Danny Masterson Charged with Three Counts of Rape "By Force or Fear" *GUILTY 2 of 3*

masterson.jpg



Danny Masterson Charged with Three Counts of Rape "By Force or Fear"
If convicted on all counts, the That '70s Show actor could face 45 years to life in prison.
By Anthony Breznican
June 17, 2020


Actor Danny Masterson has long been accused of acts of sexual violence, and on Wednesday the That ’70s Show actor was finally arrested after being charged with the rapes of three women in separate incidents dating back to 2001 and 2003.

Los Angeles County District Attorney Jackie Lacey's office charged the 44-year-old with three counts of "rape by force or fear." "If convicted as charged, the defendant faces a possible maximum sentence of 45 years to life in state prison," the district attorney's office said in a statement.

The complaint accuses him of raping a 23-year-old woman in 2001. He is also charged with committing two other assaults in 2003, one against a 28-year-old woman in April, and another against a 23-year-old woman between October and December of that year.



The case will be prosecuted by Deputy District Attorney Reinhold Mueller of the Sex Crimes Division, who stated that all of the alleged rapes occurred at the actor's Hollywood Hills home.

Prosecutors noted that they declined to file sexual assault charges against Masterson in two other cases, "one for insufficient evidence and the other based upon the statute of limitations for the crime alleged."


Masterson has been held on $3.3 million bail. He is represented by defense attorney Thomas Mesereau, who previously represented Bill Cosby, Michael Jackson and Mike Tyson against sex crime charges. In a statement to the Associated Press, Mesereau insisted that Masterson is innocent.

“We’re confident that he will be exonerated when all the evidence finally comes to light and witnesses have the opportunity to testify," the attorney said. “Obviously, Mr. Masterson and his wife are in complete shock considering that these nearly 20-year old allegations are suddenly resulting in charges being filed, but they and their family are comforted knowing that ultimately the truth will come out,” Mesereau said. “The people who know Mr. Masterson know his character and know the allegations to be false.”

The criminal complaint doesn't name the victims, but the timeline of the accusations matches those of four women who accused Masterson of sexual assault in 2016 and 2017 as part of the #MeToo movement. Last year, they sued Masterson, along with the Church of Scientology, to which he belongs, alleging that the powerful and secretive organization stalked and intimidated them for coming forward with their police reports. Masterson and Scientology officials all denied wrongdoing.

Masterson responded to the suit with a statement: “This is beyond ridiculous. I’m not going to fight my ex-girlfriend in the media like she’s been baiting me to do for more than two years. I will beat her in court—and look forward to it because the public will finally be able [to] learn the truth and see how I’ve been railroaded by this woman. And once her lawsuit is thrown out, I intend to sue her and the others who jumped on the bandwagon for the damage they caused me and my family.”

In the lawsuit, the women each claim Masterson forced himself on them or took advantage of them when they were intoxicated and unable to consent.

Masterson is set to be arraigned on Sept. 18.
 
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She got banned from the last trial .. bring it on!



Season 2 Support GIF by Friends
 
Well worth reading.

Seven decades this CULT has been around??

Why is it big people, LE, etc. won't talk of it or touch it??

You have YTers who are retired big LE people who even go on about taking down cults, etc. but when it comes to Scientology they won't utter a word about it or even breathe its name. WHY is that...

It is eery that I can read this and I see Daybells and another church. Neither church is involved in either case allegedly but signs are all over the place that they are... Am I saying that the churches committed the actual acts in these cases? No. Am I saying they don't want beliefs, teachings, ways and other things coming out in these cases and are overly interested without appearing to be and have fingers in them? Oh yes. Or that their very ways and teachings can lend to these things? YES I am.

Don't cloud the argument with facts. An interesting but disturbing read this was by Leah. MSM won't touch it, one can count on that.

Someone on this site that reminded me of a bird said MSM is REAL NEWS. I disagree but even IF what they report is real news (not), what they omit results in not a full real picture of anything.
 

By Dominic Patten
May 12, 2023 4:50pm

Three weeks after opening statements began, Danny Masterson’s rape retrial rested today. Yet, with the former That 70’s Show actor once again facing a trio of sexual assault charges and potentially years behind bars, the Church of Scientology is back in the courtroom spotlight.

