Movie producer Harvey Weinstein pleads not guilty to new sex assault charge
Movie producer Harvey Weinstein pleaded not guilty on Monday to charges of sexually assaulting a woman in 2006, the third criminal sex assault case brought against him, and his attorney said he expects further charges to follow.
By : migrator
Update: 2018-07-09 16:14 GMT
New York
More than 70 women, mostly young actresses and other women employed in the movie business, have accused the 66-year-old co-founder of the Miramax film studio of sexual misconduct, including rape, in a series of incidents dating back decades.
The accusations gave rise to the #MeToo movement in which hundreds of women publicly accused powerful men in business, politics and entertainment of sexual harassment and abuse, lifting a shroud that had long shielded such behavior.
New York state Supreme Court Justice James Burke rejected prosecutors' request to order house arrest for Weinstein, allowing him to remain free on the $1 million bail that has been in effect since he pleaded not guilty in June to charges he assaulted two other women, one in 2004 and one in 2013.
Weinstein has repeatedly denied having any non-consensual sexual encounters.
"Mr. Weinstein is not a predator, he is not a rapist and I believe when this case is over we will ultimately see him to be exonerated," defense attorney Benjamin Brafman told journalists after Monday's hearing.
Brafman said that prosecutors may file additional charges against Weinstein.
Prosecutor Joan Illuzzi told the judge the sheer number of Weinstein accusers "shows the breadth of the criminality here."
Prosecutors contend Weinstein forcibly performed oral sex on the woman in 2006. The latest charges include two counts of predatory sexual assault, which carry a maximum life sentence, and one count of criminal sexual act.
Earlier charges included two counts of rape and one count of criminal sexual act. Weinstein was charged after a months-long investigation by the New York Police Department.
Prosecutors have not named Weinstein's accusers.
Details from the 2004 case align with an account Lucia Evans, a former aspiring actress gave the New Yorker magazine in 2017.
After Weinstein was accused, his eponymous company Weinstein Co fired him and filed for bankruptcy, and he was expelled from the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences.
Through his company and Miramax, Weinstein won plaudits and awards for movies including "Shakespeare in Love," "Pulp Fiction," "Sex, Lies and Videotape," "The Crying Game" and "The King's Speech."
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