Two jurors claim they were bullied into convicting Harvey Weinstein and regret it, his lawyers say
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In New York, two jurors involved in the June conviction of Harvey Weinstein expressed that they regretted their verdict, claiming they were coerced by fellow jurors, according to the former film producer’s legal team in a recent court document.

Weinstein’s attorneys are challenging his conviction on the charge of first-degree criminal sexual act. The lawyers argue that the verdict was influenced by “threats, intimidation, and outside bias,” and that the judge did not adequately address these issues during the trial.

In sworn statements attached to the filing, the two jurors indicated they felt pressured by those who were set on convicting Weinstein for forcing oral sex on Miriam Haley, a TV and film production assistant and producer, in 2006.

One juror recounted being yelled at during deliberations and being told, “we have to get rid of you.” The other mentioned that questioning Weinstein’s guilt led to rigorous scrutiny from fellow jurors, stressing that a secret vote would have led them to conclude “not guilty” on all charges.

“I regret the verdict,” this juror admitted, adding that, without the pressure from other jurors, a hung jury might have resulted in the charge concerning Miriam Haley.

Weinstein, aged 73, was found not guilty on a separate charge pertaining to Polish psychotherapist and former model Kaja Sokola. A mistrial was declared on the last charge, which involved allegations of rape against former actress Jessica Mann, after the jury foreperson opted to stop deliberations.

It was the second time the Oscar-winning producer was tried on some of the charges. His 2020 conviction, a watershed moment for the # MeToo movement, was overturned last year. Now his defense team, led by attorney Arthur Aidala, is fighting to eliminate his retrial conviction and head off another retrial on the undecided count.

Judge Curtis Farber gave Manhattan prosecutors until Nov. 10 to conduct its own investigation and file a written response before he rules on Dec. 22. That means a decision and a possible retrial or sentencing won’t come until after Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg is up for reelection on Nov. 4.

Jurors said they feared for their safety

In the affidavits, which blacked out juror names and identifying numbers, the two jurors said they feared for their safety and the foreperson’s safety. They said that when the foreperson asked for civility, another juror got in his face, pointed a finger and told him: “You don’t know me. I’ll catch you outside.”

One of the jurors said deliberations were poisoned by a belief among some jurors that a member of the panel had been paid off by Weinstein or his lawyers. That claim, which has not been supported by any evidence, shifted the jury of seven women and five men “from an even 6-6 spit to a sudden unanimous verdict,” the juror said.

Some of what was said in the affidavits echoed acrimony that spilled into public view during deliberations. As jurors weighed charges for five days, one juror asked to be excused because he felt another was being treated unfairly.

Later, the foreperson complained that other jurors were pushing people to change their minds and that a juror yelled at him for sticking to his opinion and suggested the foreperson would “see me outside.”

After the jury returned a verdict on two of the three charges, Farber asked the foreperson whether he was willing to deliberate further. The man said no, triggering a mistrial on the rape count.

After the trial, two jurors disputed the foreperson’s account. One said no one mistreated him. The other said deliberations were contentious, but respectful.

Jurors spoke with the judge

When jurors came forward with concerns, Farber was strict about respecting the sanctity of deliberations and cautioned them not to discuss the content or tenor of jury room discussions, transcripts show. In their affidavits, the two jurors said they didn’t feel the judge was willing to listen to their concerns.

When jurors were asked if they agreed with the guilty verdict, one of the jurors noted in her affidavit that she paused “to try and indicate my discomfort in the verdict.” Afterward, when Farber spoke with jurors, she said she told him “the deliberations were unprofessional.”

Weinstein denies all the charges. The first-degree criminal sex act conviction carries the potential for up to 25 years in prison, while the unresolved third-degree rape charge is punishable by up to four years — less than he already has served.

He has been behind bars since his initial conviction in 2020, and he later also was sentenced to prison in a separate California case, which he is appealing.

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