By Michael R. Sisak & Tom Hays
NEW YORK (AP) --As Harvey Weinstein stripped off his clothes, pulled down her dress and groped her breast in a hotel bathroom in 2013, Lauren Marie Young says he also offered a chilling excuse for his lewd behavior: "This is what all actresses do to make it."
Young's account of her encounter with then-one of Hollywood's most powerful movie makers came on Wednesday after she was called to the witness stand at Weinstein's New York City rape trial in a final push by prosecutors to show there was a pattern to how he preyed on women.
Weinstein persisted by masturbating, despite her telling him, "'No, no, no' the whole time," Young told jurors as the the last of six women to testify at the trial about alleged series of sexual assaults by the defendant.
The criminal charges are based on two allegations: that he raped a woman in March 2013 and forced oral sex on a TV and film production assistant in 2006.
Additional women, including Young, have been allowed to testify as prosecutors attempt to show there was a practiced method to Weinstein's attacks, including inviting women to his hotel room to discuss business, then disrobing and demanding sexual favors.
Weinstein, 67, has insisted any sexual encounters were consensual.
Young began her testimony by describing how she put on her favorite dress before heading off to a meeting with Weinstein where she expected to "network and pitch my ideas."
After he invited her up to his Beverly Hills hotel room, Weinstein lured her into the bathroom while a friend of his who helped arrange the meeting, Mexican model Claudia Salinas, closed the door behind them, she said.
The witness testified that after Weinstein was nude, he kept her from escaping by pushing her against the sink and blocking her way to the door.
"I felt so trapped and I was in shock," she told jurors, fighting back tears. She said she pleaded with Weinstein not to hurt her before he finally stepped out of the bathroom.
She pulled up her dress and walked out to find Salinas still "standing right there," she said. "I shot her an evil look and I left as quick as I could without saying anything."
On cross-examination, defense attorney Damon Cheronis questioned Young about her admission that she was initially confused about when the alleged assault occurred and her description of the lumbering Weinstein so quickly taking advantage of her. His voice rising, Cheronis asked, "And then this big, fat man does a ninja tear off of his clothes, right?"
Cheronis also seized on some inconsistencies in Young's courtroom testimony compared to her previous statements to investigators. For example, on the witness stand, she said Weinstein grazed her genitals, but in 2018 she told a Beverly Hills police detective, "I don't think he touched me down there."
The witness was to return to the stand Thursday with the prosecution case nearly complete.
Young's allegations involving the hotel encounter in California are partly the basis of criminal charges filed by the Los Angeles County District Attorney on Jan. 6, just as Weinstein's New York trial was getting underway. Weinstein is also charged in that case with raping a different woman the night before the alleged assault on Young.
The Associated Press typically does not publish the names of people alleging sexual assault unless they give their consent, as Young has done through her lawyer.
On Tuesday, the jury was shown a series of nude photos of Weinstein taken by the district attorney's office a few weeks after his arrest, possibly to try to corroborate claims by another accuser he's charged with raping that she noticed "extreme scarring" on his body.
On Wednesday, jurors were shown a drawing Young made for investigators of Weinstein's naked body and she testified that she recalled a scar that "was not a normal looking scar from a circumcision."
Messages were left Wednesday with Salinas and her manager.
Earlier Wednesday, jurors heard from a former front desk manager who checked Weinstein into a midtown Manhattan hotel where he is alleged to have raped a different women in March 2013. The testimony was meant to corroborate the woman's claim that Weinstein bullied his way into the hotel over her objections.
"Usually, couples checking in are in a happy mood," Rothschild Capulong told the jury, adding he was so concerned about Weinstein's behavior that he made a note in his end-of-shift report that security might want to check on his room.
Review: Director James Watkins’ “Speak No Evil”
Quick. Has there ever been a horror film set in a country home with a decent cell signal?
Nope, and there's no signal at Paddy and Ciara's house, either, deep in the English countryside. Soon, that land line will be cut, too, but we're getting ahead of ourselves.
Paddy and Ciara are that fun-but-somewhat-odd British couple whom Louise and Ben, early in "Speak No Evil," meet on their idyllic Tuscan family holiday. Americans based in London, Louise and Ben are at loose ends, with both job and relationship issues. And so, when the new acquaintances write to invite them for a country weekend, they decide to go.
After all, how bad could it be?
Don't answer that. There are many such moments in the first two-thirds of "Speak No Evil," a Hollywood remake of the 2022 Danish film, here starring a deeply menacing James McAvoy. Moments where Louise and Ben, out of mere politeness and social convention, act against their instincts, which tell them something is wrong – very wrong.
Director James Watkins and especially his excellent troupe of actors, adult and children alike, do a nice job of building the tension, slowly but surely. Until all bloody hell breaks loose, of course. And then, in its third act, "Speak No Evil" becomes an entertaining but routine horror flick, with predictable results.
But for a while, it's a way more intelligent film. And the jumpy moments work — I'll confess to literally springing out of my seat when someone uneventfully turned on a power drill.
We begin in stunning Tuscany, where Louise (Mackenzie Davis, in the film's most accessible and empathetic performance) and Ben (Scoot McNairy, all nerves and insecurity) are vacationing with 11-year-old daughter Agnes (Alix West Lefler). At the pool, they... Read More