After the prosecution ended its case early Friday and the defense called no witnesses, Los Angeles Superior Court Judge Charlaine Olmedo said closing arguments would start Tuesday. That could see the jury deliberating behind closed doors by Wednesday and a verdict in the following days.

However, partially overshadowing those deliberations might be a very serious sharing of information.

Somehow a lawyer representing the David Miscavige-led church, which is not a defendant in this criminal case, has come into possession of a large swath of the L.A. County District Attorney’s Office’s discovery material in this matter. Going off like a legal landmine, the revelation might see the prosecution referring the leak of sorts to the LAPD and perhaps even the state bar.

This all came to light two days ago when Deputy DA Reinhold Mueller told the court that the George Gascón-led office had received an email on May 2 from attorney Vicki Podberesky criticizing the way the church had been referenced in the retrial that began April 27. Stunningly, attached to that email, which had the subject line of “False reports of stalking and harassment by the Church of Scientology,” were 12 files containing the discovery material.

Whether the attachment of the files with the DA email from Podberesky was an oversight, an unintended consequence, a shot across the bow or just a dumb mistake, only the prosecution, the defense and the court are supposed to have such documents.

<snip>

The discovery material that Podberesky and perhaps her client possess contains personal emails, texts and more from the three Jane Does to police and others, some of which were used in the previous trial and this one, plus more “recently obtained” information.

The possession of that material by the Scientology-hired lawyer could constitute a violation of California’s Marsy’s Law, among other things.

More formally known as the California Victims’ Bill of Rights Act of 2008, Marsy’s Law is intended to ensure that victims are “to be treated with fairness and respect for his or her privacy and dignity, and to be free from intimidation, harassment, and abuse, throughout the criminal or juvenile justice process.” In testimony and in a civil case that names both Masterson and the Church of Scientology as defendants, the Janes Does — all of whom are former members of the church — and family members have spoken about being stalked, harassed and intimidated because of having reported the alleged rapes to law enforcement.

Along with the discovery material becoming public, and subsequent Leah Remini tweetstorm, it turns out that Podberesky recently met with LAPD Chief Michel Moore and filed complaints with the department on behalf of Scientology over “numerous unsubstantiated and false reports by the Masterson-complaining witnesses in which they allege the church has harassed them.”

With the jury out of the ninth-floor courtroom at the Clara Shortridge Foltz Criminal Justice Center today after the retrial rested, defense attorney Shawn Holley told a clearly displeased Judge Olmedo that neither she nor her colleague Phillip Cohen provided the material to Podberesky. Previously, Cohen, who also was Masterson’s defense lawyer in the first trial, denied that he had handed over the documents.

<snip>

Former O.J. Simpson and Lindsay Lohan lawyer Holley then tried to shift focus by stating there never was a protective order in the case and invoked the name of former Masterson defense attorney Tom Mesereau. Stating that “Nothing untoward has occurred, and Ms. Podberesky is willing to come to court to say so,” Holley also suggested that the material could have emerged out of the currently paused civil case – which seems unlikely but still is not permitted.
 
"Former O.J. Simpson and Lindsay Lohan lawyer Holley".


I would have loved to see them tried together. And I bet Jamie Lee Curtis was very disappointed in Lindsay.
 
Another mistrial. Just WTF?! I have seen 3 in a row. Over 3 years. Really?! You know what it was?. COVID. Yeah. Everything that is wrong is because of COVID.
"COVID! The world's latest excuse for everything! Brought to by people worldwide!".
 

By Dominic Patten
May 12, 2023 4:50pm

Three weeks after opening statements began, Danny Masterson’s rape retrial rested today. Yet, with the former That 70’s Show actor once again facing a trio of sexual assault charges and potentially years behind bars, the Church of Scientology is back in the courtroom spotlight.

After the prosecution ended its case early Friday and the defense called no witnesses, Los Angeles Superior Court Judge Charlaine Olmedo said closing arguments would start Tuesday. That could see the jury deliberating behind closed doors by Wednesday and a verdict in the following days.

However, partially overshadowing those deliberations might be a very serious sharing of information.

