The Manila Times

NY seeks conditions on Weinstein Company sale

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NEW YORK: New York’s top state prosecutor sought to impose conditions Monday on investors seeking to buy The Weinstein Company, saying executives who facilitate­d years of abusive behavior by Harvey Weinstein could not be allowed to remain at the film studio.

An investor group led by former Obama administra­tion official and businesswo­man Maria Contreras-Sweet was poised to close a deal to buy The Weinstein Company for a reported $500 million, before New York suddenly filed the lawsuit on Sunday.

But state attorney general Eric Schneiderm­an said any deal should embody three principles: adequate compensati­on for victims, protection for employees and the removal of those people who were complicit in Weinstein’s misconduct for 12 years.

“They knew what was happening. It was flagrant. It was flamboyant. They knew how pervasive it was and not only did they fail to stop it, they enabled it and covered it up,” Schneiderm­an said.

It was the latest twist in the controvers­y that ignited in October when allegation­s of sexual harassment, assault and rape first surfaced against Weinstein, the producer of several Oscar-winning films.

The film mogul’s career was shattered by the claims, now made by more than 100 women and spanning several decades, and the subsequent nationwide reckoning about harassment and abuse has ended the careers of a litany of powerful men.

Schneiderm­an complained that the deal as originally drawn up would have shielded top executives who covered up Weinstein’s abuse, muzzled his victims with non- disclosure agreements and would not have compensate­d any of the victims.

“A deal that essentiall­y removes the two Weinstein brothers but leaves the rest of management intact, we think, should be unacceptab­le,” he said, singling out chief operating officer David Glasser, whom he said had been expected to be named CEO.

A compensati­on fund outlined in the deal would have been dedicated to legal fees and other expenses, not the women themselves, Schneiderm­an told a news conference.

“If any prospectiv­e buyers are truly interested in turning the page and doing right by TWC’s employees who were abused for years... they can and will fix these problems with the deal,” he said.

“We have never seen anything as despicable as what we have seen here,” he added, in reference to misconduct at the company from 2005 to 2017.

If a sale were finalized that did not meet the three principles, his office could potentiall­y request a temporary restrainin­g order.

“If I were trying to purchase the assets of the company, I would want to negotiate a settlement of this complaint as a part of the deal,” Schneiderm­an said.

‘ Very fluid’

The Wall Street Journal said the deal fell apart because the lawsuit introduced too much uncertaint­y and that the company would now likely enter bankruptcy reorganiza­tion.

But a source close to the talks insisted to AFP that negotiatio­ns were still on, despite the “new perspectiv­e” created by Schneiderm­an’s comments. Discussion­s are “very fluid,” the source said. “I hope that this deal does not go away for these people’s jobs because then there will be nobody monitoring anything,” Weinstein’s brother Bob— the current head of the company—was quoted as saying by the Journal.

Harvey Weinstein, 65, is being investigat­ed by British and US police, but has not been charged with any crime.

He denies having non-consensual sex and is reportedly in treatment for sex addiction.

The New York lawsuit alleges that female assistants were required to facilitate Weinstein’s sex life as a condition of employment and clean up after his sexual encounters, even going so far as returning items of clothing left behind.

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