logo
First accuser resumes giving evidence in Harvey Weinstein's rape retrial

First accuser resumes giving evidence in Harvey Weinstein's rape retrial

BreakingNews.ie30-04-2025

A former TV production assistant has resumed giving evidence at Harvey Weinstein' s retrial, elaborating on the weeks leading up to the July 2006 date when he allegedly forced oral sex on her.
Miriam Haley is the first of the ex-Hollywood honcho's accusers to give evidence at the retrial, which is happening because New York's highest court overturned Weinstein's 2020 conviction.
Advertisement
The 73-year-old former studio boss has pleaded not guilty and denies sexually assaulting anyone.
Miriam Haley, centre, an accuser giving evidence at Harvey Weinstein's rape trial, arrives to the courtroom after a break in New York (Seth Wenig/AP)
Ms Haley gave evidence at the original trial and was candid last year about her mixed feelings about repeating the experience.
Weinstein's lawyers have not yet had their chance to question her and potentially try to poke holes in her account.
But the defence has sought vigorously — if often unsuccessfully — to rein in the scope of Ms Haley's evidence by objecting to prosecutors' questions, such as multiple queries about whether she had any sexual interest in Weinstein.
Advertisement
Ms Haley said she did not.
The defence has argued that all of Weinstein's accusers consented to sexual encounters with him in hopes of getting work in show business.
Ms Haley began giving evidence on Tuesday by describing how she got to know Weinstein.
Harvey Weinstein appears in state court in Manhattan for his retrial in New York (Sarah Yenesel/Pool Photo via AP)
She briefly worked as a production assistant on his company's reality show 'Project Runway' in June 2006 and said she had a series of interactions with him that were sometimes inappropriate and suggestive, but other times professional and polite.
Advertisement
Throughout, Ms Haley said, she was only looking for professional opportunity — not sex or romance — with the then-powerful producer of such Oscar winners as 'Shakespeare in Love' and 'Gangs of New York'.
Ms Haley, who has also gone by the name Mimi Haleyi, has not yet delved into the alleged sexual assault that underlies one of the charges against Weinstein.
Weinstein's retrial includes charges based on allegations from Ms Haley and another accuser from the original trial, Jessica Mann, who was once an aspiring actor.
She alleges that Weinstein raped her in 2013.
Advertisement
He is also being tried, for the first time, on an allegation of forcing oral sex on former model Kaja Sokola in 2006.
Her claim was not part of the first trial.
Ms Mann and Ms Sokola also are expected to give evidence at some point.
The Associated Press generally does not name people who allege they have been sexually assaulted unless they give permission for their names to be used.
Advertisement
Ms Haley, Ms Mann and Ms Sokola have done so.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

New knight Beckham joins King at A-list gathering
New knight Beckham joins King at A-list gathering

