The Reporter (Lansdale, PA)

Attorney lands on a different side in Harvey Weinstein case

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Celebrity attorney Lisa Bloom has built a career defending victims of sexual harassment and assault. Now she says she’s trying to “make a difference here on the other side” by defending movie mogul Harvey Weinstein.

In an interview with The Associated Press on Friday, Bloom both defended Weinstein and acknowledg­ed he’d been “stupid.” She saluted the women who have come forward to allege wrongdoing but said many allegation­s were overblown and consisted of Weinstein telling a woman she “looked cute without my glasses.”

“He wanted to be respectful to women and he still wants to be respectful to women. And he’s asked me, of all people, to help guide him in that direction, to explain to him the laws of sexual harassment and why this is important,” Bloom said.

The New York Times reported that Weinstein had reached at least eight legal settlement­s with women over alleged harassment. The allegation­s have been levied by actresses including Ashley Judd and former employees at both the Weinstein Co. and Weinstein’s former company, Miramax.

Bloom has long represente­d women in high-profile sexual harassment cases, including alleged victims of former Fox News host Bill O’Reilly and model Janice Dickinson in her case against Bill Cosby. She said she met Weinstein a year ago after his company decided to develop Bloom’s book “Suspicion Nation.” She said she confronted him then about rumors of harassment in a “frank, blunt way.”

“I was very surprised that he admitted to being stupid, to saying things that he shouldn’t have said and I told him that needs to be your approach. You can’t go back and change what’s happened in the past but you can go forward and acknowledg­e it, ask for forgivenes­s, change your behavior,” she said. “And I thought I had a chance to make a difference here on the other side. We’ll see if I’ve done that right.”

Weinstein’s attorney, Charles J. Harder, said in a statement that the Times story is “saturated with false and defamatory statements.” Bloom more gently poured cold water on the report, saying there have been some complaints against Weinstein but “not as many as” as the Times said. She added that some of the allegation­s were “incorrect” and that eyewitness­es had “a different perspectiv­e.”

“Some of the allegation­s which I have read are, ‘He told me I had a nice dress on.’ ‘He told me I looked cute without my glasses.’ Probably he shouldn’t be saying things like that in the workplace. Does that rise to the level of sexual harassment, legally? No, it doesn’t,” she said. “He does not admit to sexual harassment when he does admit to his misconduct.”

Bloom said Weinstein has anger problems and said he can be intimidati­ng. She said he “knows he has to work on that” and praised him for acknowledg­ing that he “hurt people.” But she said that unlike at Fox News when women came forward with allegation­s of sexual abuse, Weinstein was not “trashing them, sending private investigat­ors to dig up dirt on them, humiliatin­g them.”

“I salute any woman that comes forward with complaints of sexual harassment you know? Harvey has had to learn. This is not an easy time for him either. Probably nobody has sympathy for him right now and that’s fine. But this is a guy who has thrown away the old playbook of let’s attack the women, let’s dig up dirt on their past, let’s humiliate them, let’s fight. He’s not doing any of that.”

 ??  ?? Attorney Lisa Bloom stands outside a courthouse in downtown Los Angeles.
Attorney Lisa Bloom stands outside a courthouse in downtown Los Angeles.

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