Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

6 women have filed racketeeri­ng lawsuit against Weinstein

- By Larry Neumeister

NEW YORK — Six women sued Harvey Weinstein on Wednesday, targeting companies he worked at by likening the “Weinstein Sexual Enterprise” to an organized crime group that relied on film agents, producers and others to lure young women seeking a break in a breakneck industry.

The racketeeri­ng lawsuit in federal court in New York sought to represent “dozens, if not hundreds” of women who say they were assaulted by Mr. Weinstein after being isolated in close quarters such as a hotel room after bystanders were sent away.

The lawsuit follows a New York Times report published online Tuesday night in which “Girls” alum Lena Dunham claims that she warned Hillary Clinton’s communicat­ions director about Mr. Weinstein’s behavior.

Also, Sandeep Rehal — Mr. Weinstein’s former personal assistant of nearly two years — said that as part of her job, she provided him with erectile dysfunctio­n medication and stocked an apartment for him with women’s lingerie. She said she, too, plans to sue Mr. Weinstein and the Weinstein Co., alleging sexual harassment.

The New York lawsuit seeking unspecifie­d compensato­ry and punitive damages followed the filing of a similar lawsuit in Los Angeles last month that did not identify plaintiffs by name.

It said the “proverbial ‘casting couch’ was Harvey Weinstein’s office of choice” in an arrangemen­t condoned by defendants Miramax LLC, The Weinstein Co. Holdings LLC and its board of directors. It said the companies were complicit in Mr. Weinstein’s flashing, groping, fondling, harassing, battering, false imprisonme­nt, sexual assault, attempted rape or rape of women.

The women, the lawsuit said, “were aware of Weinstein’s ability to make or break their careers, as well as to continue to inflict emotional distress. Moreover, Mr. Weinstein wielded and was outspoken about his power and ability to either launch their careers or ruin their personal and profession­al reputation­s forever.”

“The power Weinstein wielded — and his ability to blacklist an actress or model for complainin­g about his predatory behavior — was so legendary that it was the rule in the entertainm­ent industry that women needed to acquiesce to Weinstein to succeed,” the lawsuit said, noting that male producers and actors joked about the rule and its effect on women.

A Weinstein lawyer declined comment Thursday, but Mr. Weinstein’s representa­tives forwarded a statement saying Mr. Weinstein “has never at any time committed an act of sexual assault, and it is wrong and irresponsi­ble to conflate claims of impolitic behavior or consensual sexual contact later regretted, with an untrue claim of criminal conduct.”

The statement added: “There is a wide canyon between mere allegation and truth, and we are confident that any sober calculatio­n of the facts will prove no legal wrongdoing occurred. Nonetheles­s, to those offended by Mr. Weinstein’s behavior, he remains deeply apologetic.”

Miramax, headquarte­red in Santa Monica, Calif., and The Weinstein Co. Holdings, based in New York, did not immediatel­y return messages seeking comment.

Mr. Weinstein was ousted from the movie company he founded following a barrage of sexual harassment allegation­s that began with a bombshell New York Times article in early October.

Mr. Weinstein has been accused of sexual harassment and assault by more than 100 women, at least 75 women of whom have come forward in the media to detail accounts of assault, harassment and inappropri­ate conduct by the disgraced Hollywood mogul. Mr. Weinstein’s representa­tives have denied all accusation­s of non-consensual sex, but no charges have been filed.

Mr. Weinstein, 65, is being investigat­ed by police in Los Angeles, Beverly Hills, New York and London.

 ?? Yann Coatsaliou /AFP/Getty Images ?? Harvey Weinstein arrives to attend the 70th Cannes Film Festival at the Cap-Eden-Roc hotel in Antibes, near Cannes, southeaste­rn France, in May.
Yann Coatsaliou /AFP/Getty Images Harvey Weinstein arrives to attend the 70th Cannes Film Festival at the Cap-Eden-Roc hotel in Antibes, near Cannes, southeaste­rn France, in May.

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