Showing posts with label Harvey Weinstein. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Harvey Weinstein. Show all posts

Thursday, December 22, 2022

Movie mogul Harvey Weinstein's Asian accusers react to mixed verdict




Three Asian women victims of Harvey Weinstein 
were satisfied with verdicts after a Los Angeles jury convicted former movie mogul Harvey Weinstein Monday of one count of rape and two counts of sexual assault.

After deliberating 10 days, the Los Angeles jury failed to reach verdicts on the rape and oral copulation charges related to Jennifer Seibel Newsom, the wife of California Gov. Gavin Newsom, and the sexual battery by restraint charge involving writer Lauren Young. Mistrials were declared in Newsom's and Young's cases.

Weinstein was also acquitted of one count of sexual battery Jane Doe 3, a massage therapist.

Filipino American Young and Ambra Gutierrez, a Filipino Italian model, testified during the trial. Rowena Chiu, who was was also assaulted by Weinstein, had mixed feelings about the verdict. “I’m thankful that it’s not a complete acquittal across the board,” she says.

Young, referred to during the trial as Jane Doe 2, told her attorney Gloria Allred by phone she was happy Weinstein was convicted on some counts despite there being a mistrial on her own count, Allred said in a news conference after the verdict.

“I am relieved that Harvey Weinstein has been convicted because he deserves to be punished for the crimes that he committed, and he can no longer use his power to intimidate and sexually assault more women,” Young said in a statement read by Allred.

Allred said after the verdict that her client was “100 percent committed to testifying again if she was asked to do so.”

During the trial, Young gave tearful testimony about her how she was sexually assaulted by Weinstein in a Beverly Hills hotel bathroom in 2013 while repeatedly telling him “no.”

Young said she was paralyzed by fear when Harvey Weinstein blocked her from leaving the bathroom, masturbated in front of her and groped her breasts.

In early 2013, Young was a model who was aspiring to be an actress and screenwriter, and through Weinstein’s assistant, who had become a friend, she set up a meeting with him at the Montage Hotel on the night of Feb. 19, 2013, about a script she was working on.

During the meeting, Weinstein told her she should accompany him to his room to continue the talk while he got ready for an event.

Young said Weinstein led her into the room and then the bathroom, and his assistant shut the door behind them and left them alone. That's when she was groped and he masturbated.

“I was scared of Harvey Weinstein — that he would hurt me, or send someone to hurt me, or ruin my career, or make my life hell,” Young testified.

She said she was stunned as he quickly shed his suit and got briefly in the shower, then stepped out and blocked her from leaving when she went for the door.

Prosecutor's used Gutierrez's testimony to show a pattern of behavior but none of the charges Weinstein is facing in Los Angeles stem from her allegations.

She was at the center of a NYPD sting operation in 2015 when she had cooperated with police to wear a wire and record Weinstein, following her allegations that he had groped her breasts and put his hand up her skirt during a casting meeting. 

The investigation and the publicity surrounding the investigation led to more witnesses to come forth to testify about their Weinstein encounters.

Gutierrez’s audio recording became a smoking gun when it was later published in Ronan Farrow’s Weinstein exposé in The New Yorker in October 2017.

In 2020, Weinstein was convicted in New York of committing a criminal sexual act in the first degree and third-degree rape. He was sentenced to 23 years in state prison. The conviction energized the #MeToo movement, which sparked a worldwide reckoning on sexual assault and harassment more than two years ago.

A New York judge this week granted an appeal of the conviction.

"In 2015, when I worked with the police, they were able to put it on tape and had him saying what he did to me," Gutierrez said on "CBS Mornings" Tuesday. "It was recorded, and there was video footage on security cameras."

Gutierrez said at the time, police tried to help her but Weinstein was able to avoid charges at the time.

"The police tried to help me, they tried to do as much as they could," she said. "But he was so powerful, he was able to just make me not believable."

Of the Los Angeles verdict, Gutierrez told CBS Morning's hosts, "It's a feeling of being powerful again," she said.

Harvey Weinstein


Rowena Chiu, who worked for Weinstein in London in the 1990s, said, “Our worst nightmare was that he would get acquitted in L.A. and use that to support his appeal in N.Y.”

But the verdicts on Jane Does 2, 3 and 4 left Chiu “staggered,” she says. Chiu, who has alleged that Weinstein attempted to rape her at the Venice Film Festival in 1998, had originally been scheduled to be a supporting witness in the L.A. trial, but ultimately was not called.

