Los Angeles Times

Former mogul to face lawsuit

Federal judge allows sex-traffickin­g case against Weinstein.

- Associated press

A New York judge has ruled that an aspiring actress can sue Harvey Weinstein for violating sex-traffickin­g laws because the proverbial casting couch, in which women are asked to trade sex for Hollywood opportunit­ies, could be considered a “commercial sex act.”

U.S. District Judge Robert W. Sweet said the lawsuit filed by Kadian Noble last fall was fairly brought under sex-traffickin­g laws Congress passed that had an “expansive” definition of what could be considered a commercial sex act. His ruling, dated Monday, was filed publicly Tuesday.

The judge rejected arguments by Weinstein’s lawyers that nothing of value was exchanged between Noble and Weinstein in 2014, when they watched her demo reel in a Cannes, France, hotel room before Weinstein allegedly molested her and forced her into a bathroom to watch him masturbate.

Weinstein denies wrongdoing. His lawyer, Phyllis Kupferstei­n, said she planned to ask for an immediate appeal if the judge will allow it.

“It doesn’t resemble at all what we consider sex traffickin­g,” Kupferstei­n said. “We don’t read the statute and the case law the same way he does.”

The lawsuit’s claims, she said, were “light years away” from what the sex-traffickin­g law was intended to outlaw, such as when predators are “going after underage girls on the promise of a green card and locking them up in a basement and making them have sex with people.”

In his ruling, Sweet wrote: “For an aspiring actress, meeting a world-renowned film producer carries value, in and of itself. The opportunit­y, moreover, for the actress to sit down with that producer in a private meeting to review her film reel and discuss a promised film role carries value that is career-making and life-changing.

“The contention, therefore, that Noble was given nothing of value — that the expectatio­n of a film role, of a modeling meeting, of ‘his people’ being ‘in touch with her’ had no value — does not reflect modern reality,” the judge continued.

He included a footnote at the word “reality,” citing sources that explain that the concept of the casting couch — in which aspiring actors and actresses are promised valuable profession­al opportunit­ies in exchange for sexual favors — “has been in the American lexicon for nearly a century.”

Weinstein’s lawyers argued that letting the lawsuit proceed to trial would mean that sex-traffickin­g laws now cover all sexual activity between adults when one person holds power and influence over the other.

Sweet said that even if the prospect of a film role, modeling meeting or continued profession­al relationsh­ip with Weinstein were not enough to constitute “things of value” under the sex-traffickin­g statute, then her “reasonable expectatio­n of receiving those things in the future, based on Harvey’s repeated representa­tions that she would, is sufficient.”

Sweet also dismissed Weinstein’s brother Bob from the lawsuit.

 ?? Seth Wenig Associated Press ?? HARVEY WEINSTEIN is being sued by aspiring actress Kadian Noble.
Seth Wenig Associated Press HARVEY WEINSTEIN is being sued by aspiring actress Kadian Noble.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States