Celebrities

Jussie Smollett trial witness says actor staged attack, wanted to be ‘fake beat up’

CHICAGO — The man Jussie Smollett allegedly paid to help him stage a hate crime took the stand in the actor’s criminal trial Wednesday, describing how he took part in the hoax because he thought the ‘”Empire” star could help push his own acting career. 

Abimbola Osundairo, 28, told jurors in Chicago’s criminal court on day three of the trial how Smollett directed nearly every aspect of the alleged fake attack, from the racial and homophobic slurs he and his brother, Olabinjo, were to use down to who should throw the punches. 

“He explained that he wanted me to fake beat him up,” Osundairo testified.

“I agreed to do it because most importantly, I felt indebted to him, to Jussie,” Osundairo said “He also got me a stand-in role on ‘Empire’ and I also believed that he could help further my acting career.” 

Abimbola Osundairo testified that Jussie Smollett directed every aspect of the alleged staged hate crime at the actor’s trial on December 1, 2021. AP Photo/Charles Rex Arbogast

Osundairo and his brother are at the center of the sensational long-awaited trial as the prosecution’s star witnesses. About two weeks after Smollett told police he was the victim of a vicious hate crime on a frigid night in January 2019, the brothers were arrested but confessed the actor paid them $3,500 to stage the attack. Smollett’s team vigorously denies the allegation and claims the men intended to attack him, potentially because they’re homophobic.

Smollett is facing six counts of felony disorderly conduct for lying to police and if convicted, faces up to three years in jail. 

Osundairo, who also worked on the set of “Empire,” testified that he and Smollett met through a mutual friend in 2017 and over the next year and a half became extremely close as they spent time together smoking weed, visiting strip clubs and having sleepovers at the star’s Streeterville high-rise. 

“I would call him my brother,” Osundairo testified, adding Smollett would ask him to procure weed, cocaine and molly for him.

Around 9 a.m. on January 25, 2019, Osundairo said he received a curious text message from Smollett asking for his help “on the low” and if he was available to meet up “face-to-face” to discuss.

Later that afternoon, he picked Osundairo up and from the front seat of the actor’s Mercedes Benz, the infamous plan was hatched and Smollett was both the star and the director.

Osundairo said he helped Smollett to try and further his own acting career. AP Photo/Charles Rex Arbogast
Actor Jussie Smollett asks photographers to move back as he arrives with his mother Janet, right, at the Leighton Criminal Courthouse for day three of his trial in Chicago on Wednesday, Dec. 1, 2021. AP Photo/Charles Rex Arbogast

First, Smollett asked Osundairo if he “could trust” him and then lamented the studio’s response to a disturbing piece of hate mail he claimed he received that showed a stick figure hanging and the words “You will die black f-g.”

“He talked about how the studio was not taking the mail seriously, the hate mail he’d received earlier,” Osundairo said. “I was confused, I looked puzzled and then he explained that he wanted me to fake beat him up.”

Smollett asked if Osundairo’s brother could help and then explained his vision for the stunt. He first told the brothers the specific words he wanted them to use — “‘Empire’, f—-t, n—-r, MAGA” — and then gave blow-by-blow instructions.

Director and “Empire” creator Lee Daniels shares a screen grab showing Jussie Smollett’s injuries obtained during an alleged biased hate crime attack on January 28, 2019. Lee Daniels

“He wanted me to punch him but he wanted me to pull the punch so I didn’t hurt him and then he wanted me to tussle him and throw him to the ground and give him a bruise,” he said.

“Then he wanted it to look like he was fighting back, so I was supposed to give him a chance to fight back and then eventually throw him to the ground and my brother would tie the noose around his neck and pour bleach on him.” 

The actor told the brothers not to bring their phones in case they dropped them and lost them and ordered them not to use a rideshare service to prevent any record of their location. Should news of the attack get picked up by the press, Smollett directed Osundairo to send him a phony “condolence letter,” which he later did when the alleged hate crime inevitably became front page news.

Osundairo testified that Smollett asked him to “fake beat him up.” AP Photo/Charles Rex Arbogast

Within ten minutes, the plans were laid and a dress rehearsal was set for two days later, Osundairo told jurors.

From across the room, Smollett, wearing a dark suit, light blue shirt and burgundy tie, furrowed his brow as he watched Osundairo testify about the alleged “dry run” and kept his eyes trained on his former friend.

Osundairo, dressed in a black turtleneck, a gold chain and a matching black and gold face covering, hardly flinched as he delivered more than four hours of testimony.

The two brothers being questioned over the Jussie Smollett attack are actors Abimbola ‘Abel’ and Olabinjo ‘Ola’ Osundairo. Instagram

On Sunday, January 27, the day before the attack was set to take place, Smollett picked up the two brothers and brought them to his neighborhood where he pointed out the exact location he wanted the alleged hoax to go down, Osundairo testified.

“He said that there was going to be a camera to capture the fake attack, that he wanted a camera to capture the fake attack,” Osundairo said.

Asked by special prosecutor Dan Webb why he wanted the attack captured, Osundairo testified Smollett “wanted to use the camera footage for media.”

When the plan was finally carried out around 2 a.m. on January 29, 2019, the camera Smollett hoped would capture the attack was pointed in another direction but just about everything else went according to plan. The brothers delivered their lines, roughed Smollett up and fled the area, only to be arrested a little over two weeks later.

Osundairo told special prosecutor Dan Webb that Smollett wanted to get “footage for media” of the attack. AP Photo/Charles Rex Arbogast

Outside of the courtroom Wednesday evening, Smollett wore a frown as he exited the building flanked by supporters and didn’t answer a question asking what he thought about Osundairo’s testimony.

His team is slated to begin their cross-examination Thursday morning.