Please register to access this content.
To continue viewing the content you love, please sign in or create a new account
Dismiss
This content is for our paying subscribers only

Entertainment Hollywood

Harvey Weinstein loses bid to dismiss sexual assault charges

Weinstein has pleaded not guilty to charges brought over sexual misconduct allegations



Harvey Weinstein arrives to court in New York, Monday, July 9, 2018. Weinstein, who was previously indicted on charges involving two women, was due in court on Monday for arraignment on charges alleging he committed a sex crime against a third woman. (AP Photo/Seth Wenig)
Image Credit: AP

A New York judge has denied Harvey Weinstein’s request to dismiss two predatory sexual assault charges, ahead of the former Hollywood producer’s trial in January.

The decision by Justice James Burke of the State Supreme Court in Manhattan is a victory for prosecutors who have charged Weinstein with five sex crimes, including rape.

Lawyers for Weinstein declined to comment in an email sent by their office. A spokesman for Manhattan District Attorney Cyrus Vance declined to comment.

Weinstein, 67, has pleaded not guilty to charges brought over allegations of sexual misconduct toward two female accusers in 2006 and 2013.

A trial is scheduled for January 6, 2020. Weinstein could face a life sentence if convicted.

Advertisement

Weinstein has also denied allegations by roughly 70 women of sexual misconduct dating back decades, saying any contact was consensual.

In refusing to dismiss the predatory sexual assault charges, Burke rejected Weinstein’s claim that an alleged rape from the winter of 1993-94 occurred too long ago to serve as an “aggravating” and “underlying” crime, as required by state law.

The judge, in the decision dated November 26, also rejected Weinstein’s claims that dismissal was required because he had not been given fair notice of the earlier alleged rape, and because the grand jury that indicted him had been improperly convened.

Prosecutors have said they intend to call the actress Annabella Sciorra, who has appeared in the TV series ‘The Sopranos’ and movies such as ‘The Hand That Rocks the Cradle’, to testify that Weinstein raped her in 1993.

Weinstein cannot be criminally charged with raping Sciorra because the statute of limitations has run out.

Advertisement

Burke also ruled out expert defence testimony on several topics, such as the causes of “original misunderstandings of sexual intentions” and “the phenomenon of ‘voluntary unwanted sex.’”

He said Weinstein’s lawyers can introduce expert testimony on other topics including how memory works and can be distorted, and whether there is a link been people’s confidence in their memory and the accuracy of that memory.

Accusations against Weinstein helped spark the #MeToo movement in late 2017 — hundreds of women have accused powerful men in entertainment, business, media, politics and other fields of sexual misconduct.

Advertisement