The Columbus Dispatch

Judge rejects $19M Weinstein deal

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NEW YORK — A $19 million settlement between Harvey Weinstein and some of his accusers was rejected Tuesday by a judge.

U.S. District Judge Alvin K. Heellerste­in in Manhattan said Weinstein’s accusers in the proposed class-action settlement were too varied to be grouped together.

Lawyers for several women who had opposed the deal praised what they described as Hellerstei­n’s swift rejection of a one-sided proposal.

A spokesman for Weinstein did not immediatel­y comment.

A spokespers­on for New York Attorney General Letitia James, who announced the tentative agreement June 30, said her office is determinin­g its next steps. “Our office has been fighting tirelessly to provide these brave women with the justice they are owed and will continue to do so,” Morgan Rubin said in a statement.

The deal to settle lawsuits brought by James and a Chicago lawyer on behalf of multiple women would have provided between $7,500 and $750,000 to some women who accused Weinstein of sexually abusing them.

The 68-year-old former Hollywood producer was convicted earlier this year of rape and sexual assault against two women. Accusation­s by dozens of women in 2017 led to the downfall of his career and gave rise to #Metoo, the global movement to hold powerful men accountabl­e for their sexual misconduct.

Weinstein was diagnosed in March with the coronaviru­s just days after he was moved to the state’s maximum security Wende Correction­al Facility near Buffalo to begin serving his 23-year prison sentence.

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