The Manila Times

Weinstein expected to ‘surrender’

-

NEW YORK: Disgraced Hollywood mogul Harvey Weinstein is expected to turn himself in to New York police on Friday to face sex crime charges, nearly eight months after his career collapsed in a blaze of assault accusation­s.

US media reported that the former movie powerbroke­r—once the

winning scores of Oscars— had been indicted by a Manhattan grand jury.

TheNewYork­Post said he would surrender to police, where he would likely have his mugshot

- ing taken to a Manhattan court, where experts predicted he would plead not guilty.

The Manhattan district attor-

have investigat­ed Weinstein for months, coming under growing pressure from the Time’s Up movement to bring the fallen producer to justice.

Any court appearance on Friday would mark the first criminal

- ried, disgraced former studio boss.

CNN, citing an unnamed source, reported on Thursday evening that Weinstein would be charged with raping a woman and forcing another to perform oral sex on him.

TheNewYork­Times and New YorkDailyN­ews had earlier reported the charges against Weinstein would relate to at least one accuser, Lucia Evans, who said he forced her into oral sex in 2004.

Ben Brafman, Weinstein’s highpowere­d defense attorney, declined to comment Thursday.

nor the police department immediatel­y responded to requests to comment.

Police have, however, previously

- vestigatio­n regarding Evans, who was an aspiring actress at the time.

New York police have also con-

against Weinstein after “Boardwalk Empire” actress Paz de la Huerta accused him of raping her twice at her New York apartment in late 2010.

‘ Tried to get away’

The mogul’s career went down in

- sault allegation­s following bombshell articles in The New York Times and New Yorker, which sparked a sexual harassment watershed across the United States and won both outlets a Pulitzer.

More than 100 women have since accused the 66-year-old of crimes ranging from sexual harassment to assault and rape going back 40 years.

More than two dozen actresses including Salma Hayek, Gwyneth Paltrow and Angelina Jolie say they were sexually harassed by the producer. A few, including Asia

they were raped.

“We are one step closer to justice,” McGowan was quoted as saying by Variety. “May this give hope to all victims and survivors everywhere.”

Evans, now a marketing consultant, told The New Yorker that Weinstein approached her in a club in 2004 and that an assistant subsequent­ly set up a daytime

Tribeca.

“He forced me to perform oral sex on him,” she said. “I said, over and over, ‘I don’t want to do this, stop, don’t,’” she added.

Eventually, she said, the burly executive “overpowere­d” her. “I just sort of gave up. That’s the most horrible part of it, and that’s why he’s been able to do this for so long to so many women: people give up, and then they feel like it’s their fault.”

Weinstein denies any nonconsens­ual sex and has reportedly been in treatment for sex addiction.

He is also reportedly under federal investigat­ion by the US at-

Otherwise, he has been hit by a litany of civil lawsuits and The Weinstein Company— which sacked

His wife, fashion designer Georgina Chapman, is now divorcing him with police investigat­ions also ongoing in London and Los Angeles. “It’s going to be a media circus,”

- yer and former prosecutor, told Agence France- Presse, warning that any trial—let alone a criminal conviction—would still be a long way off.

Sexual assault cases, particular­ly those that allegedly happened years ago, are notoriousl­y hard to prosecute particular­ly as there is often little to no forensic evidence.

Weinstein hired Brafman, one of America’s most celebrated criminal defense lawyers, last November, just days after New York police announced they were gathering evidence for a possible arrest warrant.

“You can expect him to

Brafman. fight

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