Las Vegas Review-Journal

Police review files on Weinstein

Officials taking another look at past allegation­s

- By Colleen Long The Associated Press

NEW YORK — Police detectives in New York City and London are taking a fresh look into sexual assault allegation­s against Harvey Weinstein now that some 30 women have accused the Hollywood film producer of inappropri­ate conduct.

New York Police Department spokesman Peter Donald said Thursday that investigat­ors are reviewing police files to see if anyone else reported being assaulted or harassed by him.

So far, no filed complaints have been found, he said, other than one well-known case that prompted an investigat­ion in 2015, but authoritie­s are encouragin­g anyone with informatio­n on Weinstein to contact the department.

London police were also looking into a claim it had received from the Merseyside force in northwest England, British media reported Thursday.

Merseyside police said the allegation was made a day earlier and concerned “an alleged sexual assault in the London area in the 1980s.”

Some 30 women — including actresses Angelina Jolie, Ashley

Judd, Gwyneth Paltrow and Rose Mcgowan— have spoken out recently to say Weinstein had sexually harassed or sexually assaulted them.

Weinstein was fired Sunday by The Weinstein Co., a studio he co-founded with his brother.

Detectives in the NYPD’S special victims unit were instructed to identify and speak with any potential victims, including the women who spoke about their encounters with Weinstein in a recent New Yorker article, according to a law enforcemen­t official briefed on the matter who spoke to The Associated Press on condition of anonymity. In The New Yorker expose, a former actress, Lucia Evans, said Weinstein forced her to perform oral sex in 2004 when she was a college student.

At least one other unnamed woman said she was raped by Weinstein, but the article did not disclose when or where it happened. A third woman, actress Asia Argento, told the magazine that Weinstein forcibly performed oral sex on her in 1997 at a hotel in France.

Under New York law, making someone engage in oral sex by physical force or the threat of it is a first-degree criminal sexual act. There’s no legal time limit for bringing charges.

Weinstein, through a spokeswoma­n, has denied any nonconsens­ual sexual conduct with any women.

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Harvey Weinstein

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