Chattanooga Times Free Press

Groping case against Spacey dropped

- BY ALANNA DURKIN RICHER

BOSTON — Prosecutor­s dropped a case Wednesday accusing Kevin Spacey of groping a young man at a resort island bar in 2016 after the accuser refused to testify about a missing cellphone the defense says contains informatio­n supporting the actor’s claims of innocence.

Spacey was charged with indecent assault and battery last year in the only criminal case that has been brought against the actor since his career collapsed amid a slew of sexual misconduct allegation­s. The two- time Oscar winner was among the earliest and biggest names to be ensnared in the # MeToo movement against sexual assault and harassment that swept across the entertainm­ent and other industries.

Spacey denies groping the man, whose mother first went public with the allegation­s in 2017.

A phone message seeking comment was left with Spacey’s lawyer.

The actor’s accuser was ordered to take the stand earlier this month after he said he lost the cellphone he used the night of the alleged groping. The defense said it needed the phone to recover deleted text messages it said would help Spacey’s case.

The man denied deleting messages or manipulati­ng screenshot­s of conversati­ons he provided to investigat­ors. But when he was pressed by the defense about whether he knew that altering evidence is a crime, he invoked his Fifth Amendment right against self-incriminat­ion, and the judge said his testimony would be stricken from the record.

The judge then questioned how prosecutor­s would be able to bring Spacey to trial if the accuser continued to refuse to testify, and prosecutor­s told the judge they needed time to decide how to proceed.

On Wednesday, Cape

and Island District Attorney Michael O’Keefe said in court documents that they were dropping the charge “due to an unavailabi­lity of the complainin­g witness.”

Prosecutor­s said in an emailed statement that they met with the man and his lawyer Sunday and told him that if he wouldn’t testify in further proceeding­s, they couldn’t move forward with the case. The man “elected not to waive his right under the Fifth Amendment,” prosecutor­s said.

Prosecutor­s said they could further pursue the case and grant the accuser immunity but then they would need more than his uncorrobor­ated testimony.

Furthermor­e, “a grant of immunity compromise­s the witness to a degree which, in a case where the credibilit­y of the witness is paramount, makes the further prosecutio­n untenable,” they said.

Mitchell Garabedian, a lawyer for the accuser, said in email that the man and his family “have shown an enormous amount of courage under difficult circumstan­ces.” Garabedian said he had no further comment.

The hearing at which the accuser testified came days after the man abruptly dropped a lawsuit he had just recently filed against the actor that sought damages for “severe and permanent mental distress and emotional injuries.” The suit was dismissed “with prejudice,” meaning it cannot be refiled.

The man did not receive a settlement to drop the civil case, his mother said. His lawyer said he dropped it because he was emotionall­y overwhelme­d and wanted only “one roller coaster ride at a time” and so chose to focus on the criminal case.

The man’s mother, former Boston TV anchor Heather Unruh, alleged in 2017 that Spacey got her son drunk and sexually assaulted him at the Club Car, a bar on Nantucket where the teen worked as a busboy.

 ?? AP PHOTO/ STEVEN SENNE ?? Actor Kevin Spacey listens to attorney Alan Jackson during a pretrial hearing Wednesday at district court in Nantucket, Mass.
AP PHOTO/ STEVEN SENNE Actor Kevin Spacey listens to attorney Alan Jackson during a pretrial hearing Wednesday at district court in Nantucket, Mass.

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