Telegraph

time7 minutes ago

  • Telegraph

New knight Beckham joins King at A-list gathering

A host of A-list stars including the soon-to-be Sir David Beckham joined the King at St James's Palace to celebrate the 35th anniversary of his royal charitable foundation. His Majesty was seen laughing with a line-up of celebrities, including Meryl Streep and Kate Winslet, all of whom support the King's Foundation. Beckham is an ambassador of the Foundation, attending its 2025 award ceremony along with Stanley Tucci, Sarah Beeny, Alan Titchmarsh and Raymond Blanc. Oscar-winning actresses Streep and Winslet are described as 'friends' of the Foundation, which exists to 'build sustainable communities and transform lives' and is known particularly for its education programmes teaching heritage and traditional skills. The King was heralded as a 'pioneer and a visionary' for his quest to protect traditional crafts and the environment at the ceremony. Beckham, who became an ambassador for the foundation last year, bowed his head and greeted the King with 'Your Majesty' as the monarch made his way down a line of supporters before the event. The King, 76, stopped to talk to model Lady Penny Stewart, the wife of rock star Sir Rod Stewart, who told the King she had been keeping bees on their Scottish estate. Winslet, described by royal aides as 'a friend of the foundation' was overheard telling the King 'don't worry, I've got your back'. Royal sources suggested the British actress may increase her role as a supporter of the charity in the future. As royal founding president of the charity, the King attended the event to celebrate the foundation's 35th anniversary. He met the winners to congratulate them on their awards after competing for the prize in eight individual categories alongside hundreds of other entrants. 'We all know that the King has been at the forefront and sort of marching us all along for more than 50 years, he's been an absolute pioneer and visionary in that sense,' said Lady Stewart. 'These awards and indeed the foundation is so important because of the role they have in not only protecting these traditional crafts and the environment but also giving the winners such an incredible platform to go and achieve great things. 'The King may have been accused of hugging trees and people thinking he was mad when he started talking about the environment all that time ago, but he was at the forefront then and now has been proved right with everything he said and now we're all just trying to play catch up. 'I really recognise the beauty in the way he is trying to get us on board with his knowledge and if we can pass that on to the younger generation, and save some of the traditional skills like we've seen with these winners today, we can all be a part of making a difference. 'I think the mistake is when we say, well, there's such a huge job ahead of us that we could give up, but where's the hope about and confidence that we can pull together to not make it such a mammoth task, there is real hope for the future.' Raymond Blanc, the chef and foundation ambassador, said after meeting the King: 'I think what the King has done is extraordinary. He's done it for many, many years – from the 1970s, about the same time I arrived in England – and my values are his values. 'There's a deep belief in connecting human beings with communities, with agriculture, with sustainability, management of waste, management of energy, and he has done it for the last 45, 50 years.' The Emerging Talent award, presented to an individual who has shown exceptional talent and commitment while on a King's Foundation programme, went to Emily Hurst. Ms Hurst has recently completed the Chanel and King's Foundation Métiers d'Art Fellowship in Millinery, based at Highgrove Gardens. In her final year of university, she independently learnt the heritage craft of straw braiding to produce historically accurate hats. 'In my final year at university, I discovered the craft of straw making and fell in love with it. I found out it was an endangered craft and then my tutors put me in touch with the King's Foundation,' she said. 'Working at Highgrove was absolutely the best place to be, surrounded by so much inspiration from His Majesty's garden and learning from some of the best milliners in the country, I'm so incredibly honoured.' The Young Entrepreneur award went to Barnaby Horn for developing his own business after honing his traditional milliner skills also on the Chanel and King's Foundation Métiers d'Art Fellowship in Millinery, based at Highgrove. He said: 'After having lots of different jobs after university, including being a writer and working as a drag queen, I eventually went to the Royal College of Art to study millinery. 'I realised that hats had potential to be artefacts of storytelling and I also wanted to be able to make work that was sculptural and tell stories while I was physically not in the room. 'There's a lot of my work that is poetry, performance or something that involves dance, so I wanted to create work that could embody characters, and obviously the head is such a sensitive place, like a location of dreams and the continuation of storytelling that I love.' The King's Foundation offers education courses for almost 15,000 students annually, health and wellbeing programmes for nearly 2,000 people every year, and spearheads 'place-making and regeneration projects in the UK and overseas to revitalise communities and historic buildings'. The King's Foundation is based at Dumfries House in Ayrshire, Scotland, and acts as custodian of other historic Royal sites including the Castle of Mey in Caithness, Scotland, and Highgrove Gardens in Gloucestershire. The Foundation also works from The King's Foundation School for Traditional Arts in Shoreditch, Trinity Buoy Wharf on the River Thames and the Garrison Chapel in Chelsea and at more than a dozen sites worldwide. The King Charles III Harmony Award was won by Prof Muhammad Yunus, chief adviser to the government of the People's Republic of Bangladesh, for his work on social business. The International Impact award went to The Akoje Residency, founded by Maro Itoje and Khalil Akar, to support artists from African, Caribbean, South West Asia and North Africa, which funds residencies at Dumfries House, Scotland. Advocate of the Year went to Patrick Holden, the founder and chief executive of the Sustainable Food Trust, while the Community Partnership of the Year was awarded to Auchinleck Primary School, where pupils are regular visitors to the Dumfries House estate to learn science, farming and rural skills, horticulture and cookery.

Robert F. Kennedy met with the CIA after a trip to the Soviet Union, newly declassified files show
Robert F. Kennedy met with the CIA after a trip to the Soviet Union, newly declassified files show

Daily Mail​

time10 minutes ago

  • Daily Mail​

Robert F. Kennedy met with the CIA after a trip to the Soviet Union, newly declassified files show

