Windsor Star

McGowan wonders about being silenced

Actress Rose McGowan questions timing of warrant on drug charge

- TRAVIS M. ANDREWS

Actress Rose McGowan has been one of the loudest and most persistent voices speaking out against Hollywood producer Harvey Weinstein, who has been accused of serial sexual harassment spanning several decades. McGowan claimed Weinstein raped her and later attempted to pay her in exchange for her silence.

But her outspokenn­ess, and the media scrutiny that comes with it, has stirred up news of some unrelated legal troubles. On Monday, news broke of a warrant for McGowan’s arrest obtained earlier this year. The Metropolit­an Washington Airports Authority Police Department confirmed it obtained a warrant for the arrest of McGowan for the possession of a controlled substance, a felony charge. The actress left behind “personal belongings” that “tested positive for narcotics” on a flight that flew into Washington Dulles Internatio­nal Airport on Jan. 20, police said.

The warrant was obtained on Feb. 1, and police said they have tried to contact McGowan so she can appear in court in Loudoun County, Va., to respond to the charge. Her name has also been entered into a U.S. national law enforcemen­t database.

McGowan responded with an angry tweet, calling the warrant “a load of” horse manure.

“Are they trying to silence me?” McGowan said in the tweet

She didn’t elaborate on who might be trying to silence her, or what they would be preventing her from saying — but others seemed to fill in the gaps.

If McGowan “would have taken that million dollars in hush money I’m quite sure this wouldn’t even be a headline,” writer Ashlee Marie Preston said in a tweet, retweeted by McGowan adding the word, “FACT.”

“It’s not a coincidenc­e that Rose McGowan” had this happen “after speaking out against Hollywood predators,” journalist Laura Loomer said in a tweet.

McGowan became one of the leading voices against sexual abuse in Hollywood after an Oct. 5 article in the New York Times alleged that Weinstein, one of Hollywood’s most powerful producers, used his position to sexually harass and assault women he encountere­d through his work. McGowan was one of the women listed in the article.

A week later, she tweeted to Amazon CEO and Washington Post owner Jeffrey P. Bezos that she was raped by a man whose initials were “HW.”

She later confirmed to The Hollywood Reporter that her tweet referred to Weinstein.

Through her lawyer, she told The New York Times that Weinstein offered her $1 million in September to sign a nondisclos­ure agreement.

Instead of taking the money, she

began speaking loudly against a culture of sexual assault ingrained in Hollywood. On Oct. 12, the same day she tweeted the rape allegation against Weinstein, her Twitter account was temporaril­y suspended.

She took to Instagram instead, writing, “TWITTER HAS SUSPENDED ME. THERE ARE POWERFUL FORCES AT WORK. BE MY VOICE.”

Twitter quickly reinstated her account, explaining in a tweeted statement that “her account was temporaril­y locked because one of her tweets included a private phone number, which violates our Terms of Service,” and that “We will be clearer about these policies and decisions in the future.”

On Friday, she gave a speech at the Women’s Convention in Detroit, offering examples of how sexual harassment is embedded in the movie business, such as the fact that, “writers in Hollywood use rape as a plot device. They can’t imagine a woman getting strong otherwise.”

She also said there is no protection in place for women.

“In regards to Hollywood, we have no Title IX,” she said, referring to U.S. legislatio­n against discrimina­tion. “There’s nothing.” McGowan said she wouldn’t be silenced. “I’ve had monsters after me for years and years trying to eradicate me from this planet,” she said. “And I will not go.”

 ??  ?? Rose McGowan
Rose McGowan

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