, that I probably have no idea what I’m talking about (!), but I do believe what he did, fraudulently misrepresent a “hate crime”, could find a place in the Federal Hate Crime laws–called, I believe, the Mathew Shepperd law, which Rahm Emanuel referred to in his speech with the Chief of Police criticizing what this piece of [ditto] did. We may never know how many real victims of hate crimes now will think long and hard about coming forward and making a legitimate complaint; that is part of the real damage he caused. But, and I don’t mean to sound like a broken record, but it is something very close to my heart, as a person who dedicated more decades than I care to remember to the law and to the Rule of Law in this country, is the glaring “I’m going to do it because I can do it” conduct of this State’s Attorney in so obviously giving a pass to her (as John Kass called them) Obama Celebrity Pals. No wonder people are so cynical about an open and obvious double standard in this country. Thanks for your comment. Jim.
Hey, he’s got expenses, y’know? Like paying Nigerian Princes… errr, Brothers…
Sounds like what should be next is the disbarment of Kim Foxx. The Illinois Bar seems to have all the evidence needed.