Harvey Weinstein extradited to L.A., set to appear in court - Los Angeles Times
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Harvey Weinstein extradited, could appear in Los Angeles court this week on rape charges

A closeup of Harvey Weinstein looking haggard.
Harvey Weinstein departs a Manhattan courthouse for his rape trial on Feb. 5 in New York.
(John Minchillo / Associated Press)
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Harvey Weinstein is being transported to Los Angeles on Tuesday and could make his first court appearance this week to answer charges that he sexually assaulted five women in Southern California between 2004 and 2013.

Weinstein, whose extradition from New York was ordered by a judge last month, could appear in a downtown Los Angeles courtroom as early as Wednesday, according to his defense attorney Mark Werksman.

For the record:

7:03 p.m. July 20, 2021A previous version of this article said that Weinstein could answer charges that he sexually assaulted five women in Southern California between 2013 and 2017. The charges are connected with alleged assaults between 2004 and 2013.

Werksman said his client would be transported by plane to Los Angeles on Tuesday. A spokesman for the district attorney’s office could not immediately confirm or deny details about Weinstein’s extradition.

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The 69-year-old former entertainment mogul has been charged with multiple counts of forcible rape and forcible oral copulation involving aspiring actresses and models inside hotels in West L.A. and Beverly Hills. He has denied all wrongdoing.

Weinstein is already serving a 23-year prison sentence in the Wende Correctional Facility in Alden, N.Y., after a Manhattan jury convicted him in February 2020 of rape and committing a criminal sex act. His attorneys had tried to fight his extradition to California, citing Weinstein’s poor health and the fact that he had emergency eye surgeries scheduled in New York.

A New York judge rules that California authorities can take Harvey Weinstein back to Los Angeles to stand trail on five counts of sexual assault.

Werksman had submitted court filings in Los Angeles to stop the extradition, but a hearing was never scheduled.

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Under California law, Weinstein’s trial on sexual assault charges in the state must happen within 120 days of his extradition, meaning court proceedings must begin by mid-November.

In April, Weinstein was indicted by a Los Angeles grand jury on four counts of forcible rape, four counts of forcible oral copulation, two counts of sexual battery and one count of sexual penetration by force. All five women accusing Weinstein of assault testified at the hearings, but transcripts of those proceedings remain under seal.

Lauren Young, the only accuser whose identity has been made public in the Los Angeles case, has alleged Weinstein lured her into his room after a meeting at the Montage Hotel in Beverly Hills in 2013, where the mogul allegedly grabbed her breast and masturbated before she fled. She testified against him in the Manhattan trial. An Italian model who described an assault by Weinstein to The Times in a 2017 interview was also among the victims in the Los Angeles case, though she has yet to identify herself publicly.

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The Times, as a rule, does not identify alleged victims of sexual assault unless they have chosen to come forward publicly or been identified in court.

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