If you haven't seen the Usual Suspects with Spacey, its a great movie.
Kevin Spacey was found not liable in $40 million civil trial after jurors reached a verdict Thursday. Accuser Anthony Rapp brought the case against him.
Kevin Spacey was found not liable in a civil sexual misconduct trial Thursday following more than an hour of deliberations by a jury in a New York federal courtroom. The lawsuit sought $40 million in damages.
"Mr. Spacey is grateful to live in a country where the citizens have a right to trial by impartial jurors who make their decision based on evidence and not rumor or social media," Spacey said through his lawyer Jennifer Keller in a statement to Fox News Digital.
"He is deeply thankful to this particular jury. This was a highly educated group of six women and five men, all except one college graduate and most with graduate degrees. Their verdict was swift and decisive. Justice was done today."
Jurors reached the verdict shortly before 4 p.m. ET in the civil lawsuit. The former "House of Cards" actor was accused of assault, battery and emotional distress stemming from an incident against Anthony Rapp in 1986 when Rapp was 14 years old.
"We're very grateful that this American jury saw through these false allegations," Keller said shortly after the verdict was read. "Spacey is deeply grateful. What's next is Mr. Spacey is going to be proving that he's innocent of anything he's been accused of."
"There was no truth to any of the allegations," Keller said. "This was a highly intelligent, highly educated jury. They're very, very bright people."
Richard Steigman, Rapp's lawyer, told Fox News Digital, "For myself, Anthony told his truth in court. While we respect the jury's verdict, nothing changes that."
Rapp initially made the accusations against Spacey in a Buzzfeed interview five years ago, to which Spacey issued a statement saying he didn't remember the encounter, but also apologized for the incident.
Kevin Spacey was found not liable in $40 million civil trial after jurors reached a verdict Thursday. Accuser Anthony Rapp brought the case against him.
Kevin Spacey was found not liable in a civil sexual misconduct trial Thursday following more than an hour of deliberations by a jury in a New York federal courtroom. The lawsuit sought $40 million in damages.
"Mr. Spacey is grateful to live in a country where the citizens have a right to trial by impartial jurors who make their decision based on evidence and not rumor or social media," Spacey said through his lawyer Jennifer Keller in a statement to Fox News Digital.
"He is deeply thankful to this particular jury. This was a highly educated group of six women and five men, all except one college graduate and most with graduate degrees. Their verdict was swift and decisive. Justice was done today."
Jurors reached the verdict shortly before 4 p.m. ET in the civil lawsuit. The former "House of Cards" actor was accused of assault, battery and emotional distress stemming from an incident against Anthony Rapp in 1986 when Rapp was 14 years old.
"We're very grateful that this American jury saw through these false allegations," Keller said shortly after the verdict was read. "Spacey is deeply grateful. What's next is Mr. Spacey is going to be proving that he's innocent of anything he's been accused of."
"There was no truth to any of the allegations," Keller said. "This was a highly intelligent, highly educated jury. They're very, very bright people."
Richard Steigman, Rapp's lawyer, told Fox News Digital, "For myself, Anthony told his truth in court. While we respect the jury's verdict, nothing changes that."
Rapp initially made the accusations against Spacey in a Buzzfeed interview five years ago, to which Spacey issued a statement saying he didn't remember the encounter, but also apologized for the incident.
Kevin Spacey declares 'justice was done' after being found not liable in Anthony Rapp sex abuse lawsuit
Kevin Spacey not liable in Anthony Rapp sexual abuse lawsuit. New York jury dismisses $40 million civil misconduct suit Thursday following three-week trial.
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