Harvey Weinstein could lose CBE amid sex assault claims

A decision could be made within weeks

David Hughes
Wednesday 25 October 2017 23:13 BST
Weinstein was awarded the honour for outstanding contribution to the British film industry in 2004
Weinstein was awarded the honour for outstanding contribution to the British film industry in 2004 (Getty)

Disgraced movie mogul Harvey Weinstein could be stripped of his honorary CBE after a formal investigation was launched, according to reports.

The Honours Forfeiture Committee is understood to have begun looking at the case after receiving a complaint.

A decision could be made within weeks, with a Whitehall source telling one newspaper removing the CBE was under "active consideration".

A Cabinet Office spokesman said: "Forfeiture action is confidential and we cannot comment on whether or not specific cases are being considered by the committee."

Weinstein was awarded the honour for outstanding contribution to the British film industry in 2004.

The move comes after Labour MP Chi Onwurah called for the committee to act last week.

She wrote to Cabinet Secretary Sir Jeremy Heywood highlighting the allegations against Weinstein and said his expulsion from the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences - the organisation behind the Oscars - added weight to calls for the honour to be stripped from the impresario.

"One of the criteria listed by the Government for forfeiture of an honour is if the individual in question is 'censured or struck off by a professional or regulatory body for something directly relevant to their honour'," she said.

PA

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