Harvey Weinstein´s rape conviction upheld by appeals court

BREAKING NEWS: New York appeals court upholds Harvey Weinstein’s rape conviction and 23-year prison sentence

Harvey Weinstein’s appeal was upheld by a New York appeals court on Thursday Weinstein’s legal team said they were ‘disappointed, but not surprised’ The disgraced movie mogul’s camp seeks to appeal the decision to the state’s highest courtWeinstein is serving a 23-year prison sentence after being convicted of first-degree criminal sexual act and third-degree rapeHe has been in a California jail since being extradited Weinstein’s appeal was filed last April, approximately one year after he was convicted

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Harvey Weinstein’s rape conviction and 23-year-prison sentence have been upheld by a New York appeals court on Thursday, rejected the movie mogul´s claims that the judge at his landmark #MeToo trial prejudiced him by allowing women to testify about allegations that weren´t part of the criminal case.

The ruling was issued by a five-judge panel in the state´s intermediate appeals court.

The bombshell decision and affirmed the milestone verdict in America´s reckoning with sexual misconduct by powerful figures – an era that began with a flood of allegations against Weinstein.

Weinstein´s spokesperson, Juda Engelmayer, said his legal team ‘was disappointed, but not surprised.’

‘We are reviewing all of our options and we will seek to petition the court appeals and beyond,’ Engelmayer said in a statement, CNN reported. 

Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg in a statement expressed gratitude for a decision upholding ‘a monumental conviction that changed the way prosecutors and courts approach complex prosecutions of sexual predators,’ the news outlet reported.

Weinstein’s appeal was filed last April, approximately one year after he was convicted of first-degree criminal sexual act and third-degree rape. 

He is currently serving a 23-year prison sentence in a California prison.

Weinstein, 70, was appealing his February 2020 conviction and 23-year prison sentence for assaulting former production assistant Miriam, ‘Mimi’ Haleyi and raping former aspiring actress Jessica Mann.

Harvey Weinstein’s rape conviction and 23-year-prison sentence have been upheld by a New York appeals court on Thursday. He is pictured in February 2020

Actress Annabella Sciorra, 61, who appeared on the Sopranos, was the first of six women who testified during Weinstein’s 2020 trial that they were raped or sexually assaulted by the disgraced movie mogul. Sciorra had testified that Weintein raped her in the mid-1990s

Mimi Haleyi, who worked for Project Runway – a reality show which Weinstein produced, is seen here arriving to to court alongside members of her legal team in 2020 to testify against the former movie mogul 

He was acquitted of rape and predatory sexual assault stemming from actor Annabella Sciorra´s allegations about an encounter in the mid-1990s.

The Brooklyn-born actress, who appeared on the Sopranos, was the first of six women who testified during Weinstein’s 2020 trial that they were raped or sexually assaulted by the disgraced movie mogul.

Sciorra, 61, spoke on the witness stand, testifying that Weinstein had raped her in her Manhattan home winter of 1993-1994.

The Weinstein was jailed in California, where he was extradited last year and is awaiting trial on charges he assaulted five women in Los Angeles and Beverly Hills from 2004 to 2013.

The widespread sexual abuse and harassment allegations against the disgraced movie mogul exploded in 2017.

In total, nearly 90 women including Angelina Jolie, Gwyneth Paltrow and Salma Hayek have accused Weinstein of harassment or assault.

He has maintained that all his sexual encounters were consensual. 

In a 45-page ruling, the appellate court said trial Judge James Burke properly exercised his discretion in allowing prosecutors to bolster their case with testimony from three women who accused Weinstein of violated them but whose claims did not lead to charges in the New York case.

The judges said that although the volume of material, pertaining to 28 alleged acts over 30 years, was ‘unquestionably large, and, at first blush, perhaps appears to be troublingly so,’ Burke properly exercised his discretion in weighing its relevance to the case.

The judges had been far more critical during oral arguments in December, questioning a number of Burke’s rulings, including one that cleared the way for prosecutors to confront Weinstein with evidence about other, unrelated misbehavior if he had testified.

The judges, echoing concerns from Weinstein´s lawyers, said at the time that the ruling had effectively muted his defense.

On Thursday, the panel also rejected Weinstein´s argument that Burke was wrong in other ways: by allowing a woman who had written a novel involving predatory older men to remain on the jury, and by letting prosecutors have an expert on victim behavior and rape myths testify. Burke did not allow testimony on similar subjects from defense experts.

Weinstein´s conviction, heralded by activists and advocates as a milestone achievement, was dissected just as quickly by defense lawyers seeking to spring him from what could be the rest of his life behind bars.

A mask-covered Weinstein seated with hands clasped together as he listens intently to the judge during a July 2021 hearing at Los Angeles County Court 

Rules on calling additional witnesses to testify about ‘prior bad acts’ vary by state and were an issue in Bill Cosby´s successful appeal of his sexual assault conviction in Pennsylvania.

New York´s rules, shaped by a decision in a 1901 poisoning case, are among the more restrictive.

At the December appeals court hearing, Weinstein´s lawyers argued the extra testimony went beyond what´s normally allowed – detailing motive, opportunity, intent or a common scheme or plan – and essentially put the ex-studio boss on trial for crimes he wasn´t charged with and hadn´t had an opportunity to defend himself against.

Burke´s ruling, which allowed prosecutors to use stories from Weinstein´s past to attack his credibility, worked to prevent him from taking the witness stand, Weinstein lawyer Barry Kamins told the appellate panel at the December hearing.

‘The jury was overwhelmed by such prejudicial, bad evidence,’ Kamins argued. ‘This was a trial of Harvey Weinstein´s character. The people were making him out to be a bad person.’

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