In a case that just wonât seem to die, lawyers for Jussie Smollett filed court papers Thursday to answer a charge that they are not legally allowed to practice in the state of Illinois and therefore shouldnât be able to fight to block a judgeâs ruling appointing a special prosecutor in Smollettâs case.
In response to a motion to disqualify Smollettâs out-of-state attorneys, the actorâs New York-based lawyer, Tina Glandian, basically said, âWe good,â the Chicago Sun-Times reports.
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Glandian said that she and the rest of Smollettâs legal team would continue their quest to kill having a special prosecutor look into the handling of the actorâs case, in which charges were dropped after he was accused of staging a racist and homophobic attack on himself in Chicago earlier this year.
The person making the charge against Smollettâs attorneys is retired Chicago appellate court Justice Sheila OâBrienâa woman whoâs seemed to be on a crusade to get the former Empire star up on some kind of charges and/or perhaps take down the Cook County Stateâs Attorney Office led by Kim Foxx.
After Foxxâs office chose to drop the more than 10 felony disorderly conduct charges against Smollett, it was OâBrien who filed a petition with the courts to have a judge appoint a special prosecutor.
Now, OâBrienâs questioning the legal right of Smollettâs out-of-state attorneys to represent him, saying theyâre not licensed in Illinois.
As part of her response to OâBrien, Glandian said OâBrien had long served her and the rest of Smollettâs legal team without ever questioning their validity until now, and also wrote, per the Sun-Times:
that the day before OâBrien filed her latest motion, Glandian herself had contacted the [state Attorney Registration and Disciplinary Commission] to see if more paperwork was required to continue representing Smollett, and the ARDC staffer said they were uncertain.
Regardless, another hearing in the case is set for July 31.
And as for those who may be questioning OâBrienâs motives, in a report earlier this year, the Sun-Times noted:
Many wonder if OâBrien is angling to run for Foxxâs job, or trying to stoke the controversy on behalf of someone who is. After a hearing in May, OâBrien insists she is the rarest of Cook County creatures: a nobody whom nobody sent.
âIâm a private citizen. I was in public life for a long time,â OâBrien told reporters. âI did this because I think itâs the right thing to do and someone had to do it.â
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