Weinstein accuser's ex-roommate backs up sexual assault allegation
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[January 29, 2020]
By Brendan Pierson
NEW YORK (Reuters) - The former roommate of
Mimi Haleyi, one of the women who has accused Harvey Weinstein of sexual
assault, took the stand on Tuesday in the former Hollywood mogul's rape
trial.
Elizabeth Entin told jurors that Haleyi, visibly upset, told her in the
summer of 2006 that Weinstein forced oral sex on her.
"I said, 'Miriam, that sounds like rape,'" Entin testified, using
Haleyi's full first name.
Weinstein, 67, has pleaded not guilty to sexually assaulting Haleyi and
Jessica Mann. Since 2017, more than 80 women, including many famous
actresses, have accused Weinstein of sexual misconduct.
The accusations fueled the #MeToo movement, in which women have accused
powerful men in business, entertainment, media and politics of sexual
misconduct. Weinstein's trial is widely seen as a key moment for the
movement.
Weinstein, who reshaped the independent film industry with critically
acclaimed pictures such as “The English Patient” and “Shakespeare in
Love,” has denied the allegations and said any sexual encounters were
consensual.
Haleyi, who worked as a production assistant on a Weinstein television
show, told jurors on Monday that Weinstein invited her to his Manhattan
home in July 2006 and attacked her, backing her into a bedroom and
forcing oral sex on her.
Entin said on Tuesday that she and Haleyi shared an apartment in 2006.
She said that one evening Haleyi appeared unusually nervous, and told
her Weinstein had assaulted her in his home.
"She said 'I’m on my period' and he said 'I don’t care,' at which point
he threw her down, pulled down her underwear, pulled out her tampon and
went down on her while she was saying 'no,'" Entin said.
Entin testified that she told Haleyi her experience sounded like rape
and urged her to speak to a lawyer, but that Haleyi did not want to.
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Witness Elizabeth Entin is questioned by Assistant District Attorney
Meghan Hast during film producer Harvey Weinstein's sexual assault
trial at New York Criminal Court in the Manhattan borough of New
York City, New York, U.S. January 28, 2020 in this courtroom sketch.
REUTERS/Jane Rosenberg
Entin said that weeks before the alleged attack, Haleyi called her
at work to tell her that Weinstein had barged into their apartment
and begged her to come to Paris with him. Entin said Haleyi told her
that Entin's chihuahua, Peanut, was "kind of chasing him around" and
that Weinstein seemed afraid of the dog.
At the time, Entin said, she saw Weinstein not as a threat but as "a
pathetic older man trying to hit on Miriam."
On cross-examination, Donna Rotunno, one of Weinstein's lawyers,
asked Entin whether she knew Weinstein had paid for Haleyi to travel
to Los Angeles and London after the alleged assault, and that she
had continued to communicate with him. Entin said she did not.
After Entin left the stand, prosecutors showed jurors several old
photos of Weinstein, including one of him and former U.S. President
Bill Clinton. They previously had said they wanted to introduce the
photo to demonstrate Weinstein's power and connections.
Haleyi was the second accuser to testify against Weinstein at the
trial. Actress Annabella Sciorra, known for her role on HBO's "The
Sopranos," testified last week that Weinstein forced his way into
her Manhattan apartment one winter night in 1993 or 1994 and
violently raped her.
While Sciorra's allegation is too old to support a separate rape
charge against Weinstein, prosecutors hope it will show he is a
repeat sexual predator - a charge that could put him in prison for
life.
Jessica Mann, a former aspiring actress, is expected to testify that
Weinstein raped her in 2013.
(Reporting by Brendan Pierson in New York; Editing by Noeleen Walder,
Tom Brown and Jonathan Oatis)
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