NEW YORK – The judge inΒ Harvey WeinsteinΒ βs sex crimes case declared a mistrial on the remaining rape charge after the jury foreperson said he wouldnβt continue deliberating.
Deliberations were ended Thursday, a day after the jury delivered aΒ partial verdictΒ in Weinstein’sΒ sex crimes retrial. The jury got stuck on a third charge. It was a rape accusation dating to 2013.
The foreperson complained Wednesday that he felt bullied by another juror and said Thursday he wouldnβt go back into the jury room.
The panel convictedΒ the ex-studio boss of one of the top charges but acquitted him of another. Both of those charges concerned accusations of forcing oral sex on women in 2006. Those verdicts still stand.
TheΒ jury of seven women and five menΒ unanimously reached those decisions last Friday, the foreperson later told the judge. The verdict was delivered Wednesday only because Judge Curtis Farber asked whether there was agreement on any of the charges.
The third charge was over a rape accusation involving a woman who also said she had a consensual relationship with the Oscar-winning producer. Under New York law, the third-degree rape charge carries a lesser penalty than the other two counts.
Weinstein denies all the charges. In an unusual exchange with the judge during some legal arguments before the partial verdict was disclosed Wednesday, he insisted it was unfair to continue the trial after two jurors came forward with concerns about the proceedings.
βI canβt be judged by a situation thatβs going on like this,β said Weinstein, 73, saying the judge was βendangeringβ him.
Jury-room strains started leaking into public view Friday, when a juror askedΒ to be excusedΒ because he felt another was being treated unfairly. Then Monday, the forepersonΒ complained that other jurors were pushing peopleΒ to change their minds and talking about information beyond the charges.
The man raised concerns again Wednesday. In a closed-door discussion with prosecutors, defense lawyers and the judge, the foreperson said another juror was yelling at him for sticking to his opinion and at one point vowed, βYou going to see me outside.β
βI feel afraid inside there,β the foreperson told the judge and attorneys, according to a transcript.
WeinsteinβsΒ initial convictionΒ five years ago seemed to cement the downfall of one of Hollywoodβs most powerful men in a pivotal moment for the #MeToo movement against sexual misconduct.
But that conviction wasΒ overturnedΒ last year, and the case was sent back for retrial in the same Manhattan courthouse.
Weinsteinβs accusers said he exploited his Tinseltown influence to dangle career help, get them alone and then trap and force them into sexual encounters.
His defense portrayed his accusers as Hollywood wannabes and hangers-on who willingly hooked up with him to court opportunity, then later said they were victimized to collect settlement funds and #MeToo approbation.
Miriam Haley, the producer and production assistant whom Weinstein was convicted β twice, now β of sexually assaulting, said outside court Wednesday that the new verdict βgives me hope.β
Accuser Kaja Sokola also called it βa big win for everyone,β even though Weinstein was acquitted of forcibly performing oral sex on her when she was a 19-year-old fashion model. Her allegation wasΒ addedΒ to the case after the retrial was ordered.
Weinstein also was convicted of rapingΒ another woman in California. He’sΒ appealingΒ that conviction.
The Associated Press generally does not name people who say they have been sexually assaulted, unless they agree to be identified. Haley, Mann and Sokola did so.
