Entertainment

Cuba Gooding Jr’s groping case allowed by judge to go forward

Judge Phyllis Chu ruled that conflicting accounts of the accusations against the actor should be resolved at a trial starting on September 3.
Judge Phyllis Chu ruled that conflicting accounts of the accusations against the actor should be resolved at a trial starting on September 3. Judge Phyllis Chu ruled that conflicting accounts of the accusations against the actor should be resolved at a trial starting on September 3.

A New York City judge has rejected actor Cuba Gooding Jr’s request to have his groping case thrown out.

Judge Phyllis Chu said in a written ruling this week that conflicting accounts of the accusations against the Oscar-winning Jerry Maguire star should be resolved at a trial starting on September 3.

A lawyer for Gooding, Mark Heller, said he still expects his client to be exonerated.

A criminal complaint filed by prosecutors in Manhattan has accused Gooding of placing his hand on a 29-year-old woman’s breast and squeezing it without her consent at Magic Hour Rooftop Bar & Lounge near Times Square on June 9. The woman told police she believed Gooding was intoxicated.

The 51-year-old Gooding was arrested four days later after turning himself in to police. He pleaded not guilty to forcible touching and sexual abuse charges and was released on after about six hours in police custody.

The defence had filed papers saying the misdemeanour forcible touching case should be dismissed based on accounts of two witnesses who say it never happened, and that video from the bar backs up that claim.

The papers argued that since there was clear evidence that no crime was committed, it was necessary to throw out the case to protect the integrity of the criminal justice system.

The judge wrote: “This court disagrees. The conflicting factual allegations between the criminal court information and the defendant’s motion should be resolved at trial.”