The Guardian (USA)

Mario Batali accuser testifies she felt confused and powerless to stop chef

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A Massachuse­tts woman who accused Mario Batali of kissing and groping her while attempting to take a selfie at a Boston restaurant testified Monday that she felt confused and powerless to do anything to stop the celebrity chef.

While being questioned by prosecutor­s at Batali’s sexual misconduct trial, the 32-year-old said he appeared drunk, slurred his words and kept closing his eyes as they took multiple photos together at his insistence.

The trial opened Monday after Batali, perhaps surprising­ly, waived his right to a jury trial and opted instead to have a judge decide his fate.

The woman also testified that she felt embarrasse­d by the 2017 incident – until she saw other women step forward to share similar encounters with Batali.

“This happened to me and this is my life,” said the woman when asked by prosecutor­s why she also decided to speak out. “I want to be able to take control of what happened, come forward, say my piece and have everyone be accountabl­e for their actions and behaviors.”

Batali’s lawyer, Anthony Fuller, argued that the assault never happened. Fuller also contended that the accuser wasn’t a credible witness and had a financial incentive to lie.

Furthermor­e, Fuller suggested the woman joked about her encounter in text messages with friends and ate at Eataly, the Italian marketplac­e Bataly once owned, after the encounter.

“She’s not being truthful,” Fuller said. “This is being fabricated for money and for fun.”

The accuser has filed a lawsuit against Batali seeking unspecifie­d damages for “severe emotional distress” that is still pending in Suffolk county superior court in Boston.

Fuller also said the accuser, in an effort to get out of jury duty, recently pleaded guilty to lying during jury selection in another Massachuse­tts criminal trial because she claimed she was clairvoyan­t.

Batali, who pleaded not guilty to indecent assault and battery in 2019, could face up to two and a half years in jail and be required to register as a sex offender if convicted. He’s expected to be in court throughout the proceeding­s, which should last about two days, according to prosecutor­s.

Batali is among a number of highprofil­e men who have faced a public reckoning during the #MeToo social movement against sexual abuse and

harassment in recent years.

The 61-year-old was once a Food Network fixture on shows like Molto Mario and Iron Chef America. But the ponytail-and-orange-Croc-wearing personalit­y’s high-flying career crumbled amid sexual misconduct allegation­s.

Four women accused him of inappropri­ate touching in 2017, after which he stepped down from day-today operations at his restaurant empire and left the since-discontinu­ed ABC cooking show The Chew.

Batali has offered an apology, acknowledg­ing the allegation­s “match up” with ways he has acted.

“I have made many mistakes and

I am so very sorry that I have disappoint­ed my friends, my family, my fans and my team,” he said in an email newsletter at the time. “My behavior was wrong and there are no excuses. I take full responsibi­lity.”

Last year, Batali, his business partner and their New York City restaurant company agreed to pay $600,000 to resolve a four-year investigat­ion by the

New York attorney general’s office into allegation­s that Batali, restaurant managers and other workers sexually harassed employees.

In Boston, he opened a branch of the popular Italian food marketplac­e Eataly in the downtown Prudential Center in 2016 as well as a Babbo Pizzeria e Enoteca in the city’s Seaport district in 2015.

Batali has since been bought out of his stake in Eataly, which still has dozens of locations worldwide, including in Boston and New York City. The Babbo restaurant in Boston has since closed.

 ?? Photograph: Reuters ?? Mario Batali in court in Boston, Massachuse­tts, on the first day of his trial.
Photograph: Reuters Mario Batali in court in Boston, Massachuse­tts, on the first day of his trial.

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