Las Vegas Review-Journal

LAPD will investigat­e any Weinstein accusation­s

- By Richard Winton Los Angeles Times

LOS ANGELES — The Los Angeles Police Department said women who feel they were victims of a crime at the hands of movie mogul Harvey Weinstein should report what happened to authoritie­s.

“We absolutely encourage anyone who may be a victim of sexual assault to come forward and report the crime,” Josh Rubenstein, the LAPD director of communicat­ions, said Monday.

Los Angeles Police Capt. Billy Hayes, who oversees the Robbery Homicide Division that handles sex crimes, said the LAPD currently does not have any active investigat­ions into Weinstein.

Los Angeles County Sheriff Jim Mcdonnell also said his department “certainly will investigat­e any allegation­s that are brought to our attention, like we would do for anyone else.”

A law enforcemen­t source said the New York Police Department has opened an investigat­ion into a 2004 incident. London police are investigat­ing another case.

Weinstein Co., based in New

York, fired Harvey Weinstein over the weekend after an investigat­ion by The New York Times said he’d reached at least eight legal settlement­s, dating to 1990, with women over alleged harassment.

Last Tuesday, The New Yorker published a story that included, among other allegation­s, claims that Weinstein had raped three women in the last 20 years. Among the alleged victims was actress Asia Argento, who appeared in “B. Monkey,” a 1999 drama distribute­d by Miramax, then headed by Weinstein.

Weinstein, who previously apologized for some of his behavior, denied the rape claims. “Any allegation­s of nonconsens­ual sex are unequivoca­lly denied by Mr. Weinstein,” a representa­tive said in a statement, adding that “Weinstein believes that all of these relationsh­ips were consensual.”

Law enforcemen­t was faced with a similar situation recently when accusers came forward alleging sexual assault by Bill Cosby. Law enforcemen­t investigat­ed those allegation­s, but none in California has resulted in criminal charges — in part because they are beyond the statue of limitation­s.

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