Harvey Weinstein reports chest pain and leaves court as jury deliberates rape retrial
News > Arts & Entertainment News
Audio By Carbonatix
10:41 AM on Wednesday, May 13
By JENNIFER PELTZ
NEW YORK (AP) — Harvey Weinstein started feeling chest pains as jurors deliberated in his rape retrial Wednesday, his lawyers said.
The development came as court ended early for the day as the jury awaited an answer to its first request to revisit some evidence. Weinstein, 74, has a number of health problems and uses a wheelchair. He has been in prison since 2020.
Jurors had been deliberating for under four hours when they sent a note requesting to re-hear one page of accuser Jessica Mann 's testimony and get a copy of a lengthy PowerPoint file that prosecutors had created to put emails and other evidence in a timeline.
Defense lawyer Marc Agnifilo said court officers had told him Weinstein was having chest pains. No further information was immediately available.
Judge Curtis Farber sent jurors home about an hour earlier than normal, telling them only that there were “unforeseen reasons” for the change. Both the prosecutors and Weinstein’s lawyers had absented themselves from the courtroom, on the theory that the jury would be less likely to wonder why Weinstein wasn’t there.
Jurors started deliberating Wednesday, and are deciding whether the former movie mogul raped Mann, a hairstylist and actor, in a Manhattan hotel on March 18, 2013.
Mann, 40, testified that the two had a consensual relationship, but that Weinstein subjected her to unwanted sex that day after she repeatedly said no.
Lawyers for Weinstein have maintained that the encounter was consensual, and they have emphasized that Mann continued seeing Weinstein afterward and expressing warmth toward him. Mann has said she was mired in complicated feelings about him, herself and what had happened and that she was “normalizing everything.”
Her viewpoint changed in 2017, when a series of sexual misconduct allegations against the Oscar-winning Weinstein propelled the #MeToo campaign to hold people — especially powerful men — accountable for sexual misbehavior. Weinstein has said he “acted wrongly” but never assaulted anyone.
Some of those accusations later generated criminal convictions against Weinstein in New York and California.
An appeals court overturned his 2020 New York conviction on charges that involved Mann and another accuser. At a retrial last year, jurors failed to reach a verdict on Mann's portion of the case, leading to a second retrial this year. He is charged with one count of rape in the third degree.
The current jury heard nearly three weeks of testimony, five days of it from Mann. Weinstein decided not to testify.
The Associated Press generally does not identify people who say they have been sexually assaulted. Mann, however, has agreed to be named.