WASHINGTON (AP) - The CIA released nearly 1,500 pages of previously classified documents relating to New York Sen. Robert F. Kennedy and his 1968 assassination on Thursday, detailing the spy agency's work to investigate his killing as well as previously unknown contacts between him and the agency. Kennedy met with the CIA following a 1955 tour of the Soviet Union, relaying his observations to the spy agency as a voluntary informant, the documents show. The newly available material comprises 54 documents, including memos about the agency's work to investigate whether RFK's killer had any foreign ties, as well as the response to his killing by foreign powers. President Donald Trump had ordered the release of documents relating to the assassinations of RFK, President John F. Kennedy and Martin Luther King Jr. More than 10,000 pages of records pertaining to RFK's assassination were released in April. "Today´s release delivers on President Trump´s commitment to maximum transparency, enabling the CIA to shine light on information that serves the public interest," CIA Director John Ratcliffe said in a statement. "I am proud to share our work on this incredibly important topic with the American people." Kennedy, a Democrat, was fatally shot on June 5, 1968, at the Ambassador Hotel in Los Angeles moments after giving a speech celebrating his victory in California´s presidential primary. His assassin, Sirhan Sirhan, was convicted of first-degree murder and is serving life in prison. Kennedy's contacts with the CIA following his visit to the Soviet Union reflected the tensions of the time, and the high value put on personal observations of Americans who traveled to Russia and other former Soviet regions. Prominent elected officials and business leaders visiting the USSR were often asked to share their observations following their return. The documents show that RFK was a voluntary informant. In a statement Thursday, the CIA showed the meetings reflected RFK's "patriotic commitment" to serving his country. Many of his observations reflected granular observations about daily life. "On 29 Aug 55, while in Novosibirsk, USSR, a friend and I visited a State machine factory. The factory has 3,500 employees, of whom one third are women. The wage scale is between 840 and 2,500 rubles," Kennedy told the CIA interviewer, according to the documents. "The Director of the plant whose name I do not recall was frosty, although the engineer was friendly." The CIA used artificial intelligence to scan its library for documents related to RFK's assassination that could be declassified. The search turned up many documents that had little to do with his killing, such as the records of RFK's meeting with the CIA. Kennedy's son, U.S. Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr., said he was gratified to see the documents' release. "Lifting the veil on the RFK papers is a necessary step toward restoring trust in American government," Kennedy said.

Love Island beauty reveals terrifying ordeal after she's followed by man and forced to flee screaming
Love Island beauty reveals terrifying ordeal after she's followed by man and forced to flee screaming

The Sun

time24 minutes ago

  • The Sun

Love Island beauty reveals terrifying ordeal after she's followed by man and forced to flee screaming

LOVE Island star Patsy Field has revealed a terrifying ordeal in which she was forced to flee in terror after being followed by a man near her home. The star, who rose to fame on last summer's edition of the ITV2 dating series, took to TikTok to reveal the worrying encounter in which she actively described how she was pursued by a man who appeared to be following her. 4 Patsy told her followers that she had decided to head out for a walk in her local area in Bromley shortly after 8pm at night in order to walk off being "full of steak" after a plush family meal at Miller and Carter. She told how her mum had discouraged her from walking late at night but Patsy insisted she was fine as she had never had problems in her area being out on her own but did confess to her fans that where she lives gets a "bad rep". Patsy continued in the clip as she said: "I'd got an outfit on which could be a bit revealing but like I said, I'd never had any issues before. "I've always felt safe where I'm from." Detailing how she then went for the walk, she realised that ten minutes in there was a man walking close by. Although she did not interact with him, Patsy told her followers that she decided to cross the road to be safe after being left concerned by how close the man was to her. She then said: "I give it a couple of steps on the other side of the road and I thought, I'll just check and I turn around and he's crossed the road." Although this unsettled Patsy, she once again tried to give the benefit of the doubt by explaining that the man could have also crossed due to the parked cars at the side of the road. In order to be sure, Patsy then told how she crossed back over the road once more and to her utter disbelief, the man once again followed suit. Confessing she went into a panic, she decided to stand still and look at her phone, causing the man to pass her and walk ahead. 'It was years in the making' admits Love Island's Patsy Field as she breaks silence after Joey Essex revealed he WAS a producer plant However, things took a more sinister turn when the man in question eventually turned back around and walked back along the path in Patsy's direction. Patsy said: "He starts walking back towards me and I'm like what the f*** is going on." Revealing she was still stood in the same place, she felt unnerved when the man made clear eye contact with her. Fearing what could happen next, a panicked Patsy revealed she began to scream out loud and run in the opposite direction. She also began to phone her mum who was able to come and collect her as she was close-by to the family home. In a heartbreaking admission, the reality star said: "Now I'm scared to walk around my own area which is a shame as I've never had an issue before." Patsy first became known for her stint on Love Island last year. She had an early exit in the series but returned for one of the show's final episodes to be a part of the programme's savage dumping - determined by the ex-Islanders. 4 4

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store