“I see desperate failings in the legal system,” she told the Los Angeles Times. “I feel that it’s very personal. My reaction was almost a visceral anger at how much these women had been put through to take the stand. The fact that the legal system puts such a burden on the witness, challenges the survivor’s credibility. It is a horrifying and brutal process. What sort of signal does that give women of the #MeToo movement who are really struggling? A staggering percentage of rape victims know they’re not going to be believed.”


More than 90 women have accused Weinstein of sexual misconduct including rape, unwanted touching and harassment. Allegations and convictions against the formerly  influential Hollywood producers prompted the #MeToo movement. 

Throughout the New York and Los Angeles trials, Weinstein has professed his innocence and claims some of the sexual encounters were consensual.

The L.A. jury convicted Weinstein only on the charges leveled by Jane Doe 1, an Italian model and actress. A juror, who did not want his name used, told reporters that because Jane Doe 1 never contacted Weinstein again after she was assaulted lent more credibility to her charges. The other Jane Does follow-up calls and emails to the producer weakened their accusations, he said.

Newsom, identified in the trial as Jane Doe 3, testified against Weinstein and disclosed that she was harassed by the producer, shared a statement on Twitter in response to the verdict. The tweet read, "Harvey Weinstein will never be able to rape another woman. He will spend the rest of his life behind bars where he belongs. Harvey Weinstein is a serial predator and what he did was rape."

"Throughout the trial, Weinstein’s lawyers used sexism, misogyny, and bullying tactics to intimate, demean and ridicule us survivors," Jennifer added. "This trail was a stark reminder that we as a society have work to do. To all survivors out there — I see you, I hear you, and I stand with you."

EDITOR'S NOTE: For additional commentary, news and views from an AANHPI perspective, follow @DioknoEd on Twitter.

Monday, October 7, 2019

Harvey Weinstein assistant: 'He liked Chinese girls'

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On 'The Today Show," Rowena Chiu told about Harvey Weinstein attempted to rape her

“Harvey Weinstein told me he liked Chinese girls,"said Rowena Chiu, Weinstein's former assistant.

"He liked them because they were discreet, he said — because they knew how to keep a secret. Hours later, he attempted to rape me.”

Chiu went public last month to share on The Today Show that Weinstein allegedly attempted to rape her in 1998.

Chiu wrote an opinion piece, published Saturday (Oct. 5), for The New York Times that explained how the power dynamics of gender, race, seniority, and wealth ultimately worked against her.

“I was a woman in an industry in which women still struggle to be taken seriously,” she wrote. “Harvey was a man in an industry in which men dominate, and he often used that dominance to claim sexual favors.”

Chiu had signed a nondisclosure agreement (NDA) that prevented her from sharing any information with others. She said she attempted suicide twice before leaving Miramax, Weinstein’s entertainment company.

“I lived in constant fear of Harvey’s abuse, control and power; that the story would come back to haunt me; that I would inadvertently slip up on my promise to never speak of this,” wrote Chiu. “I suffered, completely isolated from those around me who could have provided the support I needed: a loved one, a trusted pastor, a respected therapist — even the man I would marry. I spent decades grappling with guilt that I took the job, that I hadn’t left the room sooner, that it was somehow my fault, that I hadn’t handled Harvey ‘robustly’ enough, that I was not tough enough to work in the film industry.”

In September 2018, Chiu was one of the millions who tuned in to watch Dr. Christine Blasey Ford testify against Brett Kavanaugh. Chiu ended up participating in a 2019 group interview with Dr. Ford and other survivors. She hesitated for a while before agreeing to go public with her story in She Said: Breaking the Sexual Harassment Story That Helped Ignite a Movement, written by her interviewers Jodi Kantor and Megan Twohey, the two NY Times journalists who contributed to outing Weinstein in 2017.

Chiu said that after her appearance on The Today Show, Weinstein threatened to sue her.

“I don’t know what the path ahead looks like. But for now, I am getting used to being stopped in the street to talk about #MeToo; I am happy that my children can know my secret; I am grateful to be able to be honest with family and friends, who are coming forward in droves to offer support. I can briefly glory in the relief that I am no longer sitting on a sickening secret that has — finally and ultimately — come to light.”
Read the full opinion piece here.

Tuesday, September 10, 2019

'He tried to rape me,' says new Harvey Weinstein accuser

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Rowena Chiu talks about Harvey Weinstein on the Today Show.

A former Harvey Weinstein employee, Rowena Chiu, accused her former boss on The Today Show Monday of trying to rape her in 1998. She had waited until now because of nondisclosure agreement (NDA), which she says she was finally ready to go public with what she experienced.

"Harvey [Weinstein] is very persistent," Chiu said Monday (Sept. 9). "He has a tendency to cajole... he's a very big guy, he pushed me back against the bed and I was petrified and terrified as he tried to rape me."

