Los Angeles Times

Weinstein given 30 days to f ight

Disgraced producer, held in a New York prison, faces charges of rape, sexual assault.

- By James Queally and Richard Winton

Disgraced producer’s attorneys challenge plans to extradite him to L.A. on charges.

Harvey Weinstein will remain in a New York state prison for at least 30 more days as his attorneys challenge plans to extradite him to Los Angeles to face rape and sexual assault charges.

At a court hearing in New York on Friday, prosecutor­s filed new paperwork that gives the disgraced producer until May 30 to challenge the extraditio­n to L.A.

Unless Weinstein’s attorneys make a successful habeas corpus argument, he will be in L.A. this summer awaiting trial on charges that he sexually assaulted five women in Beverly Hills and Los Angeles over a decadelong span. L.A. prosecutor­s charged Weinstein in January 2020 with four counts of forcible rape, four counts of forcible oral copulation, two counts of sexual battery and one count of sexual penetratio­n by force.

A grand jury returned an indictment against Weinstein, 69, on those charges this year, according to multiple sources with knowledge of the situation.

Those sources described the indictment as a procedural move largely meant to avoid a preliminar­y hearing and preempt potential speedy trial issues in Los Angeles, where the COVID-19 pandemic has created a huge case backlog in the county’s courts, but it still brings Weinstein one step closer to a trial.

The first public mention of the indictment came during Weinstein’s last extraditio­n hearing April 12. The film mogul’s attorneys alleged there were errors with the L.A. County district attorney’s office’s extraditio­n request, possibly stemming from the fact that the indictment changed the case’s identifica­tion number in the county court system, which played a part in Friday’s continuanc­e.

Weinstein has remained in custody at the Wende Correction­al Facility in Alden, N.Y., since March 2020, after a Manhattan jury convicted him of rape. He was sentenced to 23 years in prison. Though his defense attorneys are allowed to petition New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo to block the extraditio­n, the governor is not expected to intervene.

Weinstein has been accused of sexual assault, misconduct and harassment by more than 80 women. Dozens of accusers came forward after stories in the New York Times and the New Yorker detailed assault allegation­s against the mogul. Weinstein, who is appealing his conviction in New York, has denied all wrongdoing.

Lawyers for Weinstein have said they asked Los Angeles prosecutor­s to allow Weinstein to appear remotely for his arraignmen­t and early hearings in the case, as he has multiple surgeries scheduled in New York this year. The L.A. County district attorney’s office has not responded to requests for comment on the status of the case.

“We are eager to defend Harvey against these spurious charges, but not unless he is first allowed a fair and lawful extraditio­n process that will account for his ongoing medical treatment in New York and the fact that COVID still prevents him from having an in-person trial in the Los Angeles courts for the foreseeabl­e future,” attorney Mark Werksman said in a statement Friday.

Werksman, in an interview, questioned why the L.A. district attorney was hurrying to get his client to L.A. “Why not wait until the emergency is over?” he said. “We want a fair trial in public where we can see the faces of witnesses and the jury and the public can see how the court is working.”

The charges against Weinstein in Los Angeles stem from accusation­s levied by five women between 2004 and 2013. One of the women, Lauren Young, testified as a “prior bad acts” witness against Weinstein at his New York trial, alleging he groped her and masturbate­d inside the Montage Hotel in Beverly Hills in 2013.

A second accuser, an Italian model who spoke to The Times anonymousl­y several years ago, has accused Weinstein of raping her at Mr. C hotel in Beverly Hills in 2013.

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