The Sentinel-Record

Lawyer fights for Weinstein, in court and out

- TOM HAYS JENNIFER PELTZ

NEW YORK — A powerful public figure is accused of sexual assault in a Manhattan hotel room. There’s media frenzy. Enter go-to defense attorney Ben Brafman.

Brafman, 69, was on the winning end of that scenario in 2011 when he helped former Internatio­nal Monetary Fund director Dominique Strauss-Kahn beat an attempted rape charge.

Seven years later, Brafman has an even bigger challenge: defending Harvey Weinstein against sex crime charges.

“I’m trying my best to save him in somewhat of an impossible situation he finds himself in,” Brafman told The Associated Press.

Saving unpopular clients in impossible situations is something of a specialty for Brafman, whose list of past clients includes profession­al athletes, celebritie­s and wealthy businessme­n in trouble, some so vilified many lawyers would shy away from them.

He said in the past year he’s gotten to know Weinstein as someone with “a forceful personalit­y” who “soaks up all the oxygen in the room,” but steadfastl­y maintains his innocence.

In Brafman, Weinstein gets a tactical and pugnacious lawyer willing to fight for him inside court — and outside, too, in pressure-cooker conditions.

With Strauss-Kahn, Brafman had a case that came to center on the credibilit­y of a hotel maid who had accused the influentia­l French diplomat of sexual assault.

Manhattan District Attorney Cyrus R. Vance Jr. — the same prosecutor handling the Weinstein case — ultimately dropped the charges, saying there were inconsiste­ncies in the accuser’s story.

Compared to Strauss-Kahn, Weinstein’s case appears to be a much heavier lift: He faces more serious allegation­s of raping one woman in a hotel room, plus forcing another to perform oral sex in his office. On top of that, there are dozens of similar allegation­s against his client by actresses and other women and a climate of outrage fueled by the #MeToo movement.

After Weinstein turned himself in May 25, Brafman came out swinging, telling reporters: “Mr. Weinstein did not invent the casting couch in Hollywood,” and that “bad behavior is not on trial in this case.”

In the AP interview, the lawyer said he felt compelled to strike back against months of what he calls unfair press coverage fueled by leaks by authoritie­s investigat­ing the case. He also claims Vance is under intense political pressure to get a conviction, further stacking the odds against Weinstein.

“I think part of my ethical responsibi­lity to a client in a high-profile case is to try and prevent a conviction by what’s happening outside of the courtroom,” he said. “And when there is a tsunami of bad press in a case like this, for example, I have to be able to try and level the playing field.”

He added: “I’m not defending the crime of rape. To falsely accuse a person of rape, however, is equally offensive. And in this case, I believe that there are a number of very well-known personalit­ies who have made accusation­s against Harvey Weinstein that are just patently false.”

An Orthodox Jew who is the son of Holocaust victims, Brafman was raised in Brooklyn and Queens. He graduated from Ohio Northern University College of Law, and served as an assistant district attorney in Manhattan in the mid-1970s before building his defense practice.

In 2001, Brafman won an acquittal for hip-hop star Sean Combs after he was accused of toting an illegal handgun into a crowded Manhattan nightclub. Brafman says it taught him a lesson about managing hardchargi­ng clients used to calling all the shots.

He had less success muzzling another big-name client, Martin “Pharma Bro” Skhreli, who was convicted at a high-profile trial last year of cheating hedge fund investors.

Even after he was found guilty, the former pharmaceut­ical CEO — notorious for inflating the price of a life-saving drug — kept taunting the likes of Hillary Clinton on social media, prompting a judge to revoke his bail. Skhreli ended up receiving a seven-year sentence.

Brafman also represente­d conservati­ve author and filmmaker Dinesh D’Souza, who pleaded guilty to making illegal campaign contributi­ons and was sentenced to probation. D’Souza was back in the news last week when President Donald Trump announced he was pardoning him.

Kenneth Montgomery, a lawyer who has represente­d an accuser in a rape investigat­ion, said Brafman’s willingnes­s to engage the media is understand­able in a legal system where “the government has a lot of power, and in a day and age where the media affects people’s opinion.”

Some defense attorneys stay pointedly mum outside court, but speaking to the media can make sense if “you want to get in front of” the public narrative of a case, Montgomery said.

Attorney Douglas Wigdor, who represente­d the maid who accused Strauss-Kahn, said Brafman “advocated on behalf of his client and used all his connection­s and skills to his client’s advantage, and I can’t really begrudge him for doing that.”

In any case Brafman takes, “I think the client feels my passion for the work that I’m doing,” he said. “I’m not a robot. I’m not just a hired gun. I get paid well, but I earn every single penny.”

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