Harvey Weinstein Sentenced to 23 Years in Prison
Harvey
Weinstein has been formally sentenced to 23 years in prison after a
New York City jury found the former Hollywood mogul guilty of
committing a criminal sex act in the first degree and rape in the third
degree.
Judge James
Burke presided over the sentencing hearing on Wednesday, March 11. Weinstein,
67, arrived in court to face a minimum of five years and a maximum of 29 years
behind bars for raping actress Jessica Mann in 2013 and forcibly performing
oral sex on production assistant Miriam Haley in 2016.
Mann and
Haley both delivered final "victim impact" remarks before the court
and Weinstein on Wednesday, according to the Associated Press. “The day my
screams were heard from the witness room was the day my voice came back to its
full power… Rape is not just one moment of penetration. It is forever,"
said Mann. "It scarred me deeply, mentally and emotionally,” Haley
said, per Variety. “What he did not only stripped me of my dignity as a
human being and a woman, but it crushed my confidence.
Weinstein,
who repeatedly claimed all sexual encounters were consensual, also delivered a
statement before Judge Burke, citing his old correspondence emails that his
lawyers once used during the trial in an attempt to illustrate a friendly
relationship between their client and these women. "I’m not going to say
these aren’t great people," he said. "I had wonderful times with
these people. I’m just genuinely confused. Men are confused about this
issue."
Weinstein
was remanded to Riker's Island on Feb. 24 for the 16-day waiting period before
his official sentencing hearing, but he found himself at Bellevue Hospital over
concerns of high blood pressure and heart palpitations. He remained there for
more than one week and underwent a heart procedure before eventually moving to
the infirmary unit at Riker's.
Dozens of
women have come forward with allegations of sexual assault and misconduct
against Weinstein, the former film producer and now-ousted head of The
Weinstein Company, since The New York Times first published an exposé in
October 2017. Prosecutors fought for a severe sentencing against Weinstein
that "reflects the seriousness of the defendant’s offenses,"
while
his attorneys argued for a lesser sentence. In an open letter to the judge,
Weinstein's lawyers argued their client may not live beyond the minimum
five-year jail time due to his age and health, referring to five years as
"a de facto life sentence."
There also
remains the case in Los Angeles. District Attorney Jackie Lacey
announced in January that Weinstein was formally charged with “raping one
woman and sexually assaulting another in separate incidents over a two-day
period in 2013."
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