Harvey Weinstein's 2020 rape conviction overturned by New York appeals court

 Harvey Weinstein's 2020 sex violations conviction in New York upset

April 25, 202410:58 AM ET




Previous filmmaker Harvey Weinstein showed up in a Los Angeles court in October. 2022.
Etienne Laurent/Getty Pictures
Manager's note: This report incorporates depictions of rape.

On Thursday morning, the most noteworthy court in New York State upset the 2020 crime sex wrongdoing conviction of previous film head honcho Harvey Weinstein and requested another preliminary. Weinstein has been carrying out a 23-year sentence in New York based on that conviction. The Manhattan lead prosecutor's office told NPR it plans to retry the case.

The New York State Court of Requests found in a 4-3 decision that Weinstein had not gotten a fair preliminary, to some extent because the preliminary adjudicator permitted declarations from ladies whose charges were not part of that case. (On the whole, over 100 ladies made public charges against Weinstein.)

For the requests of the court, Judge Jenny Rivera wrote to a limited extent in the decision: "We presume that the preliminary court mistakenly conceded declarations of uncharged, claimed earlier sexual demonstrations against people other than the complainants of the hidden wrongdoings since that declaration filled no material non-penchant need... The main proof again that Weinstein's defendant [Weinstein] was the complainants' declaration, and the consequence of the court's decisions... was to support their validity and lessen the respondent's personality before the jury."

Those ladies were affirmed in court as "Molineux witnesses" or "earlier terrible demonstration witnesses," which has been permitted in New York in specific circumstances dating back to 1900. Pundits and legitimate specialists say that the utilization of the "Molineux Rule" can be exceptionally abstract and leaves decisions more open to difficulties.


In a composed proclamation to NPR Thursday, lawyer Douglas Wigdor, who has addressed eight claimed Harvey Weinstein casualties, including two of the Molineux observers in the New York criminal preliminary, said: "The present choice is a significant step back in considering those responsible for demonstrations of sexual viciousness. Courts regularly concede proof of other uncharged demonstrations where they help juries understand issues concerning the goal, business as usual, or plan of the respondent. The jury was told of the importance of this declaration, and upsetting the decision is lamentable in that it will require the casualties to persevere one more time."

Regulation
How the 'Molineux Rule' Allows Specific Observers in the Harvey Weinstein Preliminary
It will presently depend on the Manhattan lead prosecutor, Alvin Bragg Jr., to send off another preliminary against Weinstein. Bragg is presently associated with another extremely high-profile case: the New York preliminary of previous president Donald Trump, who has been accused of 34 crimes, including misrepresenting business records in the primary degree. A representative for the DA's office told NPR Thursday in a composed proclamation: "We will give it our best shot to retry this case and stay unflinching in our obligation to overcomers of rape."

Despite the New York court's choice, one more conviction against Weinstein represents now. In February 2023, an adjudicator in Los Angeles condemned Weinstein to a 16-year jail term on a different conviction of assault and rape. That sentence is to be served sequentially after the New York jail term. Starting around Thursday morning, Weinstein was being held in upstate New York at the Mohawk Restorative Office.

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