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Sunday, May 18, 2025

Danny Masterson convicted of 2 counts of rape; ‘That ‘70s Show’ actor faces 30 years to life

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717 days ago
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Danny Masterson appears at the CMT Music Awards in Nashville, Tenn., June 7, 2017. A jury found “That ’70s Show” star Masterson guilty of two counts of rape Wednesday, May 31, 2023, in a Los Angeles retrial in which the Church of Scientology played a central role. (Photo by Wade Payne/Invision/AP, File)

Danny Masterson appears at the CMT Music Awards in Nashville, Tenn., June 7, 2017. A jury found “That ’70s Show” star Masterson guilty of two counts of rape Wednesday, May 31, 2023, in a Los Angeles retrial in which the Church of Scientology played a central role. (Photo by Wade Payne/Invision/AP, File)

Wade Payne

“That ’70s Show” star Dan­ny Mas­ter­son was led out in hand­cuffs from a Los An­ge­les court­room Wednes­day and could get 30 years to life in prison af­ter a ju­ry found him guilty on two of three counts of rape at his sec­ond tri­al, in which the Church of Sci­en­tol­ogy played a cen­tral role.

Mas­ter­son’s wife, ac­tor and mod­el Bi­jou Phillips, gasped when the ver­dict was read and wept as he was tak­en in­to cus­tody, while a group of fam­i­ly and friends who sat stone-faced be­hind him through­out both tri­als.

The ju­ry of sev­en women and five men reached the ver­dict af­ter de­lib­er­at­ing for sev­en days spread over two weeks. They could not reach a ver­dict on the third count, that al­leged Mas­ter­son raped a long­time girl­friend. They had vot­ed 8-4 in fa­vor of con­vic­tion.

Mas­ter­son, 47, will be held with­out bail un­til he is sen­tenced. No sen­tenc­ing date was set.

“I am ex­pe­ri­enc­ing a com­plex ar­ray of emo­tions — re­lief, ex­haus­tion, strength, sad­ness — know­ing that my abuser, Dan­ny Mas­ter­son, will face ac­count­abil­i­ty for his crim­i­nal be­hav­ior,” one of the women, whom Mas­ter­son knew as a fel­low mem­ber of the church and was con­vict­ed of rap­ing at his home in 2003, said in a state­ment.

A sec­ond woman, a for­mer girl­friend, whose count left the ju­ry dead­locked, said in the state­ment: “While I’m en­cour­aged that Dan­ny Mas­ter­son will face some crim­i­nal pun­ish­ment, I am dev­as­tat­ed that he has dodged crim­i­nal ac­count­abil­i­ty for his heinous con­duct against me.”

A spokesper­son for Mas­ter­son de­clined to com­ment, but his at­tor­neys will al­most cer­tain­ly ap­peal.

Af­ter a dead­locked ju­ry led to a mis­tri­al in De­cem­ber, pros­e­cu­tors re­tried Mas­ter­son, say­ing he drugged and forcibly raped three women in his Hol­ly­wood Hills home be­tween 2001 and 2003. They said he used his promi­nence in the church — where all three women were al­so mem­bers at the time — to avoid con­se­quences for decades.

“We want to ex­press our grat­i­tude to the three women who came for­ward and brave­ly shared their ex­pe­ri­ences,” Los An­ge­les Coun­ty Dis­trict At­tor­ney George Gascón said in a state­ment af­ter the ver­dict Wednes­day.

Mas­ter­son did not tes­ti­fy, and his lawyers called no wit­ness­es. The de­fense ar­gued that the acts were con­sen­su­al, and at­tempt­ed to dis­cred­it the women’s sto­ries by high­light­ing changes and in­con­sis­ten­cies over time, which they said showed signs of co­or­di­na­tion be­tween them.

“If you de­cide that a wit­ness de­lib­er­ate­ly lied about some­thing in this case,” de­fense at­tor­ney Philip Co­hen told ju­rors, go­ing through their in­struc­tions in his clos­ing ar­gu­ment, “You should con­sid­er not be­liev­ing any­thing that wit­ness says.”

The Church of Sci­en­tol­ogy played a sig­nif­i­cant role in the first tri­al but ar­guably an even larg­er one in the sec­ond. Judge Char­laine F. Olme­do al­lowed ex­pert tes­ti­mo­ny on church pol­i­cy from a for­mer of­fi­cial in Sci­en­tol­ogy lead­er­ship who has be­come a promi­nent op­po­nent.

The church said in a state­ment af­ter the ver­dict that the “in­tro­duc­tion of re­li­gion in­to this tri­al was an un­prece­dent­ed vi­o­la­tion of the First Amend­ment and af­fects the due process rights of every Amer­i­can. The Church was not a par­ty to this case and re­li­gion did not be­long in this pro­ceed­ing as Supreme Court prece­dent has main­tained for cen­turies.”

