The Guardian (USA)

Harvey Weinstein says #MeToo skewed New York rape conviction in appeal

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Fresh off a second rape conviction, Harvey Weinstein asked New York’s highest court on Tuesday to overturn his first one, arguing that the judge in his 2020 case betrayed his right to a fair trial by “succumbing to the pressure” of the #MeToo movement.

Weinstein’s lawyers are asking the state’s court of appeals to dismiss the disgraced movie mogul’s rape conviction and to order a new trial on a single count of criminal sexual act. The rape charge, they said, involves alleged conduct outside the statute of limitation­s and could not be retried.

Weinstein, 70, was convicted in a Manhattan court in February 2020 of a criminal sex act for forcibly performing oral sex on a TV and film production assistant in 2006, and rape in the third degree for an attack on an aspiring actress in 2013. He was sentenced to 23 years in prison.

Last month, a Los Angeles jury convicted Weinstein of raping and sexually assaulting an Italian actor and model, who said he appeared uninvited at her hotel room door during a film festival there in 2013. He is due to be sentenced in that case on 23 February.

The court of appeals agreed to hear Weinstein’s appeal last summer after a mid-level appellate court upheld his conviction. Weinstein’s legal team, led by veteran defense attorney Arthur Aidala and former judge Barry Kamins, repeated some of the same arguments in their brief on Tuesday.

They again took aim at the trial judge, James Burke, arguing that he swayed the landmark trial’s outcome with repeated rulings favorable to prosecutor­s – including his decision allowing additional accusers to testify about allegation­s that never led to criminal charges.

They also challenged Burke’s refusal to remove a juror who had written a novel involving predatory older men, as well as his decision to allow prosecutor­s to have an expert on victim behavior and rape myths testify while rejecting testimony on similar subjects from defense experts.

Weinstein’s lawyers said Burke gave in to an “unrelentin­g deluge of publicity, vocal special interest groups and a morally outraged public”, creating a carnival atmosphere that deprived Weinstein of the “judicial serenity and calm to which he was entitled”.

Prosecutor­s have until 1 March to respond. Burke is no longer on the bench.

Allegation­s against Weinstein, the once powerful and feared studio boss behind such Oscar winners as Pulp Fiction and Shakespear­e in Love, ushered in the #MeToo movement – a cultural reckoning on sexual misconduct in the entertainm­ent, news and other industries.

Weinstein’s New York trial drew intense publicity, with reporters packing the courtroom and cameras lined up outside to capture images of the onetime studio boss shuffling in and out of court. Protesters chanted “rapist” outside the courthouse.

“Put bluntly, the court of public opinion became the court in this case,” Weinstein’s lawyers wrote.

Weinstein maintains his innocence and contends that any sexual activity was consensual.

He was acquitted at the New York trial of first-degree rape and two counts of predatory sexual assault stemming from actor Annabella Sciorra’s allegation­s of a mid-1990s rape – testimony that his lawyers argue was so dated it should never have been allowed.

The judge’s decision to allow testimony from three women whose allegation­s did not lead to charges in the New York case “overwhelme­d” the trial with “excessive, random and highly dubious prior bad act evidence”.

A five-judge panel in the state’s intermedia­te appeals court heard Weinstein’s initial appeal. Some of the judges were critical of Burke and prosecutor­s, suggesting at a December 2021 hearing they were open to reversing Weinstein’s conviction and ordering a new trial.

In their appeal to the court of appeals, Weinstein’s lawyers said that material – pertaining to 28 alleged acts of boorish behavior over 30 years – would have served “only to make the jury hate Weinstein” and that giving prosecutor­s those arrows in their quiver deprived him of his right to testify in his own defense.

Aidala said he wants the court of appeals to remind the state’s trial courts “that a defendant cannot be tried based on his character – but must be tried based on the conduct for which he has been accused”.

 ?? Photograph: Reuters ?? Harvey Weinstein was convicted in February 2020 by a Manhattan court. He was convicted separately in a second case in Los Angeles last month.
Photograph: Reuters Harvey Weinstein was convicted in February 2020 by a Manhattan court. He was convicted separately in a second case in Los Angeles last month.

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