Hollywood Legal: Weinstein Denies Rose McGowan Rape Accusations Using Emails From Affleck & Her Former Manager

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Though Harvey Weinstein has remained mostly quiet since dozens of women accused him of sexual harassment and assault, the movie mogul is defending himself after the debut of Rose McGowan’s E! docuseries Citizen Rose and her memoir Brave. In a statement to Deadline, Weinstein lawyer Ben Brafman denied McGowan’s claims that she was sexually assaulted by the producer in 1997, calling the actor’s allegations “a bold lie.” Brafman defended his client by releasing two emails sent to Weinstein, in which Ben Affleck and McGowan’s former manager Jill Messick contradict the actress’s claims.

As Deadline points out, the email from Affleck was dated July 26, 2017, nearly three months before The New Yorker and New York Times released bombshell reports detailing McGowan’s allegations, along with accusations from many other women in Hollywood. This means Affleck might not have known the full scale of what he was responding to when he wrote the email, a full decade after the events.

In Affleck’s email, he reportedly wrote:

[Rose] never told me nor did I ever infer that she was attacked by anyone. Any accounts to the contrary are false. I have no knowledge about anything Rose did or claimed to have done.

This email seemingly clashes with a passage in McGowan’s new book Brave, in which she describes telling Affleck, her co-star in Phantoms,about the alleged assault at the Sundance Film Festival. McGowan claims Affleck responded by saying, “Goddammit! I told him to stop doing that!”

Last November, after the reports came out — while he was dealing with his own groping allegations — Affleck told Savannah Guthrie on the Today show, “I believe Rose, I support her, I really like and admire her tenacity, and I wish her the best.”

In the other email provided by Weinstein’s lawyer, McGowan’s manager at the time of the alleged assault, Jill Messick, reportedly wrote:

When we met up the following day, she hesitantly told me of her own accord that during the meeting that night before she had gotten into a hot tub with Mr. Weinstein. She was very clear about the fact that getting into that hot tub was something that she did consensually and that in hindsight it was also something that she regretted having done.

In Brave, McGowan claims that when she told her manager of the encounter shortly after, her manager “counseled me to see it as something that could help my career in the long run.”

McGowan responded to the emails on Twitter:



McGowan received a $100,000 settlement from Weinstein in 1997. She was also reportedly offered an additional $1 million in hush money to sign a nondisclosure agreement, which she refused.

http://deadline.com/2018/01/harvey-...essick-ben-affleck-sexual-assault-1202274875/
 


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The family is right. McGowan holds some responsibility for that suicide. :smh: People she going after like Milano and her manager need to just check this deranged bitch.
 
I feel so glad that I don't have a fucking clue who this crazy bitch is :dunno:
 
Harvey Weinstein Told Cara Delevingne She Needed to ‘Get a Beard’
By Amanda Arnold@aMandolinz
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Photo: Taylor Hill/WireImage

While Cara Delevingne isn’t sure whether being openly queer has influenced her acting career in any lasting way, she says she doesn’t think it helped her when she was just starting out. Her evidence: the homophobic comments that disgraced Hollywood mogul Harvey Weinstein allegedly made to her, long before he tried to make her kiss another actress in front of him. It’s one of a few vulnerable subjects Delevingne touches on in an interview with Net-a-Porter, in which she opens up about everything from feeling voiceless as a supermodel to defining her sexuality. “I fucking hate it,” she says of the latter topic, before speaking more broadly to her experience as a queer woman in the industry and recounting the anecdote about Weinstein, which she says was one of her first interactions with him.

“One of the first things Harvey Weinstein ever said to me was, ‘You will never make it in this industry as a gay woman — get a beard,’” she says. She also claims that he when she was starting to audition for screen roles, Weinstein would name famous women and ask her if she had ever slept with them. “I just thought: This is insane,” Delevingne says.

Weinstein’s prediction didn’t hold up. While it is inarguable that queer female celebrities still face homophobia — just last week, Kristen Stewart opened up about an unnamed Hollywood figure who warned her against holding hands with her girlfriend in public — Delevingne has objectively seen success in her career. She’s currently promoting Carnival Row, the new Amazon Prime show in which she appears alongside Orlando Bloom. Meanwhile, she’s also become a vocal advocate for LGBTQ youth and is in a happy, committed relationship with Ashley Benson. Though the couple has kept many details about their relationship under wraps, Delevingne isn’t apprehensive to talk about how much she loves her girlfriend.

“I never really trusted people, or felt worthy of it, and I always pushed them away,” she added. “[Benson is] the first person that has said: ‘You can’t push me away. I’m going to be nice to you, I love you.’ I’m just like, wait, so all I have to do is just let you be nice to me? Why have I never done that before?”
 
Rose McGowan Is Suing Harvey Weinstein for Racketeering
By Devon Ivie@devonsaysrelax
Photo: Ian West/PA Images via Getty Images
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More than two years after publicly alleging that Harvey Weinstein raped her at the start of her career, Rose McGowan is now suing Weinstein, as well as his former lawyers Lisa Bloom and David Boies, for racketeering. Per filings obtained by Vulture, the lawsuit alleges that Weinstein conspired with the two attorneys, as well as spy agency Black Cube, to “suppress and discredit” McGowan’s rape claim. “This case is about a diabolical and illegal effort by one of America’s most powerful men and his representatives to silence sexual-assault victims. And it is about the courageous women and journalists who persisted to reveal the truth,” the suit states. “McGowan has suffered tremendously from the defendant’s conspiracy and lies. Her book sales suffered; her expenses mounted; her job opportunities vanished; and her emotional health cratered. She has experienced trauma and depression from the defendants’ actions, and the deep betrayal will have life-long effects.”

In the lawsuit, McGowan claims that when Weinstein got wind of her plans to detail the alleged 1997 rape in her memoir, he, among other actions, tried to buy her silence, steal the manuscript, and hire someone from the Black Cube agency to infiltrate her inner circle to record their conversations. (Which the operative successfully did.) In response to the suit, Weinstein’s lawyer said McGowan is a “publicity seeker looking for money.”
In September, an excerpt from Jodi Kantor and Megan Twohey’s book, She Said, revealed that Bloom, a prominent victims’-rights attorney, was hired by Weinstein to discredit McGowan’s story. “I feel equipped to help you against the Roses of the world, because I have represented so many of them,” Bloom wrote in a particularly damning memo. “We can place an article re: her becoming increasingly unglued so that when someone Googles her this is what pops up and she’s discredited.” Bloom later confirmed that the memos featured in She Said were legitimate. She also apologized, “especially to the women,” for her short stint as a Weinstein employee.
 
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