Harvey Weinstein did not testify in
his own defense during his trial. But on Wednesday, March 11, 2020, moments before he was sentenced to 23 years in prison for
two felony charges, he finally spoke up in court.
In comments that stretched for about
20 minutes, Weinstein expressed remorse, defended his relationships with the
women who testified against him, said he was "confused," bragged
about the charity money he raised after 9/11 and Superstorm Sandy, lamented
that his children won't speak to him and fretted about the future of the
American legal system.
His statement was unexpected and,
perhaps, unwise. In general, defendants like Weinstein, who plans to appeal his
guilty verdict and faces other rape and sexual assault charges in Los Angeles,
are advised not to speak because what they say can be used against them,
according to Michelle Simpson Tuegel, an attorney who has worked in criminal
defense.
Here is the full court transcript of
his comments:
First of all, to all the women who
testified, we may have different truths, but I have great remorse for all of
you. I have great remorse for all the men and women going through this crisis
right now in our country.
You know, the movement started
basically with me, and I think what happened, you know, I was the first
example, and now there are thousands of men who are being accused and a
regeneration of things that I think none of us understood.
I think that -- I can't help looking
at Jessica and Mimi and hope that something of our old friendship in me could
emerge, but I'm sure like me, they have lawyers who say to them be careful of
what you say.
I read, you know, those letters
where people talked about, you know, missing you, loving you, that kind of
thing. As you know, having a serious friendship, that is what I believe that I
had with Mimi and Jessica. You know, I really, really was maybe hypnotic and
under that impression that I had that feeling, that I had that relationship.
That five years with Jessica and the
years that I knew Mimi were always filled with, don't go on the plane Harv, I
want to have dinner with you first from Mimi. Or, Harv, whatever, let's get, you
know, can you look at this idea I have for a television series. Or Harv, I'm in
Cannes, can I go to the premier. Or Jessica, can I get into the Soho Club,
which is a very exclusive, tough place to get into. But she needed it for
herself. I got her a job at the Peninsula Hotel which she excelled at for
awhile.
I'm not going to say these aren't
great people, I had wonderful times with these people, you know. It is just I'm
totally confused and I think men are confused about all of these issues.
You know, I just -- dealing with the
thousands of men and women who are losing due process, I'm worried about this
country in a sense too. I'm worried there is a repeat of the blacklist there
was in the 1950's when lots of men like myself, Dalton Trumbo, one of the great
examples, did not work, went to jail because people thought they were
communists.
You know, there was a scare, and
that is what happened, and I think that is what is happening now all over this
country.
Two years ago, we wrote a letter to
15 friends, I think, the ADA quoted part of it, but the part of it that was the
most important part was I'm a builder, I know how to build, and I know how to
generate, you know, things on a charitable nature, and I know how to pass my
success forward.
I think even Mimi and Jessica would
say that I was generous, you know, in that part of the relationship.
The thing that I wanted to do in
that letter was I wanted to build a hospital, but not a hospital like the
regular hospital, a hospital that deals with this, rehabilitation and
redemption; people losing their jobs over the fact they testified for me, or
people being afraid to testify that they will lose their jobs. That is not the
right atmosphere for this United States of America. It is wrong, you know, and
that is what is happening. Everybody is on some sort of blacklist.
I had no great powers in this
industry. Miramax, at the height of its fame, was a smaller company than by far
any Walt Disney, any Sony, Paramount. I could not blackball anybody, because if
I said don't use that actress, the guys at Warner Brothers would say I'm going
to use it to ... spite that bastard, whatever. That is what it was. But it
became blown up like power, power, power. I was not about power, I was about
making great movies, I was a perfectionist, and I think I drove myself crazy.
I'm not going to also run away from
what the District Attorney said about some of the things I did say. I had a
fight with my brother, yes, people said I said bad things to people, but there
are so many people, thousands of people who would say great things about me.
Sixty executives in this industry
were trained by me. They are at the top of their field. They were running
studios in top positions in this country.
When I was an assistant at
Paramount, they said if you are five minutes late, don't come in, or they would
black me the whole day.
There never was in our industry a
book that said this is how it should be. We always passed it on from assistant
to assistant. An assistant was almost like if you were my assistant, it was
like going to the Marine Corps, I mean could you survive two years with me and
then become an executive. And those two years were tough, and I admit it.
If I had to do it over again, I
would not do it that way. If I had to do a lot of things over, I would care
less about the movies and care more about my children, family, and other people
and friends and other people in this life.
The thing for me is I have not seen
my three older children since the newspaper, since the New Yorker article came
out; not the New York Times, but the New Yorker article, so I have not seen
them. I just have no idea what they are doing, and I'm in no communication with
them, that for me is hell on earth.
