911 audio released of Chicago State’s Attorney Kim Foxx’s domestic dispute with husband: ‘get out’

911 audio obtained by Fox News provides new details into a domestic incident in which Cook County State’s Attorney Kim Foxx’s husband accused her of slapping him in the face.

Kelley Foxx called 911 to report a domestic dispute with his wife on June 4 around 10 p.m., according to a police report. The audio, obtained by Fox News through a public records request, Kelley Foxx can be heard telling the dispatcher that the dispute is “physical.”

The dispatcher then asks him if anyone is hurt, to which Kelley Foxx responds, “No, not yet.”

At one point, Kelley Foxx can be heard saying “Don’t touch me.” A woman in the background responds with, “Everybody’s touching you. Get out.”

CHICAGO STATE’S ATTORNEY SLAPPED HUSBAND DURING DOMESTIC DISPUTE: POLICE REPORT

Kelley Foxx goes on to tell the dispatcher that there are no weapons in the house and that no one had been drinking.

An officer with the Flossmoor Police Department responded to the couple’s home where he found them standing on the front step. Kelley Foxx told the officer, according to the police report, that “Kimbery got mad about something that was posted on Facebook that he did.”

Cook County State's Attorney Kim Foxx.

Kelley Foxx claims that Kim Foxx asked him to leave, which he refused. He told the officer that, at one point, Kim Foxx blocked him from leaving a bathroom, grabbed his collar and threw his video game controller on the ground.

“He tried to turn on the TV and Kimberly snatched the controller out of his hand and threw the controller,” the report states, paraphrasing what Kelley Foxx said.

Kelley Foxx then alleged that Kim Foxx slapped him across the left cheek. The officer wrote that he did not “observe any indicators to support his claim of being struck. There was no redness or swelling visible on his face.”

Kelley Foxx told the officer, per the report, that he just wanted it to stop and that “she can’t come in my personal space and put her hands on me.”

A separate police officer spoke to Kim Foxx, and she said that she had an argument with Kelley Foxx and wanted him to leave. Kim Foxx told police that she did put her hands on her husband, but only to guide him out of the house. She denied slapping him.

FILE - In this Dec. 2, 2015, file photo, Kim Foxx, then a candidate for Cook County state's attorney, speaks at a news conference in Chicago. (AP Photo/M. Spencer Green, File)

The police report indicated that no arrests were made.

In a perviously released statement, Kelley Foxx and Kim Foxx told Fox News: “This is a personal family matter, and we ask that you provide our family with respect and privacy.”

KIM FOXX LIED ABOUT CONTACTS WITH JUSSIE SMOLLETT’S SISTER, VIOLATED LEGAL ETHICS, INVESTIGATION FINDS

Kim Foxx, Chicago’s top prosecutor, was heavily criticized after her office dropped several charges against actor Jussie Smollett in 2020 for faking a hate crime where he said he was beaten up by racist and homophobic Trump supporters in Chicago.

The public outrage sparked by the decision to drop the charges resulted in the appointment of a special prosecutor.

Smollett, who is both gay and black, was later found guilty on five charges of staging that attack and lying to police.

Foxx was accused of texting with a former aide to Michelle Obama and a relative of Smollett about the case. 

COURT ORDERS JUSSIE SMOLLETT BE RELEASED FROM JAIL ON BOND PENDING HIS HATE CRIME HOAX CONVICTION APPEAL

Jussie Smollett is led out of the courtroom after being sentenced at the Leighton Criminal Court Building on March 10, 2022 in Chicago, Illinois. Jussie Smollett was found guilty late last year of lying to police about a hate crime after he reported to police that two masked men physically attacked him, yelling racist and anti-gay remarks near his Chicago home in 2019. He was sentenced to 150 days in jail, 30 months probation, ordered to pay $120,000 restitution to the city of Chicago and fined $25,000.

Special Prosecutor Dan Webb, who investigated Foxx’s handling of the Smollett case, found that she lied about having contact with Smollett’s sister but ultimately said that not enough evidence was developed to support criminal charges against Foxx.

However, Webb said in his report that there was “abuse of discretion” and “operational failures” by Foxx’s office.

Foxx’s office said it “respectfully disagreed” with Webb’s findings of abuse of prosecutorial discretion.

Despite calls intense criticism and calls for Foxx to resign, the progressive prosecutor was re-elected to a second term as state’s attorney.

Fox News’ Adam Sabes, Matt Finn and Andrew Mark Miller contributed to this report.

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