USA TODAY International Edition

Report on Argento rocks #MeToo

Yet leaders say the movement will endure

- Maria Puente

Has the #MeToo movement just suffered a black eye? Maybe, maybe not.

After taking a leading role in the movement to call out sexual abuse, Italian actress Asia Argento is herself facing accusation­s: that she had sex with an underage boy in a Los Angeles-area hotel room in 2013 and quietly arranged to pay him off shortly after she publicly accused Harvey Weinstein of raping her.

The news was shocking enough to leave #MeToo champions stunned and groping for something to say in answer to questions about whether this would, should or could damage #MeToo, the culture-changing movement to press sexual abuse allegation­s against powerful men in multiple industries, especially Hollywood.

Laura Palumbo, communicat­ions director for the National Sexual Violence Resource Center in Washington, sounded somewhat forlorn and careful in what she told USA TODAY on Monday.

“We’re all sort of collective­ly processing what this means for the #MeToo movement,” she said about her organizati­on, which has been a leading voice against sexual violence. “From our perspectiv­e this doesn’t undermine the movement . ... #MeToo has always been bigger than one case or any one story.”

But it was a shocking story: The New York Times, citing an encrypted email it received from an unidentifi­ed sender that contained legal documents, reported late Sunday that Argento, 42, agreed in a private settlement to pay $380,000 to a former child actor-turned-rock musician, Jimmy Bennett, who said she sexually assaulted him in a Marina del Rey hotel room shortly after he turned 17. Argento was 37 at the time.

The age of consent in California is 18, then and now, and it’s a crime – statutory rape – to have sex with someone who is underage. Moreover, the statute of limitation­s for child sexual abuse, while complicate­d, is generally 10 years in California.

The Times said the documents it examined included a selfie of the two lying in bed. “As part of the agreement, Mr. Bennett, who is now 22, gave the photograph and its copyright to Ms. Argento. Three people familiar with the case said the documents were authentic,” the newspaper reported.

The two had appeared together in “The Heart is Deceitful Above All Things,” a 2004 film Argento directed, starred in and helped write.

A picture on Argento’s Instagram page dated May 9, 2013, shows a partial view of the two of them. “Happiest day of my life reunion with @jimmymbenn­ett xox,” she captioned the photo.

Neither Argento nor Bennett nor their lawyers or representa­tives have commented to USA TODAY. The Times said Bennett’s lawyer, Gordon Sattro, gave the newspaper a statement saying Bennett would “continue doing what he has been doing over the past months and years, focusing on his music.”

The Los Angeles County Sheriff ’s Department, the police agency for Marina del Rey (just north of LAX), said there has been no report filed but detectives were aware of the reports and were looking into the matter.

“To date, the LASD has not located any police report alleging criminal activity within our jurisdicti­on in relation to this incident,” according to a statement posted online by Capt. Darren Harris of the Sheriff ’s Informatio­n Bureau. “The LASD’s Special Victims Bureau is attempting to reach out to the reported victim and/or his representa­tives in an effort to appropriat­ely document any potential criminal allegation­s.”

Greg Risling, a spokesman for the Los Angeles district attorney’s office, which has set up a special task force to review allegation­s against Hollywood men accused of sex crimes, had no informatio­n on whether any case involving allegation­s against Argento had been presented to his office by a police agency.

But advocates of #MeToo grappled with the news gingerly. Argento is one of the key figures in the movement: She was one of the first to publicly accuse fallen movie mogul Weinstein of rape.

“If this happened, there is no way to justify it, no way to excuse it, even if (Argento) is a victim” of sexual assault, says women’s rights attorney Gloria Allred, a #MeToo leader who represents one of three women whose sexual assault accusation­s against Weinstein are now being prosecuted in criminal court in Manhattan. Argento is not one of them.

Weinstein has pleaded not guilty to the charges and has denied any nonconsens­ual sex since he was first accused of sexual abuse in double exposes in the Times and The New Yorker in October 2017. On Monday, his lawyer, Benjamin Brafman, released a statement assailing Argento for a “stunning level of hypocrisy.”

“What is perhaps most egregious is the timing, which suggests that at the very same time Argento was working on her own secret settlement for the alleged sexual abuse of a minor, she was positionin­g herself at the forefront of those condemning Mr. Weinstein,” Brafman said in the statement.

“The sheer duplicity of her conduct is quite extraordin­ary and should demonstrat­e to everyone how poorly the allegation­s against Mr. Weinstein were actually vetted and accordingl­y cause all of us to pause and allow due process to prevail, not condemnati­on by fundamenta­l dishonesty,” Brafman said.

Weinstein’s foes were adamant that the allegation­s against Argento do not undermine allegation­s against Weinstein or the #MeToo movement in general.

“Yes, (statutory rape) is a crime. Yes, it could still be prosecuted,” Allred said. “But if (Bennett) doesn’t file a report or if he doesn’t wish to testify, the reality is it’s unlikely it would be prosecuted. Prosecutor­s generally will not force a victim who is reluctant or refuses to testify.”

Moreover, Allred says, the encounter between Bennett and Argento has been resolved by a settlement and payout, and “in a way that appears to be to the satisfacti­on of both parties.” This is routine and there’s nothing wrong with such settlement­s, Allred said, having negotiated countless such resolution­s.

“This should not be a black eye for the #MeToo movement,” Allred said. “I think the movement will not only continue, I see it getting bigger, not lessening.”

Similar sentiments came from Tarana Burke, the woman credited with starting the movement back in 2007. She said in a series of tweets Monday that the movement will endure even though it is “jarring” to hear “the names of some of our faves connected to sexual violence.”

She tweeted that the debate should shift from talking about people to talking about sexual violence as a consequenc­e of power and privilege.

“People will use these recent news stories to try and discredit this movement - don’t let that happen. This is what Movement is about. It’s not a spectator sport. It is people generated. We get to say “this is/isn’t what this movement is about!” she tweeted.

Lisa Bloom, another California women’s rights attorney and daughter of Allred, says human beings can be victim and victimizer, “saint and monster,” at the same time.

“This will have zero impact on #MeToo, which is not about one person or 10 people or even 1,000 people, it’s about millions worldwide who have chosen to tell their stories of sexual harassment and assault and woken up the world to this epidemic,” Bloom told USA TODAY. “There are always going to be bumps in the road, but we can’t lose sight of the power of this movement.”

Actress Rose McGowan, another Weinstein accuser and #MeToo leader, said she was heartbroke­n by the news and urged people to “be gentle.”

“I got to know Asia Argento ten months ago. Our commonalit­y is the shared pain of being assaulted by Harvey Weinstein. My heart is broken. I will continue my work on behalf of victims everywhere,” she tweeted Monday.

On Twitter, supporters of the movement sought to reassure others that #MeToo will not be damaged by this episode.

“A person’s ability to be both a perpetrato­r and a victim of crime has never negated an actions’ criminalit­y. This is not new. Asia Argento is selfish for centering herself in a cause to which she presented reputation­al risk - however unfair - but #metoo has lost no legitimacy,” tweeted a user called feminist next door.

 ?? AFP/GETTY IMAGES ?? Italian actress Asia Argento attends the Cannes Film Festival in France in May.
AFP/GETTY IMAGES Italian actress Asia Argento attends the Cannes Film Festival in France in May.
 ?? KEVIN WINTER/GETTY IMAGES ?? Actor Jimmy Bennett poses with a wax figure of Britney Spears at Madame Tussaud's Hollywood in 2013.
KEVIN WINTER/GETTY IMAGES Actor Jimmy Bennett poses with a wax figure of Britney Spears at Madame Tussaud's Hollywood in 2013.

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