Harvey Weinstein gets one of his 11 sex assault counts dismissed by LA judge
Los Angeles, California – Convicted rapist Harvey Weinstein succeeded in getting one of the 11 counts in his Southern California sex assault case dismissed by a judge Thursday, but prosecutors vowed to revive it.
Weinstein appeared in a Los Angeles courtroom in a wheelchair and wrinkled brown jail uniform. After a deputy removed his handcuffs for the courtroom cameras, he pulled off his face mask and was quickly ordered to put it back on.
Weinstein then donned some shiny black-rimmed glasses and listened intently to arguments before the judge rejected Count 5 in the indictment unsealed last week involving five Jane Does.
Weinstein’s defense lawyer, Alan Jackson, argued the count related to an alleged May 2010 assault was "fatally flawed" because it carries a 10-year statute of limitations and prosecutors chose to go the route of a grand jury proceeding with a new case number in 2021, rather than pressing ahead with their original criminal complaint filed in January 2020, which would have required a public preliminary hearing.
According to prosecutors, Weinstein sexually battered the Count 5 victim using restraint inside a Beverly Hills hotel on May 11, 2010.
"This was a continuation of the same case," Los Angeles County Deputy District Attorney Paul Thompson argued Thursday before the ruling, claiming even the court referred to the indictment as a "superseding indictment" at one point.
Jackson also argued to have Counts 6 and 7 related to an alleged rape and forced oral copulation from 2004 or 2005 dismissed, but Judge Lisa Lench let them stand.
Weinstein's defense seems confident of victory
In rejecting Count 5, Lench gave prosecutors a chance to try again.
Thompson promised to file amended paperwork by the end of the day with language making it clear why the statute of limitations had not expired.
"At this point, they’re trying to put lipstick on a pig. The facts don’t support this charge. It’s barred by the statute of limitations. They know it, we know it, the judge knows it. It’s over for them," defense lawyer Mark Werksman told the Daily News after the hearing.
It was Werksman who entered Weinstein’s not guilty plea in the California case last week.
Already convicted of rape and sex assault in Manhattan, Weinstein was extradited from the Wende Correctional Facility near Buffalo and flown west this month after a string of delays.
Weinstein is currently facing five accusations of assault
Weinstein (69) was secretly indicted by the Los Angeles grand jury in March.
The earliest charged incident in the California case involves the alleged forcible rape of a woman at a Beverly Hills hotel between September 1, 2004, and September 30, 2005, according to the indictment.
Weinstein then allegedly went on to rape another woman on two separate occasions in November 2009 and November 2010, also inside Beverly Hills hotel rooms.
Prosecutors claim Weinstein sexually assaulted his next victim at a Beverly Hills hotel in May 2010 before going on to rape a fourth woman at a Los Angeles hotel on February 18, 2013.
The most recent incident charged in the case is the alleged sexual assault of a fifth woman at a Beverly Hills hotel a day later on February 19, 2013, prosecutors said.
Weinstein’s next scheduled court appearance is September 13. He has the right to face trial within 60 days of that date.
Jackson said Friday his client is "doing great."
"He is intimately involved in the defense of his case," Jackson told The News after the hearing. "He’s looking forward to days like today, where little by little, the prosecution’s case is going to start faltering."
Cover photo: IMAGO / UPI Photo