The Court Was Right To Overturn Harvey Weinstein's Rape Conviction
The ruling has nothing to do with #MeToo. It is about ensuring a fair trial—a principle that applies no matter how unsympathetic the defendant.

There are few high-profile criminal defendants as unsympathetic as Harvey Weinstein, the erstwhile Hollywood mogul whose alleged sexual misconduct against women was so pervasive that it was reportedly an open secret in celebrity circles. So the New York Court of Appeals' decision yesterday overturning his sex crime convictions in that state may have seemed to represent something deeper: backlash to the #MeToo movement, how powerful men are held to a less robust standard of justice, how we don't take survivors of sexual assault seriously.
In reality, it was about none of those things. It was actually about a criminal defendant receiving a fair trial—an uncontroversial premise in most cases. This case admittedly isn't like most cases. The premise should still be uncontroversial.
In February 2020, Weinstein was convicted of first-degree criminal sexual assault and third-degree rape after three women testified about nonconsensual encounters with him. But during his trial, the prosecution convinced the judge to allow three additional witnesses to testify about their experiences with Weinstein as well, despite that their testimony related to alleged misconduct for which Weinstein wasn't charged.
That was a fatal error, said the New York Court of Appeals.
"We conclude that the trial court erroneously admitted testimony of uncharged, alleged prior sexual acts against persons other than the complainants of the underlying crimes," wrote Judge Jenny Rivera for the 4–3 majority ruling. "The only evidence against defendant was the complainants' testimony, and the result of the court's rulings, on the one hand, was to bolster their credibility and diminish defendant's character before the jury. On the other hand, the threat of a cross-examination highlighting these untested allegations undermined defendant's right to testify. The remedy for these egregious errors is a new trial."
At the heart of that decision is People v. Molineux, a landmark New York ruling that significantly hamstrings the government's ability to introduce evidence of uncharged conduct, as it could unfairly prejudice a jury against the defendant. According to that 1901 decision, the Molineux rule "is the product of that same humane and enlightened public spirit which, speaking through our common law, has decreed that every person charged with the commission of a crime shall be protected by the presumption of innocence until [they have] been proven guilty beyond a reasonable doubt."
There are ways to dance around that rule, but they're limited. Most notably, Molineux begins with somewhat of a litmus test: Does the testimony merely establish propensity for criminality? If the answer to that is "yes," then that testimony must be excluded. And in Weinstein's case, the appeals court ruled, the answer to that question was "yes."
The court's decision doesn't mean Weinstein is innocent. It means he deserves a fair proceeding. And he will still await that new proceeding behind bars, as he was also sentenced to 16 years in prison by a California court after a jury found him guilty of three sex crimes there.
In dissent, Judge Madeline Singas said the testimony detailing uncharged conduct rose above mere propensity in that it helped rebut longstanding myths about rape victims that could have tainted a jury's evaluation. There are indeed many such myths, including the notion that credible victims immediately report attacks and sever any relationship with their attackers.
"But justice for sexual assault victims is not incompatible with well-established rules of evidence designed to ensure that criminal convictions result only from the illegal conduct charged," countered Rivera. "Indeed, just as rape myths may impact the trier of fact's deliberative process, propensity evidence has a bias-inducing effect on jurors and tends to undermine the truth-seeking function of trials."
The #MeToo movement was in many ways a necessary corrective to years of unacceptable behavior by powerful men, including Weinstein, who, in some sense, were genuinely above the law. The solution, however, is not to make them beneath it. "Under our system of justice, the accused has a right to be held to account only for the crime charged," wrote Rivera. "It is our solemn duty to diligently guard these rights regardless of the crime charged, the reputation of the accused, or the pressure to convict."
Editor's Note: As of February 29, 2024, commenting privileges on reason.com posts are limited to Reason Plus subscribers. Past commenters are grandfathered in for a temporary period. Subscribe here to preserve your ability to comment. Your Reason Plus subscription also gives you an ad-free version of reason.com, along with full access to the digital edition and archives of Reason magazine. We request that comments be civil and on-topic. We do not moderate or assume any responsibility for comments, which are owned by the readers who post them. Comments do not represent the views of reason.com or Reason Foundation. We reserve the right to delete any comment and ban commenters for any reason at any time. Comments may only be edited within 5 minutes of posting. Report abuses.
Please
to post comments
Now do the Bragg trial. We've had 3 days of half assed character assassination to convince a jury of a conspiracy that Trump was not charged with that the prosecutor has no jurisdiction over.
It's about getting a conviction before November. Not about a fair trial or an appeal proof verdict.
It's a different premise. Prosecutorual egomania and political bias are far different from the basic procedural rules of evidence and the operation of the court. The judge in the original trial should have ruled the testimony of those three women as inadmissible. They would have likely still gotten a conviction since I doubt anyone in the free world thought the guy was innocent.
Merchan's first procedural error was refusing to dismiss misdemeanor charges that are past the statute of limitations based upon an unspecified scheme that purported to elevate accounting entries into an unspecified felony. Every ruling he has made since is by definition procedural error because the entire trial is illegitimate.
Yes, yes, you are oppressed. I get it. Now do you feel better?
Dummy.
