Ratner, accuser clash in filings
Director is trying to silence woman who accused him of rape, court document says.
A woman who was sued by director Brett Ratner for defamation after she publicly accused him of rape alleged in a court filing Monday that the director was attempting to silence and intimidate her and other women from coming forward about his sexual misconduct.
A federal judge in Hawaii is scheduled to hear a motion this week in the lawsuit filed by Ratner against Melanie Kohler, who posted on Facebook in October that she was raped by the director about 12 years ago.
Kohler’s attorneys have asked the court to dismiss the case, saying Ratner did not have the factual basis to prove Kohler published the Facebook post with malice. They also contend California’s anti-SLAPP law prohibiting lawsuits aimed at silencing critics should apply, even though the suit was filed in Hawaii, where Kohler now lives.
“If wealthy, powerful plaintiffs like Mr. Ratner can burden victims of sexual assault like Ms. Kohler based on nothing more than their own say-so, then our fundamental 1st Amendment protections will offer no sanctuary to those who need them most,” attorneys for Kohler wrote in a filing Monday.
Ratner has denied raping Kohler and called her accusations “false, fabricated, and fictional” in his lawsuit. The suit was filed just hours after The Times published a report on the stories of six women, not including Kohler, who accused the director of misconduct.
In their response to the motion for dismissal, Ratner’s attorneys said they would prove Kohler posted the rape claim on Facebook knowing it to be false. As a result, Ratner “suffered injuries to his personal and professional reputations” and “emotional distress, worry, anger, and anxiety,” the attorneys alleged.
“Mr. Ratner could and would submit evidence to show that Defendant has changed her rape story multiple times since she initially published it,” they wrote.
Lawyers for the director contended California’s laws against “strategic lawsuits against public participation” did not apply because Kohler, a former marketing executive who now runs a scuba shop, lives in Hawaii and posted her allegations from the state.
Kohler’s attorneys contended California law should apply because the alleged rape took place in California and the case had significant implications here.
U.S. District Judge Helen Gillmor is scheduled to hear the case Thursday.