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5 takeaways from Weinstein verdict, plus who said what about ruling

PRODUCER FACES MINIMUM OF FIVE YEARS IN PRISON AFTER BEING CONVICTED ON TWO OF FIVE CHARGES

- BY ALAN FEUER

It may have been a split decision, and Harvey Weinstein may have been acquitted of the most serious charges in the case. But the stunned expression on his face after the jury’s verdict came in and he was placed in handcuffs on Monday made clear that it was a devastatin­g blow.

On the other side, Cyrus Vance junior, the Manhattan district attorney, could take pride in even a partial win against Weinstein after coming under heavy criticism for declining to prosecute the once-powerful producer at an earlier opportunit­y. Weinstein was convicted on two of five charges — first-degree criminal sexual act and third-degree rape — and acquitted on the others, including first-degree rape and predatory sexual assault. Such divided verdicts are not uncommon. Weinstein, 67, faces a minimum of five years in prison when he is sentenced by Justice James M. Burke, of state Supreme Court in Manhattan, at a hearing set for March 11. Burke could sentence Weinstein to up to 29 years in prison, if he hands down the maximum sentence on the two guilty counts and orders the terms to be served consecutiv­ely.

Here are a few takeaways about Monday’s verdict:

1

When Haley, a former production assistant on the television show “Project Runway,” testified in January, she told a harrowing story about how Weinstein had dragged her toward the bedroom of his Lower Manhattan loft after she went there to meet with him one night in July 2006. She said that she tried to avoid his advances by saying that she was menstruati­ng, but that Weinstein had held her down and forcibly performed oral sex. The jury’s decision to convict Weinstein of first-degree criminal sexual act based on this account was significan­t because Haley’s testimony was far from ideal. She acknowledg­ed that she had stayed in touch with Weinstein after that night and that she had gone to see him at the TriBeCa Grand Hotel two weeks later and had wound up having sex with him. Under cross-examinatio­n, Haley said that even though she was sobbing during the second sexual encounter, she “didn’t physically resist.”

2

Jessica Mann, who was once an aspiring actress, told the jury an equally complicate­d story. During her testimony, she described in graphic detail how after injecting himself with an erection medication, Weinstein cornered her in the bathroom of a Manhattan hotel room and raped her. Like Haley, Mann acknowledg­ed that she had kept in touch with Weinstein after the assault she described and also had consensual sex with him. The jurors convicted Weinstein of the third-degree rape charge, which involves an assailant having sex with someone without consent, in connection with her account. But they acquitted him of first-degree rape.

3

Breaking down in tears at times, Scirorra told the jury that Weinstein pushed his way into her Gramercy Park apartment in the winter months of 1993 or 1994 and raped her as she kicked and punched him in a bid to escape. Under New

York’s statute of limitation­s, Sciorra’s account was too old to prosecute as a separate crime. But her story was used to charge Weinstein with two counts of sexual predatory assault, which involves an assailant attacking at least two different victims. The jurors acquitted Weinstein of both predatory assault charges. It remains unclear why the jury acquitted Weinstein on the charges, but Sciorra’s account was problemati­c in its own ways.

4

Although the jury acquitted Weinstein of more charges than he was convicted on, the verdict was a significan­t accomplish­ment for Vance and his office, which took a huge risk in bringing Weinstein to trial in the first place. Vance, a Democrat who has long considered himself an ally of feminists, came under enormous pressure to bring a case against Weinstein after The New York Times and The New Yorker published bombshell articles in October 2017, that detailed the stories of scores of women who accused Weinstein of abuse and harassment reaching back to the early 1990s. In April 2015, his prosecutor­s declined to file charges against Weinstein after an Italian model, Ambra Battilana Gutierrez, accused him of groping her during a business meeting at his office. With the help of detectives, Battilana Gutierrez later recorded Weinstein appearing to admit that he had touched her. Prosecutor­s decided that she was a problemati­c witness because she had given inconsiste­nt accounts in a separate sexual assault case in Italy.

5

After the verdict on Monday, Vance told reporters at a news conference, “It’s a new day because Harvey Weinstein has finally been held accountabl­e for crimes he committed.” Prosecutor­s have traditiona­lly been averse to bringing rape cases in which witnesses admit to having sex consensual­ly with their assailants at other times. Employing a strategy that was used successful­ly at the second trial of comedian Bill Cosby, Vance’s prosecutor­s persuaded Burke to let them introduce three additional witnesses whose accounts did not yield charges but bolstered their argument that Weinstein had engaged in a pattern of abusive behaviour.

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 ?? The New York Times ?? Harvey Weinstein arrives at State Supreme Court in Manhattan on Monday morning. Weinstein was convicted on two of five charges — first-degree criminal sexual act and third-degree rape in a split decision.
The New York Times Harvey Weinstein arrives at State Supreme Court in Manhattan on Monday morning. Weinstein was convicted on two of five charges — first-degree criminal sexual act and third-degree rape in a split decision.
 ?? The New York Times ?? Italian model Ambra Gutierrez hugs women’s rights lawyer Gloria Allred outside the State Supreme Court in Manhattan after the Weinstein verdict was announced.
The New York Times Italian model Ambra Gutierrez hugs women’s rights lawyer Gloria Allred outside the State Supreme Court in Manhattan after the Weinstein verdict was announced.

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