Houston Chronicle

Jury has many questions at Weinstein trial

- By Tom Hays and Michael R. Sisak

NEW YORK — Jurors in Harvey Weinstein’s rape trial ended their first day of deliberati­ons Tuesday with lots of questions and no verdict in the landmark #MeToo case that could put the oncepowerf­ul Hollywood producer behind bars for the rest of his life.

The panel of seven men and five women asked to see a floor plan of Weinstein’s apartment and emails, including one he sent to a private spy agency in 2017 listing certain accusers he feared would come forward as “red flags.”

The jury is weighing charges that Weinstein raped a woman in a Manhattan hotel room in 2013 and forcibly performed oral sex on another woman, TV and film production assistant Mimi Haleyi, in 2006.

In deciding the most serious charges against Weinstein, which allege that he is a sexual predator, jurors must also weigh actress Annabella Sciorra’s account of a mid-1990s rape. While her allegation is too old to be charged on its own because to the statute of limitation­s in effect at the time, the law allows prosecutor­s to use her allegation­s as a basis for the predatory sexual assault counts.

The jury will resume deliberati­ons Wednesday.

Jurors sent their first questions about 40 minutes into deliberati­ons, asking for the legal definition of terms like consent and forcible compulsion, and seeking clarity on why Weinstein wasn’t charged with other crimes stemming from Sciorra’s allegation. Prosecutor­s built their case around graphic, often-harrowing testimony from those women, along with three other accusers who were not part of the criminal case but were allowed to take the witness stand because they say Weinstein used them same tactics on them.

Weinstein’s lawyers contend the acts were consensual. They focused on friendly, flirtatiou­s emails some of the women sent to Weinstein and further meetings some of them had with him after the alleged assaults.

A torrent of allegation­s against Weinstein in October 2017 spawned the #MeToo movement. His trial is seen as a watershed moment for the cause, but Judge James Burke has cautioned jurors that it is “not a referendum on the #MeToo movement.”

Weinstein lawyer Donna Rotunno sent a similar message in a Newsweek essay over the weekend, drawing complaints from a prosecutor who said she appeared to be trying to influence the jury.

Rotunno wrote that Weinstein’s jurors “have an obligation to themselves and their country, to base their verdict solely on the facts, testimony and evidence presented to them in the courtroom,” not critical news stories, unflatteri­ng courtroom sketches or other outside influences.

Assistant District Attorney Joan Illuzzi-Orbon said Rotunno’s essay was “100 percent inappropri­ate.” She asked Burke to instruct the jury to ignore the piece and revoke Weinstein’s bail and send him to jail because, she argued, it couldn’t have been done without his permission.

Burke denied the prosecutio­n’s request, but instructed defense lawyers not to speak to the media until after there is a verdict and told Weinstein: “I would caution you about the tentacles of your public relations juggernaut.”

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