Film director ordered to pay $1.68B to 40 women in sexual assault suit
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Apr 11, 2025
A New York jury ordered filmmaker James Toback to pay $1.68 billion to 40 women, one of the largest sexual abuse verdicts in state history.
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$1.6 billion. That's not the budget of a blockbuster movie, but what a New York jury says director James Toback owes dozens of women who say he used Hollywood dreams as bait
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The massive payout is what attorneys believe to be one of the largest sexual abuse verdicts in New York state history and one of the biggest in the Me Too era
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Toback, best known for films like Two Girls and a Guy, and the pickup artist, was one of the earliest public figures named when the Me Too movement gained traction in 2017
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According to the complaint, for nearly 40 years, Toback quote, used his reputation, power and influence to lure a young woman, including plaintiffs through fraud, coercion, force and intimidation into compromising situations where he falsely imprisoned, sexually abused, assaulted and or battered them
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The lawsuit was filed in December 2022 under the New York's Adult Survivors Act, or ASA, by 15 named plaintiffs and 23 Jane Does, totaling 38 women
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By the time the case went to trial, two more women joined, bringing the total to 40
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The ASA created a one-year window for adult survivors of sexual abuse to file civil lawsuits, no matter how long ago the alleged incidents happened
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Other high-profile cases filed under the ASA Act include singer Cassie Ventura's 2023 lawsuit
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against Sean Diddy Combs. Her claim, filed just before the ASA deadline, sparked a wave of new
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spanned from the late 1970s to the mid-2000s. The sexual assaults reportedly occurred in places
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like the hallways and stairwells of the Harvard Club, but also in public parks, his editing studios
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and even his mother's apartment. The complaint says if women refused, Toback threatened to
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blacklist them from the industry, have them kidnapped, physically harmed, or even killed
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According to the New York Times, Toback acted as his own attorney, but failed to keep up with
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the case citing health issues on Wednesday he was ordered to pay the $1.68 billion to the 40 woman
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who came forward. The lead plaintiff who launched the case says in a press release
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this is not just a verdict, it's validation. For decades I carried this trauma in silence
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and today a jury believed me, believed us. That changes everything. This verdict is more than a
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