Antelope Valley Press

Masterson case: Mistrial declared

- By BRIAN MELLEY and ANDREW DALTON Associated Press

LOS ANGELES — A judge declared a mistrial, Wednesday, after jurors said they were hopelessly deadlocked at the trial of “That ’70s Show” actor Danny Masterson, who was charged with three rapes.

Los Angeles Superior Court Judge Charlaine F. Olmedo had ordered the jurors to take Thanksgivi­ng week off and keep deliberati­ng after they told her, on Nov. 18, that they could not come to a consensus about the rape allegation­s after a monthlong trial in which the Church of Scientolog­y played a supporting role.

Masterson, 46, was charged with the rape of three women, including a former girlfriend, in his Hollywood Hills home, between 2001 and 2003. He pleaded not guilty and his lawyer said the acts were all consensual. All three women were members of the church at the time, and Masterson remains one.

“I find the jurors hopelessly deadlocked,” Judge Charlaine Olmedo declared after inquiring whether there was anything the court could do to move them closer to reaching a unanimous decision. She set a March date for a retrial.

Jurors said they had voted seven times, Tuesday and Wednesday, without being able to reach consensus on any of the three counts.

The jury foreman said only two jurors voted for conviction on the first count, four voted for conviction on the second count and five voted to convict on the third count.

Jurors were forced to start deliberati­ons from scratch, on Monday, when two had to be dismissed because they came down with COVID-19. They deliberate­d for two days but still could not reach verdicts.

The result was a serious setback for prosecutor­s, and for the three women who said they were seeking long-overdue justice.

The proceeding­s took place amid a flurry of cases on both coasts with #MeToo connotatio­ns, including the Los Angeles trial of Harvey Weinstein just down the hall from Masterson’s. In New York, Kevin Spacey won a sexual misconduct lawsuit brought by actor Anthony Rapp in New York, and a jury ordered director and screenwrit­er Paul Haggis to pay $10 million in a civil case there.

But at the Masterson trial, as at the Haggis trial, the #MeToo implicatio­ns were largely eclipsed by the specter of Scientolog­y, despite the judge’s insistence that the church not become a de facto defendant.

The women, all referred to as Jane Does and all former members of the church, said they were intimidate­d, harassed and stalked after Masterson was charged. They have repeated those allegation­s in a pending lawsuit against the church.

Masterson attorney Philip Cohen said the church was mentioned 700 times during trial and argued that it became an excuse for the prosecutio­n’s failure to build a believable case against Masterson, a prominent Scientolog­ist.

But Deputy District Attorney Reinhold Mueller said the church had tried to silence the women and that was the reason it took two decades for the case to get to trial.

Masterson did not testify. His lawyer presented no defense testimony and instead focused on inconsiste­ncies in the accounts of the three accusers, who he said changed their stories over time and spoke with each other before going to police.

“The key to this case is not when they reported it,” Cohen said during closing arguments. “It’s what they said when they reported it. What they said after they reported it. And what they said at trial.”

Mueller argued that Masterson was a man “for whom ‘no’ never meant ‘no,’ ” as shown by the graphic and emotional testimony of the three accusers.

Two women said they were served drinks by Masterson and became woozy or passed out before being violently raped. One said she thought she would die as Masterson held a pillow over her face.

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