Harvey Weinstein

Harvey Weinstein Set to be Arraigned Monday on New Indictment

Los Angeles Superior Court Judge Lisa B. Lench initially sustained the defense's challenge to that count at a July 29 hearing, but agreed to allow the prosecution the opportunity to seek a grand jury indictment to amend the indictment.

Harvey Weinstein arrives at Manhattan Criminal Court with his attorneys on Feb. 24, 2020.
Alec Tabak/New York Daily News/Tribune News Service via Getty Images

Disgraced film producer Harvey Weinstein, who is facing sex-related charges, is set to be arraigned Monday on a new grand jury indictment, which restores a count that had been dismissed by a judge after the defense argued it was barred by the statute of limitations.

The latest grand jury indictment, handed up Wednesday, charges Weinstein again with the challenged count of sexual battery by restraint against a woman in May 2010.

It marks the third time the prosecution has asked the grand jury to amend the indictment against the 69-year-old Weinstein, who was initially indicted in March on 11 counts involving five women.

The challenged count is the only charge involving one of the five alleged victims.

Los Angeles Superior Court Judge Lisa B. Lench initially sustained the defense's challenge to that count at a July 29 hearing, but agreed to allow the prosecution the opportunity to seek a grand jury indictment to amend the indictment.

“We believe that it will never succeed,” one of Weinstein's attorneys, Mark Werksman, said after an Aug. 12 hearing in which the charge was dismissed.

The defense lawyer said the prosecution “cannot breathe life into a charge that's already barred by the statute of limitations.”

The latest indictment alleges that Weinstein was “continually charged” with that crime since April 2020 and through Aug. 12, when the judge again sustained the defense's challenge to that count after the prosecution sought two more amendments to the grand jury indictment.

“We are taking appropriate steps so that justice prevails in this case,” Alex Bastian, special adviser to Los Angeles County District Attorney George Gascon, said in a statement released by the District Attorney's Office after the Aug. 12 hearing.

Weinstein's attorneys had unsuccessfully challenged two other counts — forcible oral copulation and forcible rape involving another alleged victim between September 2004 and September 2005.

Weinstein was extradited on July 20 from New York, where he has been sentenced to 23 years in prison for raping an aspiring actress and a criminal sex act against a former production assistant.

Weinstein was brought into a downtown Los Angeles courtroom in a wheelchair a day later, with one of his attorneys entering a not guilty plea on his behalf. He remains jailed without bail.

Weinstein's legal team had tried to block his transfer from New York to Los Angeles until he was “medically fit” to be moved. A court document filed in Los Angeles by the defense contended that Weinstein was in “urgent need of medical treatment to save his eyesight, and that this treatment could take anywhere from 24 to 36 months.”

The defense had also asked a judge in Los Angeles to delay the transfer until Weinstein's medical treatment is completed.

Los Angeles County prosecutors initially charged Weinstein in January 2020 with forcible rape, forcible oral copulation and sexual penetration by use of force involving one woman on Feb. 18, 2013, and sexual battery by restraint involving another woman a day later.

Weinstein was subsequently charged in April 2020 with sexual battery by restraint — one of the counts challenged by the defense — involving a woman in May 2010. In November 2020, prosecutors added six more counts — three counts each of forcible rape and forcible oral copulation — involving two alleged victims in Beverly Hills between 2004 and 2010.

The grand jury subsequently indicted Weinstein on the same charges.

Weinstein produced such films as “Shakespeare in Love,” which in 1999 received the best picture Oscar, and “Pulp Fiction.”

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