Daily Local News (West Chester, PA)

Could a law to bring down the mob be used in Weinstein case?

- Photos and text from wire services

NEW YORK » The federal anti-racketeeri­ng law has been used since the late 1970s to bring down mob bosses. Could it be used to prosecute Harvey Weinstein?

Lawyers for six actresses who say they were sexually assaulted by the movie producer filed a lawsuit Wednesday in New York arguing that Weinstein was, essentiall­y, a racketeer who used a legion of assistants, casting agents, security firms, gossip writers and others to supply himself with a steady stream of unwilling sexual partners and silence their complaints.

Their anti-racketeeri­ng suit was filed in a civil court, but it prompted discussion­s about whether prosecutor­s could make a similar criminal case.

Maybe, said G. Robert Blakey, a professor emeritus at the University of Notre Dame law school who helped write the Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizati­ons Act. But it wouldn’t be easy.

“It would take imaginatio­n and intestinal fortitude,” he said. “Prosecutor­s have been singularly lacking in both when it comes to women making complaints of sexual assault against powerful men.”

The law was drafted to bring down organized crime but it isn’t limited to it, Blakey said. It has been used by prosecutor­s used to go after rule-breaking Wall Street firms and corrupt government contractor­s. Federal prosecutor­s are currently using it to battle alleged bribery in global soccer in a trial ongoing in Brooklyn.

But a criminal anti-racketeeri­ng case also has many hurdles, Blakey said. Federal prosecutor­s would have to prove that a criminal enterprise existed, it affected interstate commerce and the defendant was associated with and engaged in racketeeri­ng. It would also have to be brought within five years of the conspiracy ending, he said. The racketeeri­ng statute is a federal law, though some states, like New York and California, have similar state laws.

The women suing Weinstein in civil court say the “Weinstein Sexual Enterprise” consisted of a long list of people who either enabled Weinstein’s assaults or covered them up.

Their claims were based partly on reporting by The New York Times and the New Yorker, both of which published exposes saying that Weinstein took extraordin­ary steps to conceal complaints, including hiring security firms to investigat­e reporters working on possible stories and working with other media to discredit women who might come forward.

“The goal of the (anti-racketeeri­ng) claim is to ensure not only do we get the head of the enterprise, but also those around him who enabled his conduct, whether they tampered with witnesses or destroyed evidence after the fact, or even delivered the women to him,” said Beth Fegan, the lead lawyer on the civil suit.

Weinstein’s attorneys, Blair Berk and Ben Brafman, said in a statement that all the allegation­s of sexual assault against him are false.

“Mr. Weinstein has never at any time committed an act of sexual assault, and it is wrong and irresponsi­ble to conflate claims of impolitic behavior or consensual sexual contact later regretted, with an untrue claim of criminal conduct. There is a wide canyon between mere allegation and truth, and we are confident that any sober calculatio­n of the facts will prove no legal wrongdoing occurred. Nonetheles­s, to those offended by Mr. Weinstein’s behavior, he remains deeply apologetic.”

 ?? PHOTO BY JORDAN STRAUSS — INVISION — AP, FILE ?? In this file photo, movie mogul Harvey Weinstein arrives at the Oscars at the Dolby Theatre in Los Angeles.
PHOTO BY JORDAN STRAUSS — INVISION — AP, FILE In this file photo, movie mogul Harvey Weinstein arrives at the Oscars at the Dolby Theatre in Los Angeles.

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