Chicago attorney Damon Cheronis fought for Harvey Weinstein in 'legal Thunderdome'

Thursday, February 27, 2020
CHICAGO (WLS) -- The usual courtroom haunts for Chicago defense attorney Damon Cheronis are at 219 S. Dearborn or 26th and California.

While defending Hollywood movie mogul and sex criminal Harvey Weinstein the past few months, Cheronis says he was working in "the legal equivalent of Thunderdome."
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The film analogy, between a New York City courtroom where Weinstein was on trial and a steel cage used for post-apocalypse jousting, does provide for the same ending: the losers suffer incredibly severe consequences.

In the State of New York vs. Harvey Weinstein, both sides lost.

WATCH: Extended interview with Damon Cheronis
Damon Cheronis on defending Harvey Weinstein


The government lost on two primary counts: predatory sexual assault. Weinstein lost on two felony counts that carry prison time: rape and criminal sexual assault.



"I don't think he received a fair trial," Cheronis told the ABC7 I-Team during an interview in Chicago, a few days after Weinstein was convicted. "Just the fact that he was convicted of these counts mean that he didn't receive a fair trial. I think it supports that. But I don't know if he could ever get a fair trial, I don't know if somebody like Harvey Weinstein could."

Cheronis, 42, is a fixture on the Chicago criminal defense scene and has been on the front lines of some of the splashiest cases the past decade here, representing mobsters, accused spies and suspected killers.

He was drafted to co-defend Harvey Weinstein by his friend and former law school classmate (Chicago Kent College of Law, IIT) Donna Rotunno. Cheronis was tapped to handle opening statements in the media-saturated case.

"The deck was stacked against us for sure, but I don't think the facts of the case were stacked against us I think that the case was very defensible," Cheronis told the I-Team. "I thought we did everything we could to raise reasonable doubt. I thought there was ample reasonable doubt. But, you know, it was a lot to overcome."

Weinstein was taken into custody in court immediately following the jury's Monday verdict.



The one-time wizard of Hollywood film producers is still in a Manhattan hospital after suffering chest pains and high blood pressure in the wake of the verdict.

"He had a laminectomy (back surgery) in December; he's recovering from that," said Cheronis. "He's got diabetes; high blood pressure issues. So, as a precautionary measure they took him to Bellevue where he is still at. So he's not in any great danger at this point he's there basically because of the accumulation of all these things."
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While Weinstein is treated he awaits sentencing and his legal team is working on arguments for the shortest possible prison term. The guidelines call for a sentence of five to 29 years.

Cheronis says they will ask for leniency based on his having been acquitted of the two most serious charges, his lack of criminal history, charitable work over the years and declining health.

"People can say what they want about Harvey Weinstein, but he's done a lot of wonderful things for charities for AIDS research," Cheronis said, adding that the ex-producer "donated a ton of his time and money" to helping people.

The defense team is also preparing an appeal of the case and claims to have a list of appeal-able items from trial.



One main component of the appeal according to Cheronis will focus on a member of the jury that they tried to have removed because of her interest in books about relationships between predatory men and younger women.

"There's no way she should have been on this jury," he said. "I asked her, I said, have you ever written a book about predatory older men? No. Have you ever written a book that has anything to do with predatory older men and young women? No. And I had her book review. She said no."

Juror Amanda Brainerd leaving the New York courthouse on Monday, Feb. 24, 2020, the day of the Harvey Weinstein verdict.

Erik Pendzich/Shutterstock



Cheronis said that based on his questioning she should have been excused from the trial. The juror, Amanda Brainerd, has actually written a book about older men seducing younger woman entitled "Age of Consent" which is due out this summer.
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Cheronis said the judge stated in the morning of the questioning that "he was going to dismiss her," but that by the afternoon "he did not do it without explanation."

The Chicago attorney said he knew from the early moments of jury selection that they had an uphill battle to fight. "We're on the 15th floor, the windows are open and there is a literal flash mob outside yelling 'the rapist is him.' And you can see the jurors looking around and listening."



Regardless, the defense attorney says he was surprised there wasn't an across-the-board acquittal. "We thought that, properly instructed, the jury would have a very difficult time returning a guilty verdict."

One thing that surprised the veteran attorney was what he saw as a sharp media bias against his client. "There were some really strong points made by the defense throughout the course of the cross examinations of these witnesses, and they would receive little or no coverage," Cheronis said. "They would never say anything good about Harvey Weinstein or his defense team, or about some of the strides we were making throughout the course of the trial. Certainly I think there was an agenda, I don't think you can disagree with that, in the reporting-and I think it has been at least reported by some outlets that the news media in this case did not accurately report, what was going on in the courtroom."

He contends the "Me Too" movement contributed to a media bias as the phrase and hashtag gained national traction from the Harvey Weinstein case.

"People saw this as a call to arms, as a definitive moment in the Me Too movement" he observed. "Of course as a lawyer that's very difficult because as a defense attorney you just want the facts, and the law to prevail. So our job is to try to keep it to the courtroom."

Now, the courtroom is empty, Weinstein is in custody and the defense attorney is back in Chicago-with a ready answer for anyone who questions: "How could you have defended that man?"

"At the end of the day, I'm a criminal defense lawyer. I believe in what I do, I believe that everybody deserves a fair trial and that may sound canned, but it's the truth. You know, if we don't give people like Harvey Weinstein a fair trial then we're all lost because you can't have the mob, you can't have the media, you can't have public opinion, determine guilt or innocence."

Weinstein's sentencing is now scheduled for March 11. His attorneys are not asking for him to be released on bail pending sentencing because if he is free he could be arrested on newly filed rape charges in Los Angeles and extradited there.
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