Orlando Sentinel

Weinstein indicted on new charges

- By Andrew Dalton, Tom Hays and Michael R. Sisak

Announceme­nt comes just as trial on separate rape and sexual assault charges was poised to get underway.

LOS ANGELES — Los Angeles prosecutor­s charged Harvey Weinstein on Monday with sexually assaulting two women on successive nights during Oscars week in 2013, bringing the new case against the disgraced Hollywood mogul on the eve of jury selection for his New York trial.

The case, brought by a task force set up by the Los Angeles County district attorney to handle sex-crime allegation­s against major entertainm­ent figures, now puts Weinstein in deep legal peril on both coasts, where he built his career as the one of the most powerful — and feared — figures in show business before a barrage of allegation­s from more than 75 women led to his downfall and ignited the #MeToo movement.

Weinstein, 67, was charged with raping a woman at a Los Angeles hotel on Feb. 18, 2013, after pushing his way inside her room, then sexually assaulting a woman in a Beverly Hills hotel suite the next night.

He could get up to 28 years in prison on charges of rape, forcible oral copulation, sexual penetratio­n by use of force and sexual battery.

“We see you, we hear you and we believe you,” District Attorney Jackie Lacey said in announcing the charges, addressing herself to the movie producer’s accusers.

Los Angeles police Chief Michel Moore said the charges open the “next chapter” for a man “who has gotten away with too much for too long,” while Beverly Hills Chief Sandra Spagnoli called the cases “horrendous crimes perpetrate­d by a sexual predator.”

Lawyers for Weinstein had no immediate response to the new charges, though he has repeatedly denied any wrongdoing.

Jury selection is set to begin Tuesday in the New York case, in which Weinstein is charged with raping a woman in a New York City hotel room in 2013 and forcibly performing a sex act on another woman, Mimi Haleyi, in 2006.

He has said any sexual activity was consensual. If convicted of the most serious charges against him in New York, two counts of predatory sexual assault, he faces a mandatory life sentence.

The charges announced Monday on the West Coast took more than two years to file because the women were reluctant to provide all the informatio­n necessary, according to Lacey.

The task force is still investigat­ing sex-crime allegation­s against Weinstein from three women, the district attorney said. Prosecutor­s declined to bring charges involving three other women because their cases were beyond the statute of limitation­s.

Weinstein is expected to appear in court in California after his trial in New York is finished, Lacey said. She said prosecutor­s will recommend $5 million bail.

Lacey, along with the two police chiefs, urged other victims to come forward.

“We need the voices of all victims to help us remove sexual predators from our community and protect others from these violent crimes,” she said.

The district attorney said the timing of the Los Angeles charges was unrelated to the New York trial. She said the filing and the announceme­nt came on the first business day in which all the necessary people could be gathered.

Neither woman has stepped forward publicly. But one of them is expected to testify in the New York case as part of an effort by prosecutor­s to portray Weinstein as a sexual predator with a distinct pattern of conduct.

Celebrity attorney Gloria Allred, who represents Haleyi as well as actress Annabella Sciorra, who is scheduled to testify against Weinstein in New York, welcomed the new charges.

“The walls of justice are closing in on Harvey Weinstein. He is now being prosecuted both in New York and Los Angeles,” Allred said in a statement, adding: “Women are no longer willing to suffer in silence and are willing to testify under oath in a court of law.”

 ?? STEPHANIE KEITH/GETTY ?? Disgraced movie producer Harvey Weinstein, center, leaves court Monday in New York City, where jury selection is scheduled to begin Tuesday in his sex-crime trial.
STEPHANIE KEITH/GETTY Disgraced movie producer Harvey Weinstein, center, leaves court Monday in New York City, where jury selection is scheduled to begin Tuesday in his sex-crime trial.

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