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NYC prosecutors open Harvey Weinstein retrial with accusations he sexually assaulted a 16-year-old

NYC prosecutors open Harvey Weinstein retrial with accusations he sexually assaulted a 16-year-old

Yahoo23-04-2025

NEW YORK — The ailing and jailed film producer Harvey Weinstein was once a titan of industry who preyed upon young women in a 'profoundly psychological' manner while holding their dreams in his hands, a jury heard in opening statements Wednesday at his Manhattan rape and sexual assault retrial.
Five years after Weinstein's landmark conviction — last year overturned by an appeals court due to errors at the first trial — a prosecutor unveiled new allegations against the disgraced producer involving a minor victim.
Assistant District Attorney Shannon Lucey told jurors in Manhattan Supreme Court that over the course of the trial, they would hear from that woman, Kaja Sokola, a native of Poland who is now 38, about Weinstein allegedly molesting and sexually assaulting her multiple times starting when she was 16, and two others who allege they were raped and sexually assaulted by Weinstein, Jessica Mann and Miriam Haley.
Describing Weinstein as now 'a frail man in a wheelchair,' Lucey said evidence would make clear that he was for a long time larger than life and 'one of the most powerful men in show business' who enjoyed unfettered power in the industry for more than 30 years.
'Who was so used to getting what he wanted when he wanted,' Lucey said. 'Even when the women he wanted told him no and resisted him.'
The fallen moviemaker's landmark 2020 conviction and subsequent 23-year prison sentence were thrown out last year by New York's Court of Appeals, which found that the trial court judge, James Burke, erroneously permitted a jury to hear testimony concerning incidents for which Weinstein was not charged. He had been convicted on counts stemming from allegations involving Haley and Mann, both set to testify again.
In his opening statement, Weinstein's lawyer, Arthur Aidala, accused the alleged victims of lying and said they engaged in yearslong, 'mutually beneficial' relationships with Weinstein.
'He gets them jobs, and in return, they fool around — consensually,' Aidala said, adding the 'casting couch' was not a crime scene and had been going on 'since the beginning of time.'
'Was it immoral? 100%,' Aidala said. 'Immoral on both ends.'
The defense attorney said Mann, Haley and Sokola had 'four million reasons' to lie, due to their collecting a total of $4 million in civil matters for Weinstein's abuse.
Sokola is expected to testify about Weinstein first molesting her when he was in his fifties, and she was 16, visiting the city for the first time for a modeling job. Four years later, in 2006, he would subdue her in a Manhattan hotel room and forcibly perform oral sex on her 'while she cried and said, 'Please don't do this,'' the prosecutor alleged.
Lucey told the jury they'd hear from Haley about how Weinstein began preying upon her after getting her a job in production on 'Project Runway,' which was paid in cash as she was undocumented, and forcing oral sex on her after luring her to his SoHo loft in 2006.
Lucey said Mann would testify about a toxic relationship with Weinstein, who was nearly twice her age, that began after she moved to Los Angeles from a poor upbringing in an evangelical family as she sought to make it as an actor.
Mann, who first met the 'Pulp Fiction' producer at an event with her roommate, dodged Weinstein's advances successfully until she didn't, the prosecutor said, acknowledging several of their sexual encounters were consensual.
Lucey said jurors would hear from Mann and an expert about the confusing dynamic she had with her abuser and a disturbing incident at the DoubleTree hotel on E. 51st St. and Lexington Ave. in 2013 when Mann said no and Weinstein didn't listen, raping her against will.
'She will explain in her own words why she attempted human connection with a man who was abusing her,' the ADA said.
Weinstein's downfall came in 2017 when more than 80 women accused him of sexual misconduct in exposés in The New Yorker and The New York Times, supercharging the #MeToo movement against sexual harassment in the workplace.
He has pleaded not guilty to all charges in the case being retried by Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg, who was not yet in office when Weinstein last went on trial in New York.
In December 2022, Weinstein was convicted a second time at a separate Los Angeles trial and sentenced to another 16 years in prison, a term he's set to continue serving regardless of the outcome of his retrial.
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Kelly and Sean 'Diddy' Combs, added that this was confirmation that the #MeToo movement is not dead, as has been discussed in the press. 'That obituary was obviously premature and I don't think it applies at all based on my experience for almost 15 years in women's rights,' Allred said. Haley had testified to meeting Weinstein at the Cannes Film Festival and then later getting work from him on Project Runway. He later invited her to a movie premiere in Los Angeles, which she accepted, and then stopped by his apartment before leaving. It was there that she said Weinstein backed her into the bedroom, held her down and forced himself on her orally. Her account was backed up by her former roommate, as well as a friend. All of this comes after Weinstein's 2020 rape and criminal sexual assault conviction was overturned in April 2024 after the court of appeals found the trial prejudiced Weinstein with improper rulings, including allowing women to testify about allegations that were not part of the case. Weinstein was convicted on the charges related to Haley and Mann in 2020. Sokola was not part of Weinstein's 2020 case, but was a key witness for the prosecution in this one. She testified to meeting with Weinstein for lunch at the Tribeca Grand Hotel in 2006 and being invited up to his hotel room to see a script, as she pursued becoming an actress. When she followed him up, she testified that Weinstein asked her to come up to a hotel room to see a script and then forcibly held her down on the bed, removed her stockings and underwear and performed oral sex on her as she repeatedly asked him to stop. The defense team had sought to undermine her testimony by pointing to the fact that Sokola had not told her sister, who was at the lunch, about the assault, and even unveiled a diary from Sokola that did not include the sexual assault. As with the other victims, they also pointed to the fact that Sokola had received $475,000 as part of a settlement fund related to the 2016 incident with Weinstein. Sokola had also received a $3 million settlement in a civil lawsuit filed against Weinstein's brother Bob Weinstein, Disney and Miramax in 2019 related to an incident in which Sokola said she had been sexually assaulted by Weinstein in 2002, when she was 16. That incident was not charged in this case, but did come up in her testimony. As Sokola's attorney, Lindsay Goldbrum, pointed out at the press conference, it's also hard to prove allegations that happened 20 years ago beyond a reasonable doubt. 'For myself, it's the closing of a chapter that caused me a lot of pain throughout my life. And having prosecutors hear my story, go through all the details with me and believe me and support me was extremely powerful,' Sokola told reporters. And while Goldbrum also saw the conviction as a positive for the #MeToo movement, she added that it 'still has a lot of work that has to be done' in terms of the courts and judicial systems 'denying justice.' Best of The Hollywood Reporter Hollywood's Most Notable Deaths of 2025 Harvey Weinstein's "Jane Doe 1" Victim Reveals Identity: "I'm Tired of Hiding" 'Awards Chatter' Podcast: 'Sopranos' Creator David Chase Finally Reveals What Happened to Tony (Exclusive)

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