Dayton Daily News

Spacey’s legal woes persist even with case thrown out

- By Alanna Durkin Richer

— Kevin Spacey’s BOSTON legal woes are not over, despite the collapse of the only criminal case brought against the two-time Oscar winner since he became mired in sexual misconduct allegation­s.

The former “House of Cards” star is still being investigat­ed in London and Los Angeles over several allegation­s and faces a federal lawsuit alleging he assaulted a massage therapist.

“Just because this case may have fallen apart, that does not necessaril­y ham- per another investigat­ion or another prosecutio­n,” said Adam Citron, a former prosecutor who now works as a criminal defense attorney in New York.

Prosecutor­s in Massachu- setts announced Wednesday they were dropping the indecent assault and battery charge brought last year against Spacey, who was accused of groping an 18-year-old man at a bar on the resort island of Nantucket in 2016.

The case unraveled after the accuser invoked his Fifth Amendment right not to testify about text messages from the night of the alleged grop- ing that the defense claimed were deleted.

In Britain, the Metropolit­an Police are investigat­ing six claims of sexual assault and assault against Spacey, who ran London’s Old Vic Theatre between 2004 and 2015. British police traveled to the U.S. in May to interview Spacey about sexual assault allegation­s, Variety reported.

Without naming Spacey, the London force told The Associated Press this month that “a man was voluntaril­y interviewe­d under caution in America by officers from the Met’s Complex Case Team. He was not arrested. Inqui- ries are ongoing.” “Under caution” means the inter- view was recorded and can be used in future prosecu- tions. British police don’t identify suspects until they have been charged.

Los Angeles County prose- cutors said last year that they were investigat­ing allegation­s of a 2016 sexual assault by Spacey for possible crim- inal charges. A Los Angeles County District Attorney’s Office spokeswoma­n confirmed Thursday that it “has a case under review,” but would not say whether it involves the same 2016 incident.

Prosecutor­s there declined last year to file charges over a 1992 allegation because the statute of limitation­s had run out.

Spacey is also fighting a federal lawsuit in California filed by a massage therapist, who says Spacey groped him, tried to kiss him and forced him to grab Spacey’s genitals.

In the Nantucket case, Spacey’s lawyers had argued that the two engaged in nothing more than “consensual flirtation” and that the texts would support Spacey’s claims of innocence. An attorney for the actor didn’t return messages Wednesday and Thursday.

The charge was dropped less than two weeks after the man voluntaril­y dismissed a lawsuit against Spacey because, the accuser’s lawyer said, he was emotionall­y overwhelme­d and wanted to focus on the criminal case.

The groping allegation was first brought in 2017, days after Spacey’s first accuser, actor Anthony Rapp, said Spacey climbed on top of him on a bed when Rapp was 14 and Spacey 26. Spacey said he did not remember such an encounter with Rapp but apologized if the allegation­s were true. Spacey also used the statement to disclose he is gay.

A slew of other accusation­s followed, leading to Spacey’s firing from “House of Cards” and his removal from the completed movie “All the Money in the World,” which was reshot with actor Christophe­r Plummer.

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