Current:Home > MyActor Robert De Niro tells a jury in a lawsuit by his ex-assistant: ‘This is all nonsense’ -Wealth Empowerment Academy
Actor Robert De Niro tells a jury in a lawsuit by his ex-assistant: ‘This is all nonsense’
View
Date:2025-04-12 03:03:50
NEW YORK (AP) — Robert De Niro testified Monday in New York City at a trial resulting from a former personal assistant’s lawsuit accusing the actor of being an abusive boss. De Niro, who at times appeared grouchy, restrained himself from erupting at the dissection of his interactions with her before finally blurting out: “This is all nonsense!”
The two-time Oscar-winning actor known for his performances in blockbuster movies like “The Deer Hunter” and “Raging Bull” was the first witness in a trial resulting from lawsuits over the employment of Graham Chase Robinson. Robinson, who worked for De Niro between 2008 and 2019, was paid $300,000 annually before she quit as his vice president of production and finance.
The woman, tasked for years with everything from decorating De Niro’s Christmas tree to taking him to the hospital when he fell down stairs, has sued him for $12 million in damages for severe emotional distress and reputational harm. Robinson said he refused to give her a reference to find another job when she quit in 2019 after repeated clashes with his girlfriend.
De Niro, 80, testified through most of the afternoon, agreeing that he had listed Robinson as his emergency contact at one point and had relied on her to help with greeting cards for his children.
But when a lawyer for Robinson asked him if he considered her a conscientious employee, he scoffed.
“Not after everything I’m going through now,” he said.
De Niro twice raised his voice almost to a shout during his testimony. Once, it occurred as he defended the interactions his girlfriend had with Robinson, saying, “We make decisions together.”
The second time occurred when Robinson’s lawyer tried to suggest that De Niro bothered his client early in the morning to take him to the hospital in 2017.
“That was one time when I cracked my back falling down the stairs!” De Niro angrily snapped. Even in that instance, he added, he delayed calling Robinson, making it to his bed after the accident at 1 a.m. or 2 a.m., but then later summoning her at 4 a.m. or 5 a.m.
Repeatedly, Judge Lewis J. Liman explained the rules of testimony to De Niro and that there were limits to what he could say.
“Can I ask a question?” De Niro asked in one exchange with Robinson’s lawyer. The request was denied.
He insisted that he treated Robinson well even after he bought a five-bedroom Manhattan townhouse and let Robinson oversee some of the preparations so he could move there with his girlfriend, Tiffany Chen.
“It is not like I’m asking for her to go out there and scrape floors and mop the floor,” he said. “So this is all nonsense!”
Correspondence between De Niro and Chen that was shown to jurors demonstrated that Chen became increasingly suspicious of Robinson’s motives, saying she thought Robinson acted like she was De Niro’s wife and believed that she had “imaginary intimacy” with De Niro.
“She felt there was something there and she may have been right,” De Niro said in defense of his girlfriend’s suspicions.
In opening statements that preceded De Niro’s testimony, attorney Andrew Macurdy said Robinson has been unable to get a job and has been afraid to leave her home since leaving the job with De Niro.
He said De Niro would sometimes yell at her and call her nasty names in behavior consistent with sexist remarks he made about women generally.
Macurdy said the trouble between them arose when Chen became jealous that De Niro relied on Robinson for so many tasks and that they communicated so well.
He said his client never had a romantic interest in De Niro.
“None,” he said. “There was never anything romantic between the two of them.”
De Niro’s attorney, Richard Schoenstein, said Robinson was treated very well by De Niro “but always thought she deserved more.”
He described De Niro as “kind, reasonable, generous” and told jurors they would realize that when they hear the testimony of others employed by De Niro’s company, Canal Productions, which has countersued Robinson.
Schoenstein described Robinson as “condescending, demeaning, controlling, abusive” and said “she always played the victim.”
veryGood! (342)
Related
- Selena Gomez engaged to Benny Blanco after 1 year together: 'Forever begins now'
- A judge has found Ohio’s new election law constitutional, including a strict photo ID requirement
- Diet for a Sick Planet: Studies Find More Plastic in Our Food and Bottled Water
- South Carolina no longer has the least number of women in its Senate after latest swearing-in
- B.A. Parker is learning the banjo
- DeSantis says nominating Trump would make 2024 a referendum on the ex-president rather than Biden
- X Corp. has slashed 30% of trust and safety staff, an Australian online safety watchdog says
- What 'Good Grief' teaches us about loss beyond death
- All That You Wanted to Know About She’s All That
- 'A sense of relief:' Victims' families get justice as police identify VA. man in 80s slayings
Ranking
- At site of suspected mass killings, Syrians recall horrors, hope for answers
- Investigative hearings set to open into cargo ship fire that killed 2 New Jersey firefighters
- Vanilla Frosty returns to Wendy's. Here's how to get a free Jr. Frosty every day in 2024
- Human remains believed to belong to woman missing since 1985 found in car in Miami canal
- Tom Holland's New Venture Revealed
- 61-year-old man has been found -- three weeks after his St. Louis nursing home suddenly closed
- Video appears to show the Israeli army shot 3 Palestinians, killing 1, without provocation
- Kaitlyn Dever tapped to join Season 2 of 'The Last of Us'
Recommendation
Questlove charts 50 years of SNL musical hits (and misses)
Product recall: Over 80,000 Homedics personal massagers recalled over burn and fire risk
Jimmy John's Kickin' Ranch is leaving. Here's how you can get a bottle of it for 1 cent.
Trump plans to deliver a closing argument at his civil fraud trial, AP sources say
Bodycam footage shows high
U.S. cut climate pollution in 2023, but not fast enough to limit global warming
NASA delays first Artemis astronaut flight to late 2025, moon landing to 2026
'A huge sense of sadness:' Pope's call to ban surrogacy prompts anger, disappointment