Los Angeles Times

Weinstein trial marks milestone for #MeToo

Despite the potential of a life sentence for Hollywood mogul, advocates say fight for systemic, lasting change will never end

- By Laura Newberry

For the past two years, Louise Godbold has been living in a state of heightened tension.

In interview after interview, the former commercial producer has shared what she said happened to her 29 years ago in an empty New York meeting room with Hollywood producer Harvey Weinstein, and then again at the Beverly Hills Hotel. Each retelling surfaced feelings of anxiety and numbness, and at times she questioned whether sharing her story was worth it. Even a friend accused her of making Weinstein

a scapegoat for a movement, #MeToo, that the friend believed had gone too far.

This month Godbold plans to watch as Weinstein is tried in Manhattan on five sex-crime charges from two separate incidents in 2006 and 2013. She is one of more than 80 women who have accused Weinstein of sexual misconduct. Last week, L.A. County prosecutor­s filed four additional sexual assault charges against Weinstein, who has repeatedly denied any wrongdoing.

“He has to be convicted,” said Godbold, a Los Angeles resident who has spent the

last 20 years helping trauma survivors through various social programs. “If not, there’s no morals, there’s no justice.”

The Weinstein revelation­s were the catalyst for #MeToo, a movement that gave an unpreceden­ted voice to survivors of sexual assault and harassment and provoked a cultural reckoning that had bubbled beneath the surface for decades.

The allegation­s are now set to culminate in a trial that is undoubtedl­y a landmark case for women’s rights. But despite the potential for a life sentence, advocates contend that the trial is just one milestone in a long crusade for systemic, lasting change.

For survivors such as Godbold, a conviction could mark a turning point and help heal their trauma. An acquittal could confirm their worst fears: That society at large is still not ready to listen.

“It would be devastatin­g if he were to get off,” Godbold said. “It would be a complete affront to every woman and every sexual assault survivor.”

If Weinstein is convicted on the rape and sexual assault charges, the verdict could give fuel to the #MeToo movement, advocates say. Survivors who once felt it too risky to put themselves through a grueling and potentiall­y humiliatin­g process might be emboldened to pursue justice.

The movement fomented a shift in the debate over sexual misconduct that has become much bigger than the mogul himself and the individual stories of those he is accused of harming. Despite this platform, very few survivors see justice served. Out of every 1,000 instances of rape, 13 cases will get referred to a prosecutor and seven will lead to a felony conviction, according to the Rape, Abuse and Incest National Network.

“This trial is critical to show that predators everywhere will be held accountabl­e and that speaking up can bring about real change,” said the Silence Breakers, a group comprised of Weinstein’s accusers, in a statement Friday. “We refuse to be silenced and will continue to speak out until this unrepentan­t abuser is brought to justice.”

Godbold, who stands among the Silence Breakers, alleges that Weinstein gave her a tour of his Tribeca offices when she was seeking an internship at Miramax in the early 1990s. The producer cornered her in a conference room, grabbed her hand and put it on his crotch, Godbold said. Weinstein later apologized and invited her to a meeting at the Beverly Hills Hotel, where she said he took off his clothes and asked for a massage.

Allegation­s of misconduct made by Weinstein’s accusers — which range from aggressive romantic overtures to repeated rape — mirror the darkest moments of many survivors, experts say.

Though some will avoid watching the trial unfold for fear of being retraumati­zed, others will follow it closely, viewing it as a reflection of how others might perceive their own stories of abuse.

“The belief that reports aren’t going to be taken seriously could be confirmed or unconfirme­d by this process,” said Emily Dworkin, a psychologi­st and professor at the University of Washington who studies the mental health effects of sexual assault.

To be sure, the Weinstein trial signals a measure of accountabi­lity in a long-standing culture of disbelief — and in the case of Weinstein and other wealthy men, hefty settlement­s that silence accusers and bar them from pursuing legal action. Still, the trial should not be seen as a neat ending that illustrate­s the success or failure of the #MeToo movement, but rather a continuum of it, advocates say.

“It would be really great if #MeToo was a ladder and we reached a new rung. But that’s not how movements work,” said Fatima Goss Graves, president and CEO at the National Women’s Law Center and co-founder of the Time’s Up Legal Defense Fund. “In my mind, we have really only begun to scratch the surface.”

Even a conviction could lead to some form of backlash for #MeToo, experts say. “There’s a risk that men in power will say, ‘See, the justice system works. We don’t need to change it,’ ” said Juliet Williams, a gender studies professor at UCLA.

History shows the incrementa­l nature of progress.

The term “sexual harassment” wasn’t coined until the mid-1970s when the term’s creator, journalist Lin Farley, taught a course at Cornell University on women and work. Many of her female students told stories of being fired or forced to quit a job because they had rejected a boss’ sexual overtures.

The term didn’t achieve mainstream recognitio­n until 1991, when Anita Hill testified before Congress about the sexual harassment she said she had experience­d while working as an aide for then-Supreme Court nominee Clarence Thomas.

Hill faced intense questionin­g about her accusation­s against Thomas from a panel of all-male senators, chaired by presidenti­al candidate Joe Biden. If Thomas’ behavior was so bad, one senator asked, why hadn’t Hill stopped it?

