Los Angeles Times

Weinstein f ights rape conviction

Fallen mogul says he didn’t get fair trial in the New York case

- By James Queally

Fallen mogul appeals, saying a biased juror and evidence unconnecte­d to the crimes violated his rights.

Harvey Weinstein formally appealed his rape conviction Monday, arguing the combinatio­n of a biased juror and a New York City judge’s decision to allow prosecutor­s to use evidence that wasn’t connected to the crimes for which the movie mogul was standing trial led to violations of his constituti­onal rights.

The Miramax co-founder and disgraced Hollywood producer was convicted of rape and a felony sex crime in February 2020 and sentenced to 23 years in a New York state prison the following month, bringing an end to a years-long saga that helped spawn the #MeToo movement as more than 80 women accused Weinstein of sexual abuse.

Weinstein has also been charged with sexually assaulting five women in Los Angeles and Beverly Hills and a hearing that could lead to his extraditio­n to California is scheduled for this month.

“Mr. Harvey Weinstein’s appellate court brief is a damning indictment of his criminal prosecutio­n,” Juda Engelmayer, Weinstein’s chief spokesman, said in a lengthy statement. “A prosecutio­n deeply influenced by intense and even magnified moral outrage over claimed sexual misbehavio­r of powerful men, special interest groups seeking to benefit off public fury, and sensationa­l (often inaccurate or preju

diced) media coverage.”

A spokesman for the Manhattan district attorney’s office said prosecutor­s will “respond in our brief to the court.”

The Los Angeles County district attorney’s office did not immediatel­y respond to a request for comment.

In the 160-page appeal, Weinstein’s legal team once again attacked the credibilit­y of the six women who testified at his 2020 trial in lower Manhattan.

Although most of the allegation­s were at least corroborat­ed by the testimony of others whom the women told of the alleged assaults around the time they took place, Weinstein’s legal team questioned why they stayed in contact with the mogul — or in some cases continued having sex with him — after the alleged crimes.

But in their appeal, Weinstein’s lawyers also zoomed in on a series of legal errors they allege were committed by New York Supreme Court Judge James Burke, mistakes that they argue made it impossible for Weinstein to receive a fair trial.

Juror Amanda Brainerd, they allege, should have been removed from the jury pool because of the content of her debut novel, “Age of Consent,” which was published last year and tackled themes of sex and “predatory older men,” according to a descriptio­n on the author’s website.

In their appeal, Weinstein’s lawyers argued that Brainerd was not honest about the nature of the novel during jury selection, and they criticized Burke for failing to remove her from the jury pool after the defense had run out of its allotted number of challenges to potential jurors.

A representa­tive for Brainerd did not immediatel­y respond to a request for comment.

Weinstein was convicted last year of assaulting former production assistant Mimi Haley and once-aspiring actress Jessica Mann. He also faced a predatory sexual assault charge connected to a rape allegation made by actress Annabella Sciorra in the early 1990s, but the jury acquitted him of that charge.

Weinstein has denied all wrongdoing, and his attorneys have argued that each alleged assault was consensual.

In their appeal, Weinstein’s lawyers argued the jury was unfairly influenced by Burke’s decision to allow testimony from three other “prior bad acts” witnesses, who had also accused him of sexual violence that was not directly connected to the crimes charged in the Manhattan case.

Burke had previously ruled that the other women — including one whose allegation­s are the basis of some of the charges Weinstein faces in Los Angeles — could testify to the mogul’s intent to use violence and force to cow women into sexually pleasing him.

In their appeal, Weinstein’s legal team argued the testimony was irrelevant to the charges filed and instead served only to weaken their client’s standing in front of a jury.

“Weinstein’s trial was overwhelme­d by excessive, random, and highly dubious prior bad act evidence, none of which shed light on disputed issues relevant to the charged offenses,” the appeal said. “Because the evidence on the charged offenses was weak, the prosecutio­n inundated the jury with copious tales of alleged misconduct (much of which was not criminal in nature) that served no legitimate evidentiar­y purpose but merely depicted Weinstein as loathsome.”

An attorney for Tarale Wulff, one of the “prior bad acts” witnesses in the New York trial who alleged Weinstein raped her in his Manhattan apartment in 2005, dismissed the appeal as a last-ditch effort to skirt justice.

“Harvey Weinstein’s criminal appeal is a desperate attempt to undo a fair trial overseen by Judge Burke and the findings of a wellreason­ed and thoughtful jury,” attorney Douglas Wigdor said in a statement. “We are confident the appeal will not alter his conviction and sentence.”

Weinstein also wanted to testify on his own behalf, according to the appeal, but had to surrender that right when Burke said he would allow prosecutor­s to crossexami­ne Weinstein about a wide array of allegation­s of misconduct beyond the scope of the charges he faced.

That decision, Weinstein’s lawyers argue, in effect robbed him of his right to testify.

“If he took the stand, the prosecutio­n would have carte blanche to put before the jury, twenty-nine alleged prior bad acts spanning the past thirty years,” the appeal said.

The appeal also challenged Burke’s decision to limit the testimony of a “false memory” expert, Elizabeth Loftus, whom Weinstein’s lawyers hoped to use to cast doubt on the veracity of the mogul’s accusers. While Weinstein’s legal team has cried foul, some critics and academics have decried Loftus’ testimony as onesided and misleading in sexual assault cases.

Weinstein’s lawyers also argued prosecutor­s failed to disclose evidence that Mann — who described her relationsh­ip with Weinstein as consensual at times, but also alleged it often collapsed into violence and abuse — had continued to engage in a consensual relationsh­ip with him until 2016, well after the date she alleged she was raped.

The appeal also questions whether Weinstein could have even been charged with assaulting Mann, noting the third-degree rape charge was filed 70 days beyond the expiration of the statute of limitation­s.

It remains unclear how the appeal might affect Weinstein’s case in Los Angeles.

The mogul is expected to challenge his extraditio­n to California at a hearing next week, and trials in L.A. County have been slow to resume because of the COVID-19 pandemic.

Attempting to carry out jury selection in such a highprofil­e case — a process that took weeks in Manhattan last year — could prove incompatib­le with social distancing requiremen­ts.

 ?? John Minchillo Associated Press ?? HARVEY WEINSTEIN is shown in February 2020. His appellate court brief blames his conviction partly on a biased juror and errors by Judge James Burke.
John Minchillo Associated Press HARVEY WEINSTEIN is shown in February 2020. His appellate court brief blames his conviction partly on a biased juror and errors by Judge James Burke.

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