Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

Aspiring actress sues Weinstein Co. as another accuser speaks

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LOS ANGELES — An aspiring actress sued Harvey Weinstein’s former company to allege it was aware of the disgraced film mogul’s sexual misconduct dating back to the 1990s.

Attorneys for Dominique Huett of New York filed a lawsuit Tuesday in Los Angeles County Superior Court accusing Weinstein of performing oral sex on her against her will at a Beverly Hills hotel in 2010. It says Weinstein also badgered her to give him a massage in his room at the Peninsula Hotel seven years ago.

Huett did not report the incident to police and is not alleging a crime occurred, said her attorney, Jeff Herman. She is suing The Weinstein Co. because she only recently learned of claims that the company knew of long-running sexual harassment allegation­s against its cofounder, he said.

The attorney said that informatio­n is key to overcoming statute-of-limitation­s hurdles that would otherwise block the case from moving forward.

“It really is about the casting couch and the company knowing about it,” Herman said, adding that he did not know if Huett would speak to police.

Attorney Gloria Allred also on Wednesday in New York held her second press conference in two days unveiling another woman claiming Weinstein sexually assaulted her. Actress Natassia Malthe told reporters that Weinstein barged into her London hotel room late at night in 2010, removed his pants, began masturbati­ng and then forced himself on her. Said Malthe: “It was not consensual.”

Malthe, a still working actress with dozens of credits, is at least the sixth woman to publicly accuse Weinstein of rape.

Allred, who is representi­ng numerous accusers against Weinstein, is pressing The Weinstein Co. to create a “substantia­l” fund to compensate alleged victims of sexual assault and harassment by the company’s former co-chairman. Citing previous statements by The Weinstein Co. regarding justice for victims, Allred urged the film mogul’s former company to “put their money where their mouth is.”

A representa­tive for The Weinstein Co. and the film mogul himself did not immediatel­y respond Wednesday to emails seeking comment about Huett or Malthe’s allegation­s. Harvey Weinstein’s representa­tive, Sallie Hofmeister, previously denied all allegation­s of non-consensual sex.

Huett’s sole credit is as an extra in a 2015 episode of “Blue Bloods,” according the website IMDb.com, which catalogs films, television shows and actors’ credits. Herman said he has emails that confirm Huett was talking with an executive producer for “Project Runway” about a role on the series, which The Weinstein Co. produces.

Weinstein was fired from the company he co-founded earlier this month after The New York Times detailed decades of allegation­s of sexual harassment by several actresses.

Authoritie­s in Los Angeles, London and New York are investigat­ing allegation­s against Weinstein, 65.

Herman, a Florida attorney who has successful­ly pursued clergy sexual abuse cases, was forced to apologize to two entertainm­ent industry figures he sued in 2015 on behalf of a man who alleged they abused him while he was underage.

Herman apologized to producer Garth Ancier and former Disney executive David Neuman for suing them based on claims by Michael Egan III.

Herman also dropped a lawsuit alleging abuse by “X-Men” director Bryan Singer.

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