Thomas, who denied the allegation­s, was confirmed to the U.S. Supreme Court.

History seemed to repeat itself in September 2018, when Christine Blasey Ford testified before the Senate Judiciary Committee that Judge Brett M. Kavanaugh had sexually assaulted her when they were each in high school, an allegation he denies. President Trump, who has also been accused of sexual assault, mocked Ford’s testimony. Kavanaugh was confirmed by the Senate days later.

It was a major blow to feminists and survivors, many of whom were retraumati­zed by the ordeal. Social mores that favored the accused appeared to remain stubbornly intact.

Yet some progress followed each of these events, historians of the gender equality movement contend.

In the five years after Hill’s testimony, sexual harassment complaints filed to the Equal Employment Opportunit­y Commission more than doubled. More women ran for Congress, and many cited Hill and how she was treated as motivation.

In the #MeToo era, those who speak out about being assaulted can count on a vocal community — at least online — to support them. And it is more likely that they will be believed. An NPR-PBSMarist poll found that 45% of respondent­s thought Ford was telling the truth, while 33% trusted Kavanaugh. A similar survey in 1991 found that the majority of the public sided with Thomas over Hill.

Many of Weinstein’s accusers are women of privilege, including a number of high-profile actresses, and some advocates question whether the stories would have gripped the public’s attention if that hadn’t been the case.

Kel O’Hara, a fellow at the social justice nonprofit Equal Rights Advocates who is working to expand support for LGBTQ student survivors of gender-based violence and harassment, said the Weinstein trial demonstrat­es “how bad things have to be in order to build a criminal case.”

“I think it really says something that it took almost 100 women, most with power, to come forward at once to make anything happen. We should celebrate the moment for what it is, but we should also think about how hard it is for people who will never get to this point,” O’Hara said.

Sexual harassment is a problem that pervades every industry, and survivors are connected by their shared experience, even if their worlds are vastly different. Mily Treviño-Sauceda, the co-founder of Alianza Nacional de Campesinas, a group that advocates for the rights of female farmworker­s, noted that some of the women she works with will see their own traumas in the testimonie­s of Weinstein’s accusers.

Farmworker­s are much more likely to be victims of gender discrimina­tion and sexual harassment. Most do not report sexual misconduct for fear of losing their jobs, or because they are undocument­ed and worry they’ll be deported if they contact the authoritie­s.

“If those women lose and they have those kind of privileges,” Treviño-Sauceda said, “what is the statement for women who don’t have that?”

Even women with power who testify at sexual assault trials that yield conviction­s still face victim blaming, the practice of questionin­g what a victim could have done differentl­y to prevent a crime. In the 2018 retrial of Bill Cosby, for example, the actor’s defense attorneys characteri­zed one of his accusers as a promiscuou­s social climber.

“She wanted to be a star,” defense attorney Kathleen Bliss said of Heidi Thomas, who said Cosby drugged her and tried to force her into oral sex in 1984. “She’s living the dream now.”

Despite the public shaming of his accusers, Cosby was found guilty of three counts of aggravated indecent assault and was sentenced to three to 10 years in state prison — a boon for the #MeToo movement.

In a recent interview with the Los Angeles Times, Hill noted that sexual harassment and abuse is “not just an issue of individual behavior.”

“It’s a problem of systems, it’s a problem with culture, which have to come together to support this kind of behavior,” she said. “In that sense, the work is beginning to happen. And the Weinstein trial is evidence that the systems are coming together to address the problem instead of simply supporting it.”

Hill now leads the Hollywood Commission, an organizati­on formed in response to #MeToo that aims to eradicate sexual harassment in the entertainm­ent industry. A professor of social policy and law, Hill said that the criminal justice system should be seen as the “last resort” for addressing these issues.

It is still too early to say whether the movement will make an enduring impression on the law, policy and the justice system, which tend to lag behind even major cultural shifts, said Williams, the gender studies professor. The civil rights and gay rights movements serve as lessons; decades of outcry and grass-roots organizing preceded meaningful institutio­nal change.

“For #MeToo to have a lasting impact,” Williams said, “we will have to come up with demands and reforms that have a much, much broader reach.”

But the Weinstein trial will undoubtedl­y offer clues, she added, to just how much work is left to be done.

 ?? Mark Lennihan Associated Press ?? LOUISE GODBOLD, center, speaks outside the courthouse on Jan. 6 in New York City after the arrival of Harvey Weinstein, who faces five sex-crime charges stemming from two incidents in 2006 and 2013.
Mark Lennihan Associated Press LOUISE GODBOLD, center, speaks outside the courthouse on Jan. 6 in New York City after the arrival of Harvey Weinstein, who faces five sex-crime charges stemming from two incidents in 2006 and 2013.
 ?? Bebeto Matthews Associated Press ?? WEINSTEIN leaves court last week after a second day of jury selection. In all, more than 80 women have accused him of misconduct, which he denies.
Bebeto Matthews Associated Press WEINSTEIN leaves court last week after a second day of jury selection. In all, more than 80 women have accused him of misconduct, which he denies.
 ?? AFP/Getty Images ?? LOUISE GODBOLD says a conviction could heal survivors’ trauma.
AFP/Getty Images LOUISE GODBOLD says a conviction could heal survivors’ trauma.

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