CHICAGO--Actor Jussie Smollett was charged on Wednesday with filing a false police report when he said he was attacked by two masked men shouting racist and homophobic slurs, Chicago police said on Wednesday, with the actor now facing arrest.
Smollett, a 36-year-old black, openly gay actor on the hip-hop TV drama "Empire," ignited a firestorm on social media by telling police on Jan. 29 that two apparent supporters of U.S. President Donald Trump beat him up on the streets of Chicago, put a noose around his neck and poured bleach over him.
"Felony criminal charges have been approved by @CookCountySAO against Jussie Smollett for Disorderly Conduct / Filing a False Police Report. Detectives will make contact with his legal team to negotiate a reasonable surrender for his arrest," police spokesman Anthony Guglielmi said on Twitter.
Lawyers for Smollett, who has stuck by his story for three weeks as police failed to find surveillance video of an assault and suspicions of a hoax grew on social media, have not responded to requests for comment on Wednesday. Smollett's agent and public relations managers also did not return calls from Reuters.
Twentieth Century Fox Television, which produces "Empire," declined comment when told earlier on Wednesday that Smollett had been formally named a suspect in the case. Earlier in the day, the studio said: "Jussie Smollett continues to be a consummate professional on set and as we have previously stated, he is not being written out of the show."
Last week, Chicago police questioned two Nigerian brothers recognized from surveillance footage near the scene of the supposed attack, but released them two days later, without charge, in light of what investigators said was new evidence. Local TV station CBS Chicago on Wednesday released a videotape it had obtained showing the two brothers buying a red hat and ski masks from a hardware store days before the alleged attack.
Smollett told police his assailants were white, that one wore a red hat, and that they shouted: "This is MAGA country" - an apparent reference to Trump's campaign slogan "Make America Great Again" - as they struck him, the New York Times has reported.
Chicago police say the charge of filing a false police report carries a maximum sentence of up to three years in prison.
"Empire" has earned multiple Emmy nominations since its 2015 debut. Smollett plays the character Jamal Lyon, a member of the family that is the focus of the show.