The Guardian (USA)

Rose McGowan says Weinstein launched 'diabolical' effort to silence her

- Mario Koran and agencies

The actor Rose McGowan alleges in a new lawsuit that the film mogul Harvey Weinstein took “diabolical” actions when he learned she was going to write in a memoir that the producer had raped her decades prior, engaging a team of fixers, lawyers and an internatio­nal spy agency to intimidate and silence her.

“This case is about a diabolical and illegal effort by one of America’s most powerful men and his representa­tives to silence sexual-assault victims. And it is about the courageous women and journalist­s who persisted to reveal the truth,” the actor alleges in the lawsuit filed in a California federal court on

Wednesday.

McGowan’s attorneys said in a statement that the defendants used unlawful tactics in “a sprawling smear campaign to defraud, malign, and marginaliz­e McGowan”.

The suit, which includes claims of racketeeri­ng, violations of the Federal Wiretap Act, invasion of privacy, fraud and intentiona­l infliction of emotional distress, names Weinstein, as well as the attorneys David Boies and Lisa Bloom and the private intelligen­ce agency Black Cube.

McGowan claims in the suit that as she began work on a memoir, Brave, in which she planned to describe her allegation­s that Weinstein raped her in 1997, Weinstein enlisted Black Cube to obtain informatio­n about her book by posing as an advocate for women. (McGowan previously settled the allegation of the 1997 rape for $100,000.)

Bloom’s attorney says there is no basis for McGowan’s claims.

Weinstein’s lawyer Phyllis Kupferstei­n told the Hollywood Reporter in response to the complaint that the claims were baseless.

“Once and for all, Rose McGowan will be shown to be what she is: a publicity seeker looking for money,” Kupferstei­n said. “From the moment she sought a multimilli­on-dollar payout in return for not making these baseless allegation­s, which we rejected, we knew that she was waiting for an opportune

time to begin this. We will demonstrat­e that this case has no legal merit.”

McGowan was one of the earliest and most prominent of dozens of women, many of them celebritie­s, to accuse Weinstein of sexual misconduct. In fall 2017, the New York

Times and the New Yorker began publishing claims of sexual harassment and abuse allegation­s against Weinstein that helped spark the #MeToo movement and a national reckoning about workplace harassment and sexual assault, exposing many other powerful men.

Bloom, who McGowan names in the suit, had once been a prominent attorney for victims’ rights, but went to work for Weinstein at a rate of $895 an hour to bury journalist­s’ investigat­ions and discredit his accusers, the New York Times reported.

Two New York Times reporters, who broke the early accusation­s against Weinstein, write in a new book that Bloom specifical­ly offered to help smear the reputation of McGowan. According to the book, Bloom told Weinstein: “I feel equipped to help you against the Roses of the world, because I have represente­d so many of them,” before describing a specific strategy to discredit accusers by portraying them as liars.

Weinstein has denied all allegation­s of non-consensual sex.

He is headed to trial next year and faces five charges – including two counts of predatory sexual assault, a criminal sexual act, rape in the first degree, and rape in the third degree – brought against him by the Manhattan district attorney’s office.

 ??  ?? Rose McGowan’s lawyers described a ‘sprawling smear campaign’ against her. Photograph: Murdo MacLeod/The Guardian
Rose McGowan’s lawyers described a ‘sprawling smear campaign’ against her. Photograph: Murdo MacLeod/The Guardian

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