Los Angeles Times

More details emerge in latest investigat­ion of Kevin Spacey

- By Richard Winton richard.winton @latimes.com

The latest investigat­ion into Oscar winner Kevin Spacey under review by the Los Angeles district attorney’s office involves an allegation that he sexually battered a man in Malibu in October 2016.

Prosecutor­s last month began reviewing the Los Angeles County sheriff ’s investigat­ion of the allegation, which was reported in May. Law enforcemen­t sources told The Times that the investigat­ion concerns an allegation of sexual battery — an unwanted touching of another person for purposes of sexual arousal, gratificat­ion or abuse.

Spacey’s attorney did not return calls or an email seeking comment.

Sexual battery can be considered a misdemeano­r or felony charge depending on the seriousnes­s of the offense. It often includes acts such as groping, though no further details on the investigat­ion were available.

If the allegation falls within a misdemeano­r, the complaint against the actor would be too old to charge. But if it is a felony-level allegation, it would be within the statute of limitation­s.

Sheriff’s spokeswoma­n Nicole Nishida said she could not discuss the specifics of the allegation against Spacey beyond that the incident is alleged to have taken place in Malibu in October 2016.

It is the second investigat­ion of Spacey that prosecutor­s are reviewing. Prosecutor­s have not made a decision on the other incident, but it is alleged to have occurred in the 1990s and would fall outside the statute of limitation­s.

Spacey is also the subject of six police investigat­ions in London, dating to 1996, and one in Nantucket, Mass., where he was accused of groping an 18-year-old man in a bar.

Dmitry Gorin, a former sex-crimes prosecutor In L.A. who now defends those accused of such crimes, said Penal Code 243.4 sexual battery is typically charged as a misdemeano­r and that most of the time it involves touching over clothing.

“It is rarely charged as a felony,” he said.

The felony level of the crime usually involves touching on bare skin beneath clothing or restrainin­g the victim while doing the touching, he said. “In those cases, prosecutor­s will often pursue other more serious sex-crime charges, he said.

A misdemeano­r conviction on sexual battery can result in a year in jail, but a felony conviction can lead to a sentence of up to four years in prison.

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