Prosecutors disclose more misconduct by Harvey Weinstein detective

Nicholas DiGaudio advised witness to delete anything she didn’t want anyone else to see before handing over phone

FILE- In this May 25, 2018 file photo, NYPD Detective Nicholas DiGaudio, right, escorts Harvey Weinstein into court in New York. New York prosecutors say the former lead police detective in the sexual assault investigation urged one of Weinstein's accusers to delete information from her phone before turning it over to prosecutors. On Oct. 11, prosecutors had abandoned part of their sexual assault case against Weinstein when evidence surfaced that DiGaudio instructed a witness to keep quiet when she raised doubts about another accuser's claim of sexual misconduct. (AP Photo/Mark Lennihan, File)
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A police detective already facing allegations that he coached a witness in Harvey Weinstein’s criminal sexual assault case was accused Wednesday of urging one of the movie mogul’s accusers to delete material from her cell phones before she handed them over to prosecutors.

The Manhattan district attorney’s office detailed the alleged misconduct in a letter to Mr Weinstein’s lawyer that was made public Wednesday.

The new allegations against detective Nicholas DiGaudio involve an unidentified woman who says Weinstein raped her in his Manhattan hotel room in 2013.

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In the letter, assistant district attorney Joan Illuzzi-Orbon said during the investigation, prosecutors asked the woman to hand in any mobile phones she might have used during the time when she interacted with Mr Weinstein.

The woman, she said, was willing to do so, but was worried the phones contained, “in addition to communications with the defendant, data of a personal nature that she regarded as private.”

She asked Mr DiGaudio what to do. He advised her to delete anything she didn’t want anyone else to see before handing over the phone, the prosecutors said.

“We just won’t tell Joan,” Mr DiGaudio allegedly said.

Ms Illuzzi-Orbon said the woman didn’t delete any information and instead asked a lawyer for advice. The phones were turned over “without any deletions,” she said.

The lawyer hired by the woman contacted the district attorney’s office about Mr DiGaudio’s conduct on October 10.

Mr Weinstein’s lawyer Benjamin Brafman said the latest allegation against Mr DiGaudio “even further undermines the integrity of this already deeply flawed indictment of Mr Weinstein.”

Mr DiGaudio was removed from the case last week after evidence surfaced that he urged a witness to keep quiet when she raised doubts about whether a different accuser’s alleged sexual encounter with Mr Weinstein was consensual.

That revelation led prosecutors to drop a charge related to that allegation.

There was no immediate response from Mr DiGaudio’s union or the New York City Police Department.