San Diego Union-Tribune

‘PRISON CONSULTANT’ ADDED TO WEINSTEIN’S ADVISORY ENTOURAGE

To ease passage from ordinary life to living behind bars

- BY ALAN FEUER

During his monthlong trial, film producer Harvey Weinstein was surrounded by an expansive, and expensive, entourage of advisers and assistants.

He had four lawyers, a jury selection expert, a crisis manager and a spokesman. There was even an employee who made sure his court-ordered ankle monitor was functionin­g correctly.

But about three weeks ago, well before a jury found Weinstein guilty of two felony sex crimes, another paid profession­al was brought into his camp: a “prison consultant” named Craig Rothfeld.

Rothfeld’s private firm, Inside Outside Ltd., was created to help new inmates understand the details of what he calls “the journey”— the confusing and often frightenin­g passage from living an ordinary life to living behind bars.

Minutes after Weinstein was convicted, the judge in his case, Justice James Burke, revoked his bail and ordered him to be sent at once to jail.

But despite the ruling, Weinstein has so far been housed in a prison ward at the Bellevue Hospital Center, where he has been receiving treatment for chest pains, diabetes and high blood pressure, his spokesman, Juda Engelmayer, said.

In the last few weeks, Rothfeld has worked with Weinstein’s lawyers to make sure that city jail officials give the producer medical attention while he is being detained before his sentencing, now set for March 11.

Over the weekend, photograph­s emerged online of Weinstein sitting in what seemed to be a common room at Bellevue, watching television in an armchair with a wheelchair parked beside him. The images prompted questions about whether the wealthy and well-connected mogul was getting special treatment. “Different pokes for different folks,” writer Denis Hamill said on Twitter.

City correction officials have repeatedly declined to discuss why Weinstein is being held at the hospital rather than in a cell at Rikers Island.

“Any suggestion that Mr. Weinstein is receiving special treatment is false,” said Peter Thorne, a spokesman for the Department of Correction. “He has access to the same services as anyone else at his location, no more, no less.”

Rothfeld agreed with the department.

“Everyone thinks he has a sweetheart deal, but he doesn’t,” he said of Weinstein. “He’s in the hospital, but he’s still in a prison cell — a regular cell, with a toilet open for the world to see.”

Rothfeld said that quite a bit of work went into getting Weinstein sent to Bellevue. To persuade Burke to recommend the hospital, he and Weinstein’s lawyers submitted copies of his medical prescripti­ons and a notarized letter from a doctor certifying his physical disability.

It helped Weinstein’s argument, he said, that over the summer the celebrity investor Jeffrey Epstein was found dead in the Manhattan federal jail cell where he was awaiting prosecutio­n on sextraffic­king charges. Because of Epstein’s death, there were now “major security issues surroundin­g high-profile people,” Rothfeld said.

It is likely that Epstein’s suicide is being taken into account by jail officials in their decision to keep Weinstein at Bellevue rather than transferri­ng him to Rikers, according to one former jail official and one city official, both of whom spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss internal Department of Correction practices.

The city official said that keeping Weinstein at Bellevue was “extremely unusual.” Rikers inmates are normally not housed at the hospital for an extended period unless they have serious medical problems.

“They don’t know what to do with him, understand­ably,” the city official said. “Post-epstein, I’m sure there is more concern.”

Weinstein could spend as many as 29 years in prison, and after he is sentenced he will no doubt face conditions far less pleasant than those he has at Bellevue.

Rothfeld said he has met with Weinstein one on one to prepare him for the fast-approachin­g moment when he will be sent to prison. Their conversati­ons, he said, have focused on getting the producer ready for having his head shaved and wearing handcuffs.

“When you go away, you’re largely entering the Bermuda Triangle,” Rothfeld said in an interview this week. “There’s little informatio­n available, and at the lowest point in someone’s life they usually have no idea of what’s in front of them.”

Feuer writes for The New York Times.

 ?? TIMOTHY A. CLARY TNS ?? Convicted of felony sex crimes, Harvey Weinstein could face up to 29 years in prison.
TIMOTHY A. CLARY TNS Convicted of felony sex crimes, Harvey Weinstein could face up to 29 years in prison.
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