Somehow a lawyer representing the David Miscavige-led church, which is not a defendant in this criminal case, has come into possession of a large swath of the L.A. County District Attorney’s Office’s discovery material in this matter. Going off like a legal landmine, the revelation might see the prosecution referring the leak of sorts to the LAPD and perhaps even the state bar.

This all came to light two days ago when Deputy DA Reinhold Mueller told the court that the George Gascón-led office had received an email on May 2 from attorney Vicki Podberesky criticizing the way the church had been referenced in the retrial that began April 27. Stunningly, attached to that email, which had the subject line of “False reports of stalking and harassment by the Church of Scientology,” were 12 files containing the discovery material.

Whether the attachment of the files with the DA email from Podberesky was an oversight, an unintended consequence, a shot across the bow or just a dumb mistake, only the prosecution, the defense and the court are supposed to have such documents.

<snip>

The discovery material that Podberesky and perhaps her client possess contains personal emails, texts and more from the three Jane Does to police and others, some of which were used in the previous trial and this one, plus more “recently obtained” information.

The possession of that material by the Scientology-hired lawyer could constitute a violation of California’s Marsy’s Law, among other things.

More formally known as the California Victims’ Bill of Rights Act of 2008, Marsy’s Law is intended to ensure that victims are “to be treated with fairness and respect for his or her privacy and dignity, and to be free from intimidation, harassment, and abuse, throughout the criminal or juvenile justice process.” In testimony and in a civil case that names both Masterson and the Church of Scientology as defendants, the Janes Does — all of whom are former members of the church — and family members have spoken about being stalked, harassed and intimidated because of having reported the alleged rapes to law enforcement.

Along with the discovery material becoming public, and subsequent Leah Remini tweetstorm, it turns out that Podberesky recently met with LAPD Chief Michel Moore and filed complaints with the department on behalf of Scientology over “numerous unsubstantiated and false reports by the Masterson-complaining witnesses in which they allege the church has harassed them.”

With the jury out of the ninth-floor courtroom at the Clara Shortridge Foltz Criminal Justice Center today after the retrial rested, defense attorney Shawn Holley told a clearly displeased Judge Olmedo that neither she nor her colleague Phillip Cohen provided the material to Podberesky. Previously, Cohen, who also was Masterson’s defense lawyer in the first trial, denied that he had handed over the documents.

<snip>

Former O.J. Simpson and Lindsay Lohan lawyer Holley then tried to shift focus by stating there never was a protective order in the case and invoked the name of former Masterson defense attorney Tom Mesereau. Stating that “Nothing untoward has occurred, and Ms. Podberesky is willing to come to court to say so,” Holley also suggested that the material could have emerged out of the currently paused civil case – which seems unlikely but still is not permitted.
Oh give me a break. This is typical. Let's hope this is the start of this cult going down. The time is certainly ripe for it.

They know where the email originated, it is an EMAIL.

People need to yell at this case, even more than Masterson himself, this CULT. AND HOLLYWOOD. What does anyone think Alex Baldwin will get....?
 

BY JAMES QUEALLY STAFF WRITER
MAY 16, 2023 8:25 PM PT

Each of the women who have accused Danny Masterson of raping them in the early 2000s said they feared two things: the once-beloved sitcom actor’s violent outbursts and the life-altering consequences they might face for opposing the powerful Church of Scientology.

The controversial faith is not a defendant in Masterson’s second trial on rape charges. But its doctrines, the behavior of its members and even a church attorney have loomed over two weeks of testimony.

“Like all predators, the defendant carefully sought out his prey. ... Most of his victims are members of the Church of Scientology, and that makes sense,” Los Angeles County Deputy Dist. Atty. Ariel Anson said in her closing argument Tuesday. “The church tells his victims: ‘Rape isn’t rape. You cause this. And above all, you can’t go to law enforcement.’”

Scientology officials say the church has no policy prohibiting or discouraging members from reporting criminal conduct to law enforcement.

<snip>

Masterson has denied all wrongdoing. He did not testify at either trial, and his defense team did not present any witnesses in the recent proceeding. Defense attorneys Phillip Cohen and Shawn Holley have largely relied on cross-examination and argument to try to undermine each accuser’s credibility.