Despite the NDA, Chiu was inspired to tell her story because of  the bravery of Christine Blasey Ford's testimony against eventual Supreme Court Justice Brett Kavanaugh.

Chiu's experience was first outlined in "She Said," an upcoming book by journalists Megan Twohey and Jodi Kantor.

From an interview in the Huffington Post:
Chiu’s story first appeared in journalists Megan Twohey and Jodi Kantor’s upcoming book, “She Said,” which tracks the reporting that led up to the Me Too reckoning in the fall of 2017. “She Said” hits stores this week.
In the book, Chiu describes struggling with depression and a suicide attempt in the 20 years since the assault. She told “Today” that she decided to break the non-disclosure agreement now because she simply hadn’t been ready to speak up about her experience earlier.
“The NDA asked us to keep a secret about something that happened to me while I was working for 20 years, and that in itself was a very difficult thing to do,” she said. ”...When this story broke in the press about two years ago, I wasn’t ready. ... I felt intimidated. I felt terrified. I didn’t know what the repercussions would be both legally and personally, and so it really has taken all of two years to square some of those things away both in terms of my own personal life, in terms of coming forward and speaking to my parents, speaking to my husband, speaking to my closest friends.”
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The accusations against Harvey Weinstein's sexual misconduct, strongly rumored in the movie industry, spurred the launching of #MeToo movement to end sexual harassment and mistreatment of women in Hollywood.

More than 90 women have accused the former mogul of sexual harassment and/or sexual assault. Weinstein has denied all the allegations. His court appointments are slated for 2020.
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Monday, May 28, 2018

Weinstein's indictment vindicates Filipina model

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Ambra Gutierez suffered from depression after authorities dismissed her allegations against Harvey Weinstein.

FILIPINA/ITALIAN MODEL Ambra Gutierrez feels vindicated and relieved now that movie mogul Harvey Weinstein is finally being brought to justice.

After seeing photos and TV coverage of of Weinstein walking into the NYPD’s 1st Precinct on Friday morning, Guitierrez told The New York Daily Post: “It’s like waking up from a dream and not knowing if it was true or not.”

Weinstein, 66, turned himself in to police Thursday (May 25) to face felony charges of criminal sexual misconduct and alleged rape against two women (former aspiring actress Lucia Evans and an unnamed party who is not Gutierrez). Weinstein, once one of the most powerful men in Hollywood, did not enter a plea in Manhattan Criminal Court and was freed on $1 million bail.

“All the memories are coming back,” she said. “Those three years I lost. It’s a bit of sadness and happiness at the same time. Now people believe me and I feel like those three years were worth it for anything I went through.”
RELATED: Filipina at center of allegations against Harvey Weinstein
Guitierrez, who was 22 at the time Weinstein invited her to his office, was one of the first women to bring Weinstein's abusive behavior to the attention of law enforcement. 

After meeting at a social occasion, the movie producer invited Guitierrez up to his Tribeca office where he allegedly groped her breast and tried to put his hand up her skirt.

She left distraught and went to the authorities. The NYPD persuaded her to put on a hidden microphone and meet up with Weinstein. At the meeting, he offered his apologies, essentially admitted to the sexual misconduct. As he was apologizing, he also tried to invite the model to his hotel room.

But Manhattan District Attorney Cyrus Vance Jr. declined to prosecute Weinstein, stating there still wasn’t enough evidence.


Ambra Battaliana Guiterrez grew up in Italy.
She was allegedly silenced with a $1-million and a non-disclosure agreement from Weinstein.

“I didn’t even understand almost what I was doing with all those papers. I was really disoriented. My English was very bad,” the model told the New Yorker. She realized the gravity of the situation when she saw Weinstein’s lawyer’s hands shaking, she said.

“The moment I (signed) it, I really felt it was wrong,” she added.

She told the New Yorker that she accepted the deal after working with the NYPD to secretly record Weinstein admitting to groping her. As part of Weinstein’s payout, Gutierrez was also made to sign a statement — to be released if she ever broke the non-disclosure agreement — which stated that the behavior Weinstein to which admitted on tape never happened.

An attorney who has seen the agreement called it “the most usurious one I have seen in decades of practice,” according to New Yorker writer Ronan Farrow, who did not name the lawyer.

“I felt like I was going crazy,” Gutierrez told the New York Post. “No one believed me."

Farrow's reporting in the New Yorker on Guitierrez's experience with Weinstein opened the doors to further investigations and gave courage to other women who suffered Weinstein's advances and sexual misconduct. The New York Times published in October last year explosive allegations against Weinstein by high profile stars such as Ashley Judd, Rose McGowan and Gwyneth Paltrow. Their stories led to the #MeToo and #TimesUp movements and a revolt against men abusing their power and influence against women.

