State Attorney In Smollett Case Is Done! Top Staff Start Resigning
The whole Jussie Smollett staged attack incident has become such a clustered up heaping pile of garbage that it’s difficult to even understand what’s really going on.
Smollett was indicted on 16 felonies…16 FELONIES! For staging a fake attack on himself and lying to the world about it.
Then he was completely let off the hook because all charges were dropped for who knows what reason.
The City of Chicago has formally sued Jussie Smollett for $130,000 for costing the police department so much time and resources.
There have since been some not so flattering text messages revealed from the State Attorney in the case, Kim Foxx. She even called Smollett “a washed-up celeb who lied to cops”.
Well, it seems that the water is starting to get a little too deep for some because two of her top staff members have submitted their resignations.
According to Fox News,
Two ranking executives inside the Cook County State’s Attorney’s Office have submitted their resignations — including State’s Attorney Kim Foxx’s chief ethics officer, April Perry, whom Foxx cited as the person who advised her to “recuse” herself from the Jussie Smollett case that has rocked the Chicago office, Fox News learned Thursday.
Mark Rotert, the director of the office’s Conviction Integrity Unit, has also submitted his resignation, according to a Foxx spokesperson. Perry and Rotert are scheduled to work their last days on the job in May.
“While I feel lucky to have been able to spend the last 15 years of my career in public service, I am looking forward to my next endeavor in the private sector where I have the opportunity to continue to work toward increasing the safety of our community,” Perry wrote in an April 15 letter obtained by Fox News via a Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) request.
Foxx has been heavily criticized for how she handled Smollett’s case by dropping all charged without an explanation and recusing herself.
This, I believe, it the beginning of the end of Kim Foxx’s career.
Photo Credit: YouTube/Chicago Sun-Times