June 11, 2025:
NEW YORK (AP) — Former movie mogul Harvey Weinstein has been convicted of one of the top charges in his sex crimes retrial. But the former movie mogul was also acquitted Wednesday (June 11, 2025) of another charge, and jurors were as yet unable to reach a verdict on a third charge. The split verdict meted out a measure of vindication to his accusers and prosecutors, but also to Weinstein after the landmark case was thrown into limbo. Weinstein was initially convicted five years ago. He has pleaded not guilty to all charges and told the court before the partial verdict was read Wednesday that the trial was not fair.
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NEW YORK (AP) — Former movie mogul Harvey Weinstein was convicted Wednesday (June 11, 2025) of one of the top charges in his sex crimes retrial but acquitted of another, and jurors were as yet unable to reach a verdict on a third charge.
The split verdict meted out a measure of vindication to his accusers and prosecutors — but also to Weinstein — in the landmark case.
The partial verdict came after an extraordinary day in which the jury foreperson indicated he felt bullied and Weinstein himself urged the judge to halt the trial, declaring: “It’s just not fair.”
“My life is on the line, and you know what? It’s not fair,” the former Hollywood heavy-hitter declared after making an unusual request to address the court. “It’s time, it’s time, it’s time, it’s time to say this trial is over.”
Weinstein’s initial conviction five years ago seemed to cement the downfall of one of Hollywood’s most powerful men in a pivotal moment for the #MeToo movement. But that conviction was overturned last year, and the case was sent back for retrial in the same Manhattan courthouse.
This time, a majority-female jury convicted the former studio boss of forcibly subjecting Miriam Haley, a producer and production assistant, to a criminal sex act in 2006.
Haley, who had qualms about testifying again, said outside court Wednesday that she hoped this time would be the last. She said it had been “exhausting and at times dehumanizing.”
“But today’s verdict gives me hope,” she added.
Jurors acquitted Weinstein of another criminal sex act charge. It related to Kaja Sokola, a former model whose allegations of forcible oral sex date to 2006 but were added to the case last year.
Sokola nevertheless called the partial verdict “a big win for everyone” and the “closing of a chapter that caused me a lot of pain throughout my life.”
Jurors were to continue deliberating Thursday on a rape charge involving hairstylist and actor Jessica Mann. Under New York law, the third-degree rape charge carries a lesser penalty than the first-degree criminal sex act offense.
Weinstein, 73, denies sexually assaulting or raping anyone.
Jury deliberations had teetered Wednesday. The foreperson — who complained Monday that other jurors were pushing people to change their minds and talking about information beyond the charges — signaled to Judge Curtis Farber that he wanted to talk.
In a closed-door discussion, the foreperson then told the judge, prosecutors and defense lawyers that another juror was yelling at him for sticking to his opinion, glaring and at one point vowed, “You going to see me outside.”
“I feel afraid inside there,” the foreperson told the judge and attorneys, according to a transcript.
The episode was the latest sign of jury-room strains. On Friday, a juror asked to be excused because he felt another was being treated unfairly. Weinstein’s lawyers asked unsuccessfully for a mistrial then, and again after the foreperson expressed his concerns Monday and Wednesday.
Weinstein and #MeToo
The trial once again turned a legal lens — and, to some extent the public eye — on the man whose reputed history of brutishness toward women propelled the #MeToo era that began in 2017.
Weinstein’s companies produced or distributed a string of best Oscar winners for decades. He personally stood on the Oscars stage as a producer of 1999 best picture winner “Shakespeare in Love.” He also became a prominent Democratic donor.
When an Italian model told police in 2015 that Weinstein had abruptly groped her in his New York office, no charges resulted.
Then, two years later, The New York Times and The New Yorker detailed decades of sexual harassment and sexual assault allegations against Weinstein.
Those disclosures made #MeToo a global rallying cry for sexual misconduct awareness and accountability.
Weinstein ultimately was convicted of sex crimes and sentenced to prison in New York and California.
His California appeal is ongoing. But New York’s highest court awarded Weinstein a new trial, saying the former trial judge had allowed prejudicial testimony.
The retrial was expanded with new charges related to Sokola, a Polish psychotherapist who said Weinstein forced oral sex on her when she was a 19-year-old model.
In some of the tensest moments of testimony, a shaken Sokola was confronted with a passage from her private journal. Mann pointed indignantly at Weinstein as she walked past him in court. Haley cursed at him from the witness stand.
The accusations and Weinstein’s defense
Weinstein’s accusers said he exploited his Tinseltown influence to dangle career help, get them alone and then trap and force them into sexual encounters.
