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Bob Weinstein says he wants brother Harvey 'to get the justice he deserves' Harvey Weinstein expelled from Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences
(about 3 hours later)
The movie executive Bob Weinstein has launched an extraordinary attack on his elder sibling, the disgraced Harvey Weinstein, insisting he had no idea about “the type of predator that he was” and saying he is sickened by his “depraved” sibling’s apparent lack of remorse over decades of alleged sexual misconduct. The disgraced film producer Harvey Weinstein has been expelled from the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences, in an unprecedented move after a special meeting held in Los Angeles on Saturday morning.
In an interview with the Hollywood Reporter, the younger Weinstein who cofounded Miramax and The Weinstein Company (TWC) said: “I want him to get the justice that he deserves.” “We do so not simply to separate ourselves from someone who does not merit the respect of his colleagues but also to send a message that the era of willful ignorance and shameful complicity in sexually predatory behavior and workplace harassment in our industry is over,” the Academy board said in a statement.
Later on Saturday, the board of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences was due to hold an emergency meeting to discuss potential action against the elder Weinstein, 65, who since the first accusations emerged last week has faced allegations of sexual misconduct from more than two dozen women and three of rape. “What’s at issue here is a deeply troubling problem that has no place in our society. The board continues to work to establish ethical standards of conduct that all Academy members will be expected to exemplify.”
Police forces in the US and the UK have announced that they are investigating allegations. Weinstein has apologised for elements of his past behaviour but unequivocally denied any allegations of non-consensual sex. He has also said he hopes to get a second chance. Weinstein, 65, faces allegations of sexual misconduct from more than two dozen women and three of rape. He has apologized for having “caused a lot of pain” but has forcefully denied all allegations of nonconsensual sex. It is believed he is currently in Arizona, receiving “treatment” related to his behavior.
In a statement issued after the New Yorker detailed allegations of rape, the TWC board said it was “shocked and dismayed” and “committed to assisting with our full energies in all criminal or other investigations of these alleged acts”. In its 90-year history, the Academy has expelled only one other member, and only because 83-year-old Carmine Caridi, an actor, violated specific written rules about sharing screener copies of films in 2004. No member has been expelled for unethical or potentially criminal behavior, including figures such as Roman Polanski, Bill Cosby and Mel Gibson, who have had high-profile sexual or domestic assault allegations made against them.
The academy’s 54-member board of governors needed a two-thirds vote to trigger an expulsion, according to its bylaws. It voted “well in excess” of that requirement, according to the Academy statement.
The Academy’s UK counterpart, Bafta, suspended Weinstein on Wednesday morning, calling his alleged behavior “completely unacceptable and incompatible with Bafta’s values”.
In an emotional interview with The Hollywood Reporter published on Saturday, even Weinstein’s own brother advocated his suspension. “I have a brother that’s indefensible and crazy,” said Bob Weinstein, 62 and an executive at The Weinstein Company (TWC). “I find myself in a waking nightmare. My brother has caused unconscionable suffering. As a father of three girls I say this with every bone in my body – I am heartbroken for the women that he has harmed.”
Prior to the decision others were less sure, arguing that pushing Weinstein out might set a difficult precedent.
“For the Academy to treat Harvey as if he is the only creep in the business is wrong,” Mitchell Block, a member of the short films and feature animation branch, told the Hollywood Reporter. “The problem is far larger than just Mr Weinstein. The silence about the other sociopaths is deafening. I think the Academy should not move hastily and take action until it fully understands the scope of the problem and formulates a clear policy.”
Weinstein has a complicated relationship with the Academy. On the one hand, according to a Quartz analysis, he is the second most-thanked person in Oscar award speeches over the past quarter-century, just behind Steven Spielberg and tied with God. His movies have been nominated for more than 300 Academy Awards. He won an Oscar himself as producer of the 1999 hit Shakespeare in Love.
On the other hand, some Hollywood insiders say Weinstein was more tolerated than loved – he has long been known for a gruff, abrasive demeanor. “He’s never been an insider with them,” one anonymous member told Daily Variety. “They’ve never really liked him.”
Many of the Academy rules around award-season lobbying were put in place in response to the type of aggressive campaigns Weinstein was famous for mounting.
The New York Times first reported allegations against Weinstein this month. More than 30 women have now accused the mega-producer of inappropriate sexual behavior, including four who have alleged that he raped them. The most recent rape allegation was levied by actor Rose McGowan on Twitter. In a string of tweets directed at Amazon Studios late on Thursday, she wrote: “HW raped me.”
Police forces in the US and the UK are investigating. In a statement issued after the New Yorker detailed allegations of rape, the TWC board said it was “shocked and dismayed” and “committed to assisting with our full energies in all criminal or other investigations of these alleged acts”.
Sallie Hofmeister, a spokesperson for Harvey Weinstein, said: “Any allegations of non-consensual sex are unequivocally denied by Mr Weinstein. With respect to any women who have made allegations on the record, Mr Weinstein believes that all of these relationships were consensual.”Sallie Hofmeister, a spokesperson for Harvey Weinstein, said: “Any allegations of non-consensual sex are unequivocally denied by Mr Weinstein. With respect to any women who have made allegations on the record, Mr Weinstein believes that all of these relationships were consensual.”