I just think my empathy has grown
over the last 2-1/2 years. I can look at everybody there, you know, and just say,
you know, I understand things, I empathize, I feel things, and I was not that
person until this crisis started. I have to just say that.
I mean that part of this is such a
tough process and has come out where I have learned so many things. I never thought
I could deal with or things I dealt with in Arizona. I said, I'll build this
hospital blah, blah, blah. I said to two 15-year-olds what would you name the
hospital, they said the Wonder Woman Hospital. I said you have to think of like
a Greek God. He said Athena. Those two 15-year-olds, because they were all part
of this group, were hooked on opiates and whatever, and you know, prostituting
themselves to make money for it.
I met all sorts of people and I have
grown.
For
me, the idea of perfection in art and business is over. My mission is to help
people. And I also want to make one clear statement. My wife Eve (my first
wife) and my wife Georgina knew nothing about this.
I went to extraordinary lengths to
hide my extramarital affairs; that was a terrible thing that I did by having
those extramarital affairs, and God knows if I could take it back, I would. I
know everybody in this room feels the same way.
It had nothing to do with anything.
I was unfaithful to both, and I just cannot tell you how bad I feel about that.
You know, I never see my children
again and they are everything to me in this world.
You know, when I deal with subjects
like this, I don't wish for vengeance, I wish for understanding. That is why I
wanted to build a hospital. I wanted to build a hospital where if somebody is
accused of something, they work, women, men, me too, they work with accredited
groups that come in and help them and help them grow.
You know, I wanted to testify, but
they told me all these things the District Attorney just said would come in my
way before I testified. I wanted to talk to everybody, but anyhow, they all
came up as it is. Now you should know some of the other side of that because I
recognized the voices in those.
One of those voices, one -- I lost
my train of thought. I just recognized some of the names who complained, but
what was known about me was with the toughness came the kindness, the person
who probably hates me the most in this world, their daughter has a situation
where she needs the help of a great doctor. I got her that doctor. That doctor
is there to date with her.
Her father could not get that
doctor. This is the person who hates me the most in this company. When his
mother was sick I helped him with a doctor too. There was not any request that
I refused on the part of the people who worked with me.
As far as the million dollars is
concerned, I wrote a check out from the company, but I reimbursed the company
because that is the way we did it. That million dollars was mine and I will say
that over and over again.
9/11 happened, and I woke up two
days later, I called John Seiss, I said we have to do something for New York,
not only for the money, but for the attitude. We raised $100 million dollars
free of expenses.
Ask the police who got that money.
Ask the firemen if they respect me. Ask the workers if they respect me, and
most of all, ask the victims of 9/11 who received $35 million dollars of that
$100 million dollars if they respect me.
You know, when you want to
investigate, take both sides into the equation, then when Sandy happened and
people lost their jobs, and people lost their houses, again, we went to the
board and we raised $77 million dollars.
Ask the guy in Coney Island, ask the
guy in Far Rockaway when he lost his business and we were able to walk in there
and save his business; ask him if he likes me.
Ask the captain who was killed in
action. I took his children to the Super Bowl and to the Academy Awards because
somebody had to do it. I did it with Steve Tisch. There are so many examples of
that.
Robin Hood (Foundation) raised $2.5
billion dollars for the children and people of New York City. We built schools,
built advocacy groups. I'm not saying I was a great part of it, but I was one
of the board there and 22 years, and I had a lot to say and a lot to do. (Paul
Tudor) Jones was the one who deserved the credit, but $2.5 billion dollars to
build schools. I showed it by my work.
You can't achieve what we achieved
at AmFar. You cannot achieve what we achieved at AmFar without doing the hard
work, getting the people, and we raised $170 million dollars and I started with
AmFar. People would not touch each other, like the virus today, people would
not touch each other. They were scared of AIDS and there were three hundred
people who raised $300,000 the first night.
The year I left AmFar, we raised $30
million dollars and $170 million dollars overall. I worked too hard. As a
result of working too hard, I felt too much pressure on myself. I really feel
the remorse of this situation, I feel it deeply in my heart. I feel emotional,
I feel like to go and talk to you guys, you know, just really, really caring
and really trying and really trying to be a better person. Thank you, your
Honor, for the time.
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It's astonishing that Weinstein feels the need to point the finger elsewhere for his actions, rather than hold up a mirror to himself. That's gutsy. Stupid, arrogant, but gutsy.
In essence, he's saying, "You women, YOU did this to ME." Nothing about those horrible, terrible, nauseating things I did to all of you. Wow.
Well, 23 years is plenty of time to think about what you've done. Plus, that is only in New York State. It doesn't include any additional time or charges pending in California.
But, hey. It's only Thursday.