In a complexity they spent days explaining, the women stayed in contact with Weinstein, saw him again, and at times accepted or requested invitations or favors, according to testimony and documents. Mann said she had a consensual relationship with Weinstein that began before and continued after he allegedly raped her.
The accusers said they were trying to reckon with what had happened, attempting to suppress the assaults for their careers’ sake or trying to keep the peace with aan influential, well-connected and irascible man.
Weinstein chose not to testify. His attorneys portrayed his accusers as Hollywood wannabes and hangers-on who willingly hooked up with him to court opportunity, then recast the encounters as crimes years later to collect settlement funds and #MeToo approbation.
The Associated Press generally does not name people who say they have been sexually assaulted, unless they agree to be identified. Haley, Mann and Sokola did so.
May 29, 2025:
NEW YORK (AP) — Harvey Weinstein’s defense has started presenting its own witnesses in his sex crimes retrial. But it’s unclear whether the ex-studio boss himself will be one of them. He’s decide in the coming days whether to testify. If he does, it would be a remarkable chapter in the yearslong saga of the onetime Hollywood honcho-turned-#MeToo outcast. The 73-year-old is being retried on rape and sexual assault charges because New York’s highest court overturned his 2020 conviction. He denies the allegations. His attorneys maintain that anything that happened between him and his accusers was consensual.
April 25, 2025:
NEW YORK (AP) — Friends of one of Harvey Weinstein’s accusers have told the jury at his retrial that the woman told them long ago that the former studio boss sexually assaulted her. One of the friends, Christine Pressman, also testified Thursday (April 24, 2025) that she once suggested the accuser date the movie mogul, but the woman balked. Unlike some other witnesses, Pressman didn’t testify at Weinstein’s 2020 rape and sexual assault trial. That trial led to a conviction that has since been overturned. Weinstein has pleaded not guilty. He says he has never sexually assaulted or raped anyone.
April 21, 2025:
NEW YORK (AP) — Harvey Weinstein has been moved to a New York City hospital after a judge approved the ailing ex-studio boss’s request to stay there rather than in jail when he’s not in court for his #MeToo retrial. Judge Paul Goetz late Thursday (April 17, 2025) ordered that Weinstein be relocated from the Rikers Island jail complex to the prison ward at Bellevue Hospital so he can receive necessary medical treatment. Weinstein’s lawyers lobbied for the move as jury selection began this week. Goetz scheduled a hearing for next Thursday to discuss the matter further. A different judge, Curtis Farber, is presiding over Weinstein’s retrial. The case resumes Monday with more jury selection.
April 16, 2025:
NEW YORK (AP) — Harvey Weinstein’s lawyers are asking a judge to allow the ailing ex-studio boss to spend his nights at a New York City hospital instead of jail for the duration of his #MeToo rape retrial. Weinstein’s lawyers made the request as jury selection resumed for a second day on Wednesday (April 16, 2025). In court papers, his lawyers argue that Weinstein’s stay at New York City’s notorious Rikers Island jail complex is exacerbating his health issues and that he’d be better off in the prison ward at Bellevue Hospital. Judge Curtis Farber has yet to rule on the request and the issue wasn’t discussed in court before jury selection resumed.
April 15, 2025:
NEW YORK (AP) — Jury selection is set to begin Tuesday (April 15, 2025) in Harvey Weinstein’s retrial in New York. The last time a New York jury sat in judgment of Weinstein, the ex-movie studio boss was convicted of rape and sentenced to 23 years in prison. But New York’s highest court overturned that conviction. The ruling has given Weinstein a second chance to fight the charges, and do so in a different atmosphere than his first trial, which was held in the middle of a global reckoning over sexual misconduct. Weinstein has pleaded not guilty and denies that he raped or sexually assaulted anyone. The judge has set aside at least four days for jury selection. Opening statements are expected next week.
April 26, 2024:
NEW YORK (AP) — Harvey Weinstein’s accusers and their advocates were shocked and angered by an appellate court’s decision to overturn the ex-movie mogul’s 2020 rape conviction. But #MeToo advocates also sought to send a clear message that the movement has not been derailed. Tarana Burke, who coined the phrase “Me too” in 2006, and Anita Hill, who testified against Clarence Thomas in 1991, both urged a long view, saying no single legal ruling can reverse the tremendous cultural progress made in the last six years. The appeals court overturned the conviction in a 4-3 vote, finding the trial judge unfairly allowed testimony based on allegations that were not part of the case.






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