The scandal has destroyed Harvey Weinstein’s reputation as one of Hollywood’s leading executives, which he acquired as a co-founder of the Miramax and Weinstein Company studios. The producer of Oscar-winning films The Artist and The English Patient, and patron to directors Quentin Tarantino and Steven Soderbergh, he was dropped by the TWC board soon after being placed on indefinite leave earlier this week, while he underwent therapy. In his Hollywood Reporter interview, Bob Weinstein said he had barely spoken to his brother in almost five years.
Bob Weinstein, 62, told the Hollywood Reporter he had barely spoken to his brother in almost five years. “I could not take his cheating, his lying and also his attitude toward everyone,” he said. While he said he was aware his brother was “philandering with every woman he could meet”, he insisted he had little idea about the alleged predatory harassment.
“I could not take his cheating, his lying and also his attitude toward everyone,” he said. While he said he was aware his brother was “philandering with every woman he could meet”, he insisted he had little idea about the alleged predatory harassment that has come to light. Weinstein insisted TWC could survive, in an interview in which, the Reporter said, he often became emotional. He and his brother, he said, ran separate companies so many of the people Harvey Weinstein did business with he had never met. “The members of the [TWC] board, including myself, did not know the extent of my brother’s actions,” he said.
“I have a brother that’s indefensible and crazy,” he said. “I find myself in a waking nightmare. My brother has caused unconscionable suffering. As a father of three girls I say this with every bone in my body – I am heartbroken for the women that he has harmed.”
Bob Weinstein insisted TWC could survive, despite widespread predictions it will be forced to close or sell parts or all of the business. “There is a plan to come out on the other side,” he said.
Weinstein often became emotional, the Reporter said. He and his brother, he said, ran separate companies so many of the people Harvey Weinstein did business with – actors, actresses – he had never met. He declined to discuss specifics of the case, including claims that the TWC board of directors were aware of settlements with several of his brother’s accusers.
“The members of the board, including myself, did not know the extent of my brother’s actions,” he said.
“I know him on a personal level better than anyone. It’s hard to describe how I feel that he took out the emptiness inside of him in so many sick and depraved ways. It’s a sickness but not a sickness that is excusable. It’s a sickness that’s inexcusable. And I, as a brother, understood and was aware as a family member, that my brother needed help and that something was wrong.”
He also said he believed the Academy should expel his brother. Its 54-member board, made up of leading actors, directors and executives including Tom Hanks, Whoopi Goldberg and Steven Spielberg, was meeting to consider that question on Saturday. The Oscar awarded to the producer in 1999 for his work on Shakespeare In Love may also be considered for nullification, according to reports.
The British Academy Film Awards (Bafta) has suspended Weinstein’s membership, and organisers of the Cannes film festival said they were dismayed.
Bob Weinstein said he was aware of some aspects of his brother’s behavior.
“I’ll tell you what I did know,” he told the Reporter. “Harvey was a bully, Harvey was arrogant, he treated people like shit all the time. That I knew. And I had to clean up for so many of his employee messes. People that came in crying to my office: ‘Your brother said this, that and the other.’ And I’d feel sick about it.”
Weinstein also said he was a victim of his brother’s abuse, including physical abuse.Weinstein also said he was a victim of his brother’s abuse, including physical abuse.
“I do not put myself in the category at all of those women that he hurt,” he said. “But it’s a complicated situation when it’s your brother doing the abusing to you as well. I saw it and I asked him to get help for many years. And that’s the truth. He avoided getting the help. We begged him. “I do not put myself in the category at all of those women that he hurt,” he said. “But it’s a complicated situation when it’s your brother doing the abusing to you as well. I saw it and I asked him to get help for many years. And that’s the truth. He avoided getting the help. We begged him.”
“This hurts, but I don’t feel an ounce of remorse coming from him, and that kills me too. When I heard his written, lame excuse Not an excuse. When I heard his admission of feeling remorse for the victims and then him cavalierly, almost crazily saying he was going to go out and take on the NRA [National Rifle Association], it was so disturbing to me. It was utter insanity. His brother should never be allowed back into the film industry, he said. “He lost his rights. He didn’t lose his rights to be rehabilitated as a human being. But as far as being in this town again? I mean, give me a break.”
“My daughters all felt sick hearing this because we understood he felt nothing. I don’t feel he feels anything to this day. I don’t.”
Bob Weinstein denied leaking information that contributed to the New York Times report that launched the scandal: “I didn’t and, you know, Harvey is suspicious of everybody. It’s unbelievable that even to this moment he is more concerned with who sold him out.”
Weinstein said his brother should never be allowed back into the film industry.
“He lost his rights,” he said. “He didn’t lose his rights to be rehabilitated as a human being. But as far as being in this town again? I mean, give me a break.”