Wednesday,  December 11 , 2024

Linkedin Pinterest
News / Nation & World

Prosecutor says Oscar-winning actor Kevin Spacey is ‘a sexual bully’ who preys on men

By BRIAN MELLEY, Associated Press
Published: June 30, 2023, 7:49am

LONDON (AP) — Oscar-winning actor Kevin Spacey gets a thrill by preying on other men, a prosecutor told jurors during his sexual assault trial Friday in a London courtroom.

Spacey is “a man who does not respect personal boundaries or space, a man who it would seem delights in making others feel powerless and uncomfortable — a sexual bully,” Prosecutor Christine Agnew said in her opening statement. “His preferred method of assault is, it appears, to grab aggressively other men in the crotch.”

The four men who have accused Spacey of sexual assault did not know each other, but all “had the misfortune to attract” his attention, she said.

Spacey, 63, has pleaded not guilty to a dozen charges including sexual assault, indecent assault and causing a person to engage in penetrative sexual activity without consent.

Defense lawyer Patrick Gibbs said Spacey denied all allegations of nonconsensual activity and told jurors to ask themselves as they listened to the evidence what — if anything — had happened.

“What has been reimagined with a sinister spin?” Gibbs said. “What has been made up or twisted?”

He said jurors would hear truths, half-truths, deliberate exaggerations and lies.

The charges involve men now in their 30s or 40s and date from 2001 to 2013. That covers most of the decade when Spacey lived in Britain and served as artistic director of the Old Vic Theatre until 2015.

The charges include seven counts against one man and five counts against three others. Several of the charges involve multiple occasions when he was said to have indecently or sexually assaulted an alleged victim.

Stay informed on what is happening in Clark County, WA and beyond for only
$99/year

The charges allege the acts were not consensual and Spacey did not “reasonably believe” the men had consented.

The two-time Academy Award winner arrived at court by cab more than two hours early. He wore spectacles and was dressed in a light gray suit, white shirt and gold tie. Spacey entered the courtroom with a large binder of documents under his arm. After he sat down behind his lawyer, he pulled a pair of reading glasses from his shirt pocket and began leafing through the pages.

When the judge took the bench, Spacey moved into the dock, where he sat behind a window in the middle of the packed courtroom. A guard sat in the corner of the room.

The actor is identified in court by his full name, Kevin Spacey Fowler.

A jury of nine men and five women, including two alternates, will decide his fate during the four-week trial in Southwark Crown Court.

“I am sure the defendant will be gratified to know that many of you will know his name or have seen his films,” Justice Mark Wall said Wednesday to potential jurors during the brief selection process.

Spacey is free on bail. He has homes in London and the U.S.

The stakes for Spacey are high. A conviction could send him to prison while an acquittal could allow for a career comeback.

“There are people right now who are ready to hire me the moment I am cleared of these charges in London,” Spacey said in an interview published this month in Germany’s Zeit magazine.

Spacey became one of the most celebrated actors of his generation in the 1990s, starring in films including “Glengarry Glen Ross” and “LA Confidential.”

He has earned multiple prominent acting awards for the theater, the silver screen and television. He won an Academy Award for supporting actor in “The Usual Suspects” in 1995 and best actor Oscar for the 1999 movie “American Beauty.”

Spacey recently had his first film role in several years, appearing in 2022 in Italian director Franco Nero’s “The Man Who Drew God,” and playing the late Croatian President Franjo Tudjman in the biopic “Once Upon a Time in Croatia.” He also stars in the unreleased U.S. film “Peter Five Eight.”

Support local journalism

Your tax-deductible donation to The Columbian’s Community Funded Journalism program will contribute to better local reporting on key issues, including homelessness, housing, transportation and the environment. Reporters will focus on narrative, investigative and data-driven storytelling.

Local journalism needs your help. It’s an essential part of a healthy community and a healthy democracy.

Community Funded Journalism logo
Loading...