A sketch artist hired by Reuters saw a couple of the naked
photos when they were passed to the jury and produced a drawing
for the news agency. In the courtroom, prosecutors did not say
why the photographs were introduced or how many were presented.
A photographer employed by the Manhattan District Attorney's
office testified that he took the pictures in June 2018.
Weinstein did not respond to reporters' questions about what he
thought of jurors viewing naked photos of him. Donna Rotunno, a
lawyer for Weinstein, said in an email that the photos had been
introduced for "no other reason than to shame Mr. Weinstein."
Jessica Mann, a woman Weinstein is accused of raping, testified
last week about the appearance of Weinstein's naked body. She
said that when she first saw Weinstein, he had no testicles and
appeared "deformed" or "intersex." The term refers to
individuals with sex characteristics "that do not fit typical
binary notions of male or female bodies," according to the
United Nations Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights.
Weinstein, 67, has pleaded not guilty to charges of assaulting
Mann and another woman, Mimi Haleyi. He faces up to life in
prison if convicted of the most serious charge, predatory sexual
assault.
On Tuesday, Weinstein's defense objected to the photographs
being introduced but did not say why. They did not address
Mann's testimony about Weinstein's physical appearance.
Reuters could not determine if prosecutors introduced the photos
in an effort to corroborate Mann's testimony. A representative
for the Manhattan District Attorney's office declined to
comment.
The trial is a watershed moment for the #MeToo movement, in
which women have gone public with allegations against powerful
men in business and politics.
Since 2017, more than 80 women have accused Weinstein of sexual
misconduct. Weinstein, whose films included "The English
Patient" and "Shakespeare in Love," has denied the allegations
and has said any sexual encounters were consensual.
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Weinstein is charged with raping Mann in March 2013. Mann testified
that the alleged rape happened in the course of an "extremely
degrading" relationship with Weinstein that lasted for years.
Weinstein's lawyer, Rotunno, pressed her over three days of cross
examination about that relationship.
"I know the history of my relationship with him," Mann said on
Tuesday. "I know it was complicated and difficult. That doesn’t
change the fact that he raped me."
Rotunno asked that the answer be stricken, but Justice James Burke
denied the request.
Mann's testimony on Monday had been cut short after she began
weeping uncontrollably as she read aloud an email she wrote in 2014
describing Weinstein as a "pseudo father."
FOCUS ON EMAILS
On Tuesday, Rotunno focused on Mann's email correspondence with him
following the alleged attack.
In one email in 2013, Mann told Weinstein she had just been through
a breakup and was hoping to have dinner with him.
In another email, sent in 2014, Mann asked Weinstein for a referral
so she could get a membership at the Soho House, an exclusive club.
In another, she told Weinstein, "I love you, always do. But I hate
feeling like a booty call."
Prosecutors are expected to rest their case later this week.
(Reporting by Brendan Pierson in New York; Editing by Jonathan Oatis,
Noeleen Walder and Cynthia Osterman)
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