After years of depression and dealing with an eating disorder, Gutierrez feels vindicated.

“We all did something, and we did not stop until this situation was done in the right way,” Gutierrez told The Post. “I’m thinking about [the] other victims right now, that they finally got justice for what they went through.”

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Wednesday, October 11, 2017

Filipina at the center of allegations against Harvey Weinstein



SCREEN CAPTURE / MSNBC
Ambra Battilana Gutierrez claims she was groped by Hollywood mogul Harvey Weinstein.

BEFORE THE New York Times story last week alleging Harvey Weinstein's sexual harassment of actresses, two years ago, a Filipina model was the first woman to bring his behavior to light.

Two years ago, Ambra Battilana Gutierrez was just 22 when she told authorities that Hollywood mogul Harvey Weinstein, one of the most powerful men in the motion picture industry, groped her breasts and tried to put his hand up her skirt.

Her story is recounted by the New Yorker magazine in light of the NYTimes recent revelations by over a dozen women of Weinstein's sexual abuse and harassment. Among the actresses who have come forth include A-listers Gwyneth Paltrow and Angelina Jolie.

Based on Guitierrez's accusations and under police guidance, she wore a wire to obtain further evidence of Weinstein' sexual abuse of several actresses including some of the biggest names in the entertainment industry.

Gutierrez met Weinstein in 2015. Weinstein repeatedly told the Miss Italy finalist that she resembled actress Mila Kunis and arranged a meeting for the next day.

Harvey Weinstein
According to Guterriez, she arrived at Weinstein’s office early the next evening with her modelng portfolio. In the office, she sat with Weinstein on a couch to review the portfolio, and he began staring at her breasts, asking if they were real. Gutierrez later told officers of the New York Police Department Special Victims Division that Weinstein then lunged at her, groping her breasts and attempting to put a hand up her skirt while she protested.

The Filipino-Italian model said he asked her for a date later for that evening. Instead of going on the date, she reported the assault to the NYPD.

In the chilling recording that was reported by The New Yorker magazine,  Weinstein tried to get Guttierrez to go up into his hotel room 'for five minutes' while he took a shower.

When Gutierrez refused and confronted him about touching her breasts, Weinstein said he was "used to that." He swore on his children that he would not touch her again, according to The New Yorker article.

He accused her of embarrassing him and making a scene in the hotel where he stayed 'all the time', adding: "I'm a famous guy."

During the encounter, she then asked him why he grabbed her breast the day before.

“Oh, please, I’m sorry, just come on in,” Weinstein can be heard saying. “I’m used to that. Come on. Please.”


After a two-week investigation, the Manhattan district attorney decided not to file charges, The New Yorker reported.

The DA's office said at the time: "This case was taken seriously ... After analysing the available evidence, including multiple interviews with both parties, a criminal charge is not supported."

“If we could have prosecuted Harvey Weinstein for the conduct that occurred in 2015, we would have,” Chief Assistant DA Karen Friedman-Agnifilo said in a statement.


“While the recording is horrifying to listen to, what emerged from the audio was insufficient to prove a crime under New York law, which requires prosecutors to establish criminal intent.”


After the story was published, reports about Gutierrez's past began to emerge in the tabloids and social media painting her as naive starry-eyed actress or as a gold-digger taking advantage of older men. Her credibility was essentially ruined.

The New York Post said: “The young, beautiful, wide-eyed woman who falls prey to Hollywood’s lusty male elite is a tale we know all too well ― and Battilana’s camp knows that, too...,” the article reads. “Her claims against Weinstein can’t be accepted as legitimate unless she is seen as either naïve and doe-eyed at one extreme, or aggressive and grasping at the other. It serves not only the media, but both Battilana’s and Weinstein’s camps to portray her as either Gone Girl or Snow White.”

Since then, several scores of actresses have come forward telling about their nightmare encounters with Weinstein. Most of them have reportedly accepted financial settlements, including Guitierrez. 

Some, such as Asia Argento say they were forced into performing sex acts despite their protestations.

“Any allegations of non-consensual sex are unequivocally denied by Mr. Weinstein,” a spokeswoman told the New Yorker, adding that he never retaliated against women who refused his sexual advances. “Mr. Weinstein obviously can’t speak to anonymous allegations, but with respect to any women who have made allegations on the record, Mr Weinstein believes that all of these relationships were consensual.”


As a result of the allegations, the once-powerful Weinstein was fired from his position in his own company.
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