On Tuesday, Cohen meticulously outlined discrepancies between the women’s testimony in court and their statements to police, while repeatedly noting prosecutors have no corroborating witnesses for any of the assaults or forensic evidence to prove Masterson drugged them.

He questioned why Chrissy B. had consensual sex and shared a hotel room with Masterson after the rape.

And he asked: “Why have we heard so much about Scientology? Could it be that there are so many other problems with the government’s case?”

Prosecutors are expected to complete their rebuttal of Cohen’s closing on Wednesday morning, and then the case will be turned over to the jury.

++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

Lengthy article at link. ~Summer
 

By CNS Staff
Published May 19, 2023 11:21AM

LOS ANGELES - Jurors began their third day of deliberations Friday in the retrial of "That '70s Show" actor Danny Masterson, who is charged with raping three women at his Hollywood Hills home between 2001 and 2003.

The downtown Los Angeles jury was handed the case before 10 a.m. Wednesday after just over a day of closing arguments by attorneys.
 

By CNS Staff
Published May 19, 2023 11:21AM

LOS ANGELES - Jurors began their third day of deliberations Friday in the retrial of "That '70s Show" actor Danny Masterson, who is charged with raping three women at his Hollywood Hills home between 2001 and 2003.

The downtown Los Angeles jury was handed the case before 10 a.m. Wednesday after just over a day of closing arguments by attorneys.

Looking bad for conviction. Scientology is very good at covert actions. I doubt he's found guilty.
 
I don't find that a long time for number of charges, victims and the type of case. But would hope that's it and they are back on Monday. May well be another mixed verdict if not all convictions. HOPEFULLY not hung on all.
 

by Contributing Editor
May 23, 2023

Jurors wrapped up an abbreviated day of deliberations Tuesday without reaching a verdict in the retrial of “That ’70s Show” actor Danny Masterson, who is charged with raping three women at his Hollywood Hills home between 2001 and 2003.

The downtown Los Angeles jury — which has spent just under 4 1/2 days discussing the case — is due back in court Thursday to resume its deliberations after a day off on Wednesday.
 

by Contributing Editor
May 23, 2023

Jurors wrapped up an abbreviated day of deliberations Tuesday without reaching a verdict in the retrial of “That ’70s Show” actor Danny Masterson, who is charged with raping three women at his Hollywood Hills home between 2001 and 2003.

The downtown Los Angeles jury — which has spent just under 4 1/2 days discussing the case — is due back in court Thursday to resume its deliberations after a day off on Wednesday.

Here's their Fair Game Policy: (@Tresir this also includes how "Fair Game" has been used in the United Kingdom.)



Scientology has gotten some of their believers on the jury, I'm sure. Scientology is great at covert operations. See operation Snow White and Operation Freakout.


3:37



The Guardian's Office was simply renamed. (The Office of Special Affairs) Mike Rinder (Who works with Leah Remini now) was the head of the new office before leaving Scientology.

9:29



This is Paulette Cooper's testimony in the Clearwater Hearings:

39 minutes (Worth every second)

 
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i find it both interesting and alarming that big time LE or former LE people won't even TOUCH talking of Scientology. I can name many and it disgusts me and tells me something and that something isn't good. They can go on about cults and talk other cults but you wont hear them talking about Scientology or acknowledging questions about it even that I've ever noticed. Just what does that say? I can think of one in particular that goes on at length about some cults but won't touch Scientology. And as to religions he won't touch on the Mormon one.

And a few others of the same ilk go on about justice etc. and how dedicated they were/are no matter who you are, but again won't touch certain things or groups or certain people.
 
i find it both interesting and alarming that big time LE or former LE people won't even TOUCH talking of Scientology. I can name many and it disgusts me and tells me something and that something isn't good. They can go on about cults and talk other cults but you wont hear them talking about Scientology or acknowledging questions about it even that I've ever noticed. Just what does that say? I can think of one in particular that goes on at length about some cults but won't touch Scientology. And as to religions he won't touch on the Mormon one.

And a few others of the same ilk go on about justice etc. and how dedicated they were/are no matter who you are, but again won't touch certain things or groups or certain people.

Scientology will try to ruin your life, and they succeed a lot, unfortunately.
 

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