Los Angeles Times

No ‘harmless old man’

Prosecutor­s portray the frail-looking Weinstein as a once-hulking figure.

- By James Queally and Laura Newberry

NEW YORK — Moments before opening statements in his landmark criminal trial last week, Harvey Weinstein entered the courtroom hanging onto another man’s arm, looking as if he’d collapse to the ground if left to walk on his own.

Moving slowly with a pronounced limp, the 67-yearold disgraced Hollywood titan was led to the defense table. Other days, he would use a walker to reach his seat.

As Manhattan Assistant Dist. Atty. Meghan Hast outlined the horrific acts Weinstein is accused of, she repeatedly described a very different version of the man — a hulking, towering figure who enjoyed an extreme height and weight advantage over the women he was accused of terrorizin­g.

“The man seated on that side of the courtroom, despite what your eyes are looking at, is not a harmless old man,” Hast said.

Through the first week of testimony at Weinstein’s sexual assault trial, prosecutor­s have continuall­y

asked witnesses to describe his physical stature in the early 1990s, 2006 and 2013 — the time frames in which three women say Weinstein raped them in Manhattan.

Causing jurors to focus on images of a confident, 6foot, 300-plus-pound version of Weinstein from back then, rather than the frail man struggling to stand on his own two feet now, could play a significan­t role in deliberati­ons, legal experts say.

“If you’re not a fully functionin­g human, the judge or jury may make a conscious or subconscio­us calculatio­n: that you can’t be held fully responsibl­e for your actions,” said Wendy Murphy, a professor of sexual violence law at New England Law in Boston and a former sex crimes prosecutor.

Weinstein is charged with first-degree rape, two counts of predatory sexual assault, one count of firstdegre­e sexual assault and one count of third-degree rape. He has denied all wrongdoing and his attorneys have argued that each alleged assault was a consensual affair.

Weinstein underwent spinal decompress­ion surgery in December, just weeks before his trial was set to begin, leaving him bent over and reliant on a walker. He has said the surgery was needed because he developed severe back pain after he was involved in an August 2019 car crash in Bedford, N.Y.

Bedford police, however, have said Weinstein was not hospitaliz­ed as a result of the crash and that there were no injuries reported to them on the day of the accident.

Four of Weinstein’s accusers have taken the stand in the last week, and prosecutor­s have asked each to contrast their own slight frames with Weinstein’s. Pictures of the Miramax cofounder’s barrel-like build have been displayed on a projector between the jury box and the witness stand day after day, often dwarfing the women who were detailing their allegation­s just a few feet away.

As actress Annabella Sciorra recounted the night she says Weinstein forced his way into her apartment and raped her in 1993 or 1994, she described herself as a full foot shorter and nearly 200 pounds lighter than he was. At one point, prosecutor­s asked her to stand up and demonstrat­e why she couldn’t run past him to escape.

“He kept coming at me and I felt very overpowere­d because he was very big,” she said last week.

Tarale Wulff and Mimi Haley, who both say Weinstein raped them in his SoHo apartment in 2005 and 2006, respective­ly, gave similar descriptio­ns of how he allegedly used his height and bulk to back them farther into his residence, until they wound up trapped in a bedroom with him.

Wulff, who testified Wednesday, said she met Weinstein while she was working as a waitress at Cipriani’s in Manhattan in 2005. She claimed Weinstein, a friend of the venue’s owner, led her away from a VIP area and into an unused terrace section of the restaurant, where she said he masturbate­d under his clothes in front of her.

A few weeks later, after agreeing to what Wulff said she expected to be an audition at Miramax’s New York offices, she said he raped her.

“He was certainly bigger and heavier and weighed me down,” said Wulff, whose case is not among those charged because the crime is too old to prosecute.

Weinstein and his associates have denied that the back surgery was timed to have any inf luence on the trial.

“It was a back problem that grew more painful and worsened with every step he took after that accident, which eventually led to the need for the surgery,” said Juda Engelmayer, a spokesman for Weinstein. “There is no strategy on this. Harvey would prefer to be healthier and walking without assistance.”

Weinstein was alone in his Jeep on the morning of Aug. 17 when he was involved in a crash in Westcheste­r County, N.Y., according to Lt. Andrew Bellantone, public informatio­n officer for the Bedford Police Department. Weinstein’s car landed on its side, and he told police he was trying to avoid a deer in the roadway, Bellantone said.

Weinstein was not treated for any injuries on the scene, according to Bellantone, who described the incident as “a whole lot of nothing.” A New York doctor did, however, affirm that Weinstein was “totally incapacita­ted” on a disability certificat­e signed shortly before he underwent surgery last month, according to a document reviewed by The Times.

Legal experts said it is not uncommon for a defendant to try to appear nonthreate­ning or put distance between their current appearance and their image at the time of an alleged crime.

Murphy pointed to the 2005 criminal trial in which Michael Jackson was accused of molesting a 13-yearold boy. Jackson appeared one day in a Santa Barbara County court wearing pajamas and limping awkwardly. The larger-than-life pop star seemed small and childish in that moment and mentally unwell, according to Murphy.

Bill Cosby was met with skepticism in 2017 when he revealed that he had gone blind in an interview published just one month before his trial on sexual assault charges in Pennsylvan­ia began. The comedian, who faced a wave of accusation­s similar to those against Weinstein, claimed he’d awakened unable to see nearly two years beforehand. He was ultimately convicted of drugging and molesting a Temple University employee.

Murphy said a defendant’s diminished physical and mental state — or the appearance thereof — sometimes translates into reduced charges or punishment, even when a defendant is found guilty.

“If I had a nickel for every one of those cases in my career where a guy was perfectly fine and then he shows up with wheelchair or cane,” Murphy said, adding there is usually no way to know whether the defendant is feigning a condition.

The same will likely remain true in Weinstein’s case.

Despite the potential of his appearance to influence the jury, any evidence or argument around the necessity of his surgery would almost certainly be inadmissib­le unless he chooses to testify, according to Dmitriy Shakhnevic­h, a criminal defense attorney who now teaches at the John Jay School of Criminal Justice in Manhattan.

Whether or not the surgery was strategic, Shakhnevic­h said, the timing could backfire.

“I don’t know if it’s going to win much sympathy,” Shakhnevic­h said. “Some folks think that this is a timed surgery, that the medical procedure was timed with the trial.”

 ?? Mark Lennihan Associated Press ?? HARVEY WEINSTEIN uses a walker as he leaves court. The producer says he had spinal surgery in December to relieve pain from an August 2019 car crash.
Mark Lennihan Associated Press HARVEY WEINSTEIN uses a walker as he leaves court. The producer says he had spinal surgery in December to relieve pain from an August 2019 car crash.
 ?? Mark Lennihan Associated Press ?? IF JURORS see Weinstein as disabled, they may consider him not fully accountabl­e, one expert says.
Mark Lennihan Associated Press IF JURORS see Weinstein as disabled, they may consider him not fully accountabl­e, one expert says.

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