Weinstein Accusers Hail His Surrender as Step Toward Justice

0
265


As disgraced Hollywood mogul Harvey Weinstein surrendered to authorities and was arrested on rape and other sex abuse and misconduct charges Friday morning, a drove of women hailed his arrest as a step toward justice and a symbol of hope for all abuse survivors.

Some of Weinstein’s most outspoken accusers, including actresses Rose McGowan and Asia Argento, took to social media as Weinstein made his way to a police precinct in lower Manhattan. In a powerful Instagram post, McGowan said she and other survivors “had given up hope that our rapist would be held accountable by law.”

“Twenty years ago, I swore that I would right this wrong,” she wrote. “Today we are one step closer to justice. We were young women who were assaulted by Weinstein and later terrorized by his vast network of complicity. I stand with my fellow survivors. May his arrest give hope to all victims and survivors everywhere that are telling their truths.”

McGowan accused Weinstein of raping her in 1997 and has been disrupting what she described as the culture of complicity in Hollywood. Through social media and her recent E! documentary “Citizen Rose,” McGowan has told her story and offered support to other survivors.

The Weinstein Ripple Effect

McGowan later appeared on “Megyn Kelly Today” after Weinstein left the precint in handcuffs, saying she doesn’t “ever want to see him again.

“I think they world could use that face being gone,” she told Megyn Kelly. “Predators eat people. And he ate a lot of my life, and I want my life back.”

McGowan admitted that while “his face is everywhere” since stories began circulating of the charges against Weinstein, “I haven’t had a sigle nightmare for the first time.”

When asked if she could ever forgive Weinstein, McGowan said, “I don’t want to. … It’s a very complex issue. Maybe I’ll get there someday. … I can say this, the man who pinned me down had handcuffs on him today.”

Argento tweeted when news broke of Weinstein’s intent to surrender: “BOOM!”

She continued writing Friday morning as Weinstein walked out of his car and turned himself in, saying she was “glued to the screen” watching the “perp walk.”

“Today Harvey Weinstein will take his first step on his inevitable descent to hell. We, the women, finally have real hope for justice,” she tweeted.

Argento told The New Yorker in its October 2017 exposé on Weinstein that the producer raped her when she was 21 in 1997. She has since taken other powerful figures to task in helping to lead the #MeToo movement. On Saturday, Argento gave a searing speech at the Cannes Film Festival calling out Weinstein and others “who still have to be held accountable.”

McGowan and Argento are just two of some 80 women who have publically accused Weinstein of assault or harassment. Weinstein has denied having nonconsensual sex. He did not speak or issue a statement upon his arrest Friday.

Dominique Huett, an actress and model who said Weinstein forcibly performed oral sex on her in a hotel in 2010, said Weinstein’s arrest “feels as if justice has begun to be served.”

“This was a very systematic pattern of abuse which was rarely considered a crime by a culture in the entertainment business that continually perpetuated it,” Huett said in a statement to NBC News. “I am sadly reminded of all of the women’s lives he destroyed and careers that were hindered from this abuse. I know a lot of women feel vindicated in regard to this arrest being held to standard as an illegal criminal act and the court process should reveal the verdict for the crimes of which he is accused in a court of law. This is a step in the right direction for abuse to be taken seriously and progress be made to abolish abuses of power.

Huett added that she feels for Weinstein’s family and children that they are “having to face these consequences at last for his behavior, criminally.”

Actress Mira Sorvino offered one simple word on Twitter: “#Justice.”

Sorvino claimed that Weinstein harassed her and tried to pressure her into a physical relationship. She and other women say the producer subsequently blacklisted them in the film industry and hurt their careers.

Annabella Sciorra was a rising actress in the 1990s when, she said, Weinstein raped her and sexually harassed her before “destroying” her career.

As news spread that Weinstein would turn himself in, she tweeted, “Anyone know where I can get front row seats?!”





Source : Nbcnewyork