The announcement from prosecutors in Chicago came Tuesday. Smollett had pleaded not guilty to 16 felony disorderly conduct charges. The Cook County State's Attorney's Office said the reversal came after reviewing the facts in the case and that the actor agreed to forfeit his $10,000 bond. Taraji P. Henson, who stars with Smollett on the Fox drama "Empire," told USA Today that she believed in his innocence from the beginning, "because I know him and I know his track record." "I'm happy that the truth has finally been set free, because I knew it all along," Henson said. "We're all happy for him, and thank God the truth prevailed.""Empire" actress Gabourey Sidibe posted a picture of Smollett on Instagram and wrote, "It's weird that y'all decided that the police were being 100% honest about this case."Director Ava DuVernay resurfaced a previous tweet from last month in which she wrote about the complicated history of the Chicago Police Department and the African-American community. Related: Chicago police superintendent: "Do I think justice was served? No.""Despite the inconsistencies, I can't blindly believe Chicago PD. The department that covered up shooting Laquan McDonald over a dozen times? That operated an off-site torture facility? That one? I'll wait. Whatever the outcome, this won't stop me from believing others," DuVernay wrote. "It can't."The Roots frontman QuestLove simply tweeted, "TOLD YALL."An official account for the writers of Smollett's Fox television show "Empire" posted a screenshot of a CNN report about Tuesday's developments, with a winky face emoji and the caption, "See y'all Wednesday. #empire #empirefox."Actor Devon Sawa tweeted, "The Smollett announcement is yet another example of how our court system is broken. LawRead More – Source

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