The Star Malaysia

Weinstein’s lawyer in closing: ‘Tears do not make truth’

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los angeles: An attorney for Harvey Weinstein at his Los Angeles rape and sexual assault trial told jurors that prosecutor­s’ case relies entirely on asking them to trust women whose testimony showed they were untrustwor­thy.

“Take my word for it,” Alan Jackson said in his closing argument. “Five words that sum up the entirety of the prosecutio­n’s case.”

Everything else prosecutor­s presented, through a month of testimony from 44 witnesses, “was smoke and mirrors,” Jackson said.

Weinstein is charged with raping and sexually assaulting two women and committing sexual battery against two others.

Jackson urged jurors to look past the drama and emotion of the testimony those four women gave, and focus on the factual evidence.

“Believe us because we’re mad, believe us because we cried,” Jackson said jurors were being asked to do.

“Well fury does not make fact. And tears do not make truth.”

Jackson said the stories of two women who Weinstein allegedly sexually assaulted on back-to-back days in 2013 “simply never happened”.

Weinstein’s alleged rape and assault of the other two women in 2005 and 2010 were “100% consensual” encounters that the women engaged in for the sake of career advancemen­t that they later became “desperate to relabel” as non-consensual, Jackson said.

“These were women with whom Harvey had transactio­nal relationsh­ips and transactio­nal sex,” he said.

Jackson argued that the women were perfectly willing to exchange sex for favours or status when the incidents happened in 2005 and 2010. But after the #Metoo explosion around Weinstein with stories in the New York Times and the New Yorker in 2017, they were regretful.

“They played the game. They hate it now, unequivoca­lly,” Jackson said. “But what about then? What about before the 2017 dogpile started on Mr Weinstein?”

He dwelled on a judge’s instructio­n he said was essential, that if jurors found that any significan­t thing a witness said was untrue, they should consider disbelievi­ng everything the witness said.

The defence is set to finish its closing argument in the afternoon, and after the prosecutor’s rebuttal, jurors will begin deliberati­ons.

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