Inmates sue Fox after their prison was put into lockdown so two episodes of Empire could be filmed and they were banned from going outside, taking classes or praying for three days

  • The Fox series Empire filmed two episodes at the Cook County Juvenile Temporary Detention Center in Chicago in the summer of 2015
  • According to a new lawsuit, inmates say they were locked in their dorms all day so that the show could film 
  • Fox tried to get the case thrown out on the basis that they weren't responsible for the lock down 
  • But a U.S. district judge allowed the case to proceed against Fox on two counts
  • The first is that Fox may have colluded with the jail to cause the lock down
  • The second is that they may have unjustly enriched from the lock down   

Inmates at the Cook County Juvenile Temporary Detention Center in Chicago are suing Fox, claiming they were locked up their dorms for days so that the show Empire could film in 2015. 

Empire filmed the first two episodes of its second season at the juvenile hall, which focused on main character Lucious Lyon's (Terrence Howard) fall from grace.

Fox tried to get the lawsuit thrown out, arguing that they were not responsible for the lockdown, but U.S. district judge Amy J. St. Eve ruled on Monday that it could proceed against the network on two points. 

Inmates at the Cook County Juvenile Temporary Detention Center in Chicago are suing Fox, saying they were unjustly pent up in their cells and 'pods' so that the show Empire could film there in 2015  

Inmates at the Cook County Juvenile Temporary Detention Center in Chicago are suing Fox, saying they were unjustly pent up in their cells and 'pods' so that the show Empire could film there in 2015  

Above, the juvenile hall where the show filmed two episodes of its second season 

Above, the juvenile hall where the show filmed two episodes of its second season 

St. Eve wrote in her decision that there was enough evidence spelled out in the lawsuit for the case to move forward on the basis that Fox may have 'colluded' with the jail officials to cause the lock down and that they may have unjustly profited from it. 

Empire was a hit during it's first season, so it's season two premiere and second episode were highly anticipated. The network charged $750,000 for a 30-second ad in the premiere and $600,000 for the same amount of ad time in the second episode. 

The lawsuit was filed last year by the legal guardians of two of the inmates. 

Fox filmed the first two episodes of the second season at the jail, prompting three days of lockdowns so the crew could work.  

During these lockdowns, inmates were only allowed in their rooms or their 'pods' - dormitory-style common areas in the middle of a group of cells. 

They weren't allowed to go outside to the recreation yard, read in the library,  pray in the chapel or even take classes in the school.

Family visits were cancelled and their requests to go to the infirmary were also ignored, the lawsuit claims. 

Being forced to stay in their pods 'for days on end' was a restriction 'more severe than those governing many adult jails,' the lawsuit reads. 

The inmates involved in the class-action lawsuit initially claimed that Fox infringed on their due process rights, but St. Eve said Fox would not be held responsible for such violations. That case continues against Cook County officials however.

The detention center has made headlines in the past for it's troubles. 

In 2015, the Chicago Tribune wrote that the center has a 'reputation for being crowded, unclean and poorly staffed”'and that it was often 'blasted as a depot where children were locked up in violent, unsanitary, overcrowded conditions.

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