Ten­sions ran high in the court­room be­tween cur­rent and for­mer Sci­en­tol­o­gists, and even leaked in­to tes­ti­mo­ny, with the ac­cusers say­ing on the stand that they felt in­tim­i­dat­ed by some mem­bers in the room.

Ac­tor Leah Rem­i­ni, a for­mer mem­ber who has be­come the church’s high­est-pro­file crit­ic, sat in on the tri­al at times, putting her arm around one of the ac­cusers to com­fort her dur­ing clos­ing ar­gu­ments.

Rem­i­ni said on Twit­ter that the two guilty ver­dicts in the re­tri­al are “a re­lief. The women who sur­vived Dan­ny Mas­ter­son’s pre­da­tion are he­roes. For years, they and their fam­i­lies have faced vi­cious at­tacks and ha­rass­ment from Sci­en­tol­ogy and Dan­ny’s well-fund­ed le­gal team,” she post­ed. “Nev­er­the­less, they sol­diered on, de­ter­mined to seek jus­tice.”

The al­leged ha­rass­ment is the sub­ject of a civ­il law­suit filed by two of the ac­cusers.

The Sci­en­tol­ogy state­ment said “there is not a scin­til­la of ev­i­dence sup­port­ing the scan­dalous al­le­ga­tions that the Church ha­rassed the ac­cusers.”

Found­ed in 1953 by L. Ron Hub­bard, the Church of Sci­en­tol­ogy has many mem­bers who work in Hol­ly­wood. The judge kept lim­its on how much pros­e­cu­tors could talk about the church, and pri­mar­i­ly al­lowed it to ex­plain why the women took so long to go to au­thor­i­ties.

The women tes­ti­fied that when they re­port­ed Mas­ter­son to church of­fi­cials, they were told they were not raped, were put through ethics pro­grams them­selves, and were warned against go­ing to law en­force­ment to re­port a mem­ber of such high stand­ing.

“They were raped, they were pun­ished for it, and they were re­tal­i­at­ed against,” Deputy Dis­trict At­tor­ney Rein­hold Mueller told ju­rors in his clos­ing ar­gu­ment. “Sci­en­tol­ogy told them there’s no jus­tice for them.”

The church called the “tes­ti­mo­ny and de­scrip­tions of Sci­en­tol­ogy be­liefs” dur­ing the tri­al “uni­form­ly false.”

“The Church has no pol­i­cy pro­hibit­ing or dis­cour­ag­ing mem­bers from re­port­ing crim­i­nal con­duct of any­one — Sci­en­tol­o­gists or not — to law en­force­ment,” the state­ment said.

Next week Olme­do will hold a hear­ing to de­ter­mine how a lawyer who rep­re­sents the Church of Sci­en­tol­ogy had ev­i­dence that the pros­e­cu­tion had shared with the de­fense. The ev­i­dence in­volved links that the lawyer ac­ci­den­tal­ly in­clud­ed in an email to Mueller.

The As­so­ci­at­ed Press does not typ­i­cal­ly name peo­ple who say they’ve been sex­u­al­ly abused.

Tes­ti­mo­ny in this case was graph­ic and emo­tion­al.

The two women whose tes­ti­mo­ny led to Mas­ter­son’s con­vic­tion said that in 2003, he gave them drinks and that they then be­came woozy or passed out be­fore he vi­o­lent­ly raped them.

The third, Mas­ter­son’s then-girl­friend of five years whose count left the ju­ry dead­locked, said she awoke to find him rap­ing her, and had to pull his hair to stop him.

Olme­do al­lowed pros­e­cu­tors and ac­cusers to say di­rect­ly in the sec­ond tri­al that Mas­ter­son drugged the women, while on­ly al­low­ing the women to de­scribe their con­di­tion in the first tri­al.

Mas­ter­son was not charged with any counts of drug­ging, and there was no tox­i­col­o­gy ev­i­dence to back up the as­ser­tion.

The charges dat­ed to a pe­ri­od when Mas­ter­son was at the height of his fame, star­ring from 1998 un­til 2006 as Steven Hyde on Fox’s “That ’70s Show” — the show that made stars of Ash­ton Kutch­er, Mi­la Ku­nis and To­pher Grace.

Mas­ter­son had re­unit­ed with Kutch­er on the 2016 Net­flix com­e­dy “The Ranch,” but was writ­ten off the show when an LAPD in­ves­ti­ga­tion was re­vealed in De­cem­ber 2017.

LOS AN­GE­LES (AP) —

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