Weinstein’s spokesman, Juda Engelmayer, told AFP before Tuesday’s hearing: “He is hopeful and expects a fair process where the facts will vindicate him.”
Weinstein, 74, and in a wheelchair due to ill-health, is already serving a 16-year prison term in a California case for the rape of a European actress more than a decade ago. He is appealing that conviction with a hearing scheduled for April 23.
He appeared gaunt as he was wheeled in on Tuesday. He wore a grey-textured tie and dark suit, and a court officer unshackled him before potential jurors entered court.
Weinstein spoke in a slow, deep voice to confirm he agreed to a legal technicality.
The Oscar-winning Weinstein has faced a litany of prosecutions since sexual assault allegations against him exploded into public in 2017 – helping to spur the “MeToo” movement.
The jury in June’s proceedings convicted Weinstein of sexual assault against movie producer Miriam Haley. He is appealing that conviction. He was acquitted of sexual assault against Polish-born actor Kaja Sokola.
Farber said Weinstein could not be cross-examined on the convictions that are being appealed.
Haley testified in Weinstein’s original 2020 conviction, which resulted in a 23-year prison term, which was thrown out in 2024 after an appeals court found irregularities in the way witnesses were presented.
‘Threatened and derided’
Weinstein has hired a new legal team, including Jacob Kaplan and Marc Agnifilo, who represents high profile figures including rapper Sean “Diddy” Combs.
Weinstein has claimed to be under threat at the notorious Rikers Island jail complex in the Bronx where he is being held, leaving him mostly in solitary confinement.
“I’m constantly threatened and derided. I wouldn’t last long out there,” he told the Hollywood Reporter at the start of the year.
He claimed to have been punched “hard in the face” while waiting to make a telephone call in the prison.
“I fell on the floor, bleeding everywhere. I was hurt really badly,” he told the Reporter.
- Agence France-Presse