It is not a different premise. The entire testimony the last 3 days us unrelated to Stormy about other stories Cohen was not paid for, the crime Bragg is trying to use.
In the Carroll lawsuit the plaintiff was allowed to introduce testimony from others besides herself.
How are you wrong on every topic. Are you DoL?
Cite?
I wonder what Mike Liarson is up to.
Writing stories about porn and abortion. Didn't you see his article the other day?
He made it the fuck up.
New York Court of Appeals' decision yesterday overturning his sex crime convictions in that state
Thank God, now he can get back to his two passion projects: gun control and finding O.J.'s real killer.
Does this also apply to E. Jean Carroll?
That's (D)ifferent.
Possibly, but probably not. The Weinstein case is a criminal case, and the Carroll case is civil, so the rules of evidence are not necessarily the same.
Gfys hypocrite.
Yeah, once again, even ignoring the tangents of E. Jean Carroll, Justice Kavanaugh, Jeffry Epstein, all the potential allegations against Hunter or Joe, really bold to say this sort of thing 4 yrs. later, well after the #MeToo movement collapsed under the weight of its own vindictiveness.
Another instance where jurisprudence and Bayes' Theorem diverge.
"It is about ensuring a fair trial—a principle that applies no matter how unsympathetic the defendant."
I agree, unless you're a Republican.
This was a result of a political bias generated by popular activism. I don’t know if the judges who overturned the conviction publicly noted that, but it’s what happened.
This is only one of many high profile NY cases in which partisan bias was displayed. A NY judge apparently claimed “the second amendment doesn’t apply in this courtroom” and instructed the jury to ignore jury nullification. The Trump trial is self explanatory. Many defense attorneys in NY could claim their client also faced political bias.
If anyone was STILL under the illusion that democrats actually cared about equity or criminal justice reform – well, they can get out of it now. To punish their political enemies, they will explore all options and enable all sorts of novel legal theories. Trump telling Zelensky to look into an ongoing case was treason, but Biden offhandedly giving Iran permission to bomb Israel is….. sympathetic old man making an oopsie?
Just get rid of the Democrats.
Seems like the only option at this point.
"Never confuse a court of law with a hall of justice".
- someone somewhere
There’s a lesson here regarding conducting an impartial trial to begin with, and this lesson so far is lost on (most of) the Reason staff, certainly the NYC prosecutorial staff and Fulton Co., GA ditto.
And in the cases mentioned here, the people involved could avoid the inevitable, harmful, backlash unleashed toward the (obviously political) corruption involved.
But the power of TDS among the lefty shits of America is truly amazing; perhaps they do need some slapping down to grow up.
I continue to be amazed at otherwise sentient humans who will judge Trump on the adolescent (and particular) focus on personality.
Grow up, assholes! HS is not life! You will, sooner or later, have to make choices governed by tradeoffs.
Only stupid fucks assume otherwise, right, that asshole squirrell, TDS-addled Sandy and brandyshit.
All of you, please sit on a barbed-wire-wrapped broom-stick. The world will thank you.
There’s a lesson here regarding conducting an impartial trial to begin with, and this lesson so far is lost on (most of) the Reason staff, certainly the NYC prosecutorial staff and Fulton Co., GA ditto.
Yeah. The idea that they’ve poisoned any number of juries if not corroded justice either doesn’t occur to them or it does.
It’s entirely possible, even likely, that Weinstein raped one or more of those women, but because they had to turn it into an OJ Simpson-style ‘reality TV as law’ affair no one will ever know or be punished and maybe not even the next time there’s a he said/she said + all her girlfriends piling on *without* the TV cameras.
It’s effectively turning into the inverse of Blackstone’s Ratio; “How many ‘she woke up in the hospital’ rapists are you willing to release or forego prosecuting so that you can convict-with-overturn-on-appeal Harvey Weinstein or Donald Trump? How many creepy-but-innocent men (read: men who aren't 6 ft. tall and white with a 6+ figure income) are you going to wrongly convict because some girl had buyer's remorse when all her friends found out?”
wrote Judge Jenny Rivera for the 4–3 majority ruling.
By such thin margins do our freedoms still breathe.
Occasionally, faint traces appear of the once impartial U.S. justice system, but they are few and far between and getting fainter as political partisanship takes hold of jury deliberations.
Before MeToo you'd never see a court do like this one and endorse an alleged "expert" witness who proceeds to inform the jury that there's nothing a victim can do that diminishes their credibility. Stayed friends and business associates, or didn't, both are 'consistent with a legitimate claim'. Get caught lying about some details, no problem, it's a "rape myth" that victims don't "misremember". Change your story, don't change your story, both prove the victim is telling the truth. Report it immediately, report it years later, doesn't matter.
It's good a bare majority stood up for not allowing propensity evidence, but they upheld an "expert" telling the jury that anything they might think calls credibility into question is just a 'rape myth'. That's not entirely unrelated to the movement explicitly aimed at promoting believing no matter what.
How does that square with what the Innocence Project proved?
Geez, I am so glad that Binion is concerned with the operation of the NYC court system, and the need for fairness toward defendants. And that we must make it fair for the serial rapist(?) is laudable.
Is there perhaps another case in the NYC court system where this concern for procedural fairness might apply? 🙂