Harvey Weinstein Convicted In New York Retrial

A 12-person jury handed down one guilty verdict and acquitted him on another charge after six days of deliberation.

Harvey Weinstein was convicted in a New York sex-crimes retrial that rehashed some of the defining accusations of his original case.

A 12-person jury handed down one guilty verdict and acquitted him on another charge after six days of deliberation.

The jury found Weinstein guilty of a first-degree criminal sexual act. The charge stemmed from his assault of former production assistant Miriam Haley in 2006.

The guilty first-degree criminal sexual act conviction would fall under time served, “and that clock is already running.”

However, the jury did not convict him of a second first-degree criminal sexual act charge stemming from his alleged assault of Kaja Sokola in 2002.

The jury has not yet reached a verdict on the third count of third-degree rape and will continue deliberations Thursday.

Weinstein’s retrial, which began in April, brought the former Hollywood boss to court after a 2020 conviction and his 23-year sentence were overturned.