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Polanski to testify via video next week

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Reuters

Film director Roman Polanski is due to appear in a London libel case via video link from Paris next week, setting a legal precedent and avoiding the risk of extradition to the United States for a child sex offense.

Polanski is being allowed to sue the British publishers of Vanity Fair magazine from a hotel room in Paris after England’s highest court in February overturned an earlier ruling that would have forced him to come to London to fight his case.

The 71-year-old filmmaker has been wanted in the United States after pleading guilty in 1977 to having sex with a 13-year-old girl. He skipped bail and fled the country for France before the sentence was pronounced.

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Polanski, who won 2002’s best director Oscar for “The Pianist,” has never been back to the United States or Britain, and if he came to London he would face possible extradition to America. He cannot be extradited from his native France.

Polanski’s lawyers say it will be the first time a libel claimant has given evidence at trial via video link.

“The idea, more than 25 years after Polanski left the United States, that he is still unable to return or even enter this country is extraordinary,” said Joshua Rozenberg, legal editor at London’s Daily Telegraph newspaper.

Barring last-minute scheduling changes, the case will open Monday and last about a week.

Actress Mia Farrow, who starred in Polanski’s “Rosemary’s Baby,” will be called as a witness, as will Debra Tate, the sister of his late wife, Sharon, who was murdered by the Manson family at the couple’s Los Angeles home in 1969.

Polanski is suing Vanity Fair’s publishers for a July 2002 article describing how the director flirted with a Swedish woman in a New York restaurant while on his way to his slain wife’s funeral in Los Angeles.

One passage in the report, reproduced in court documents after the February ruling, quotes him promising the “Swedish beauty”: “I will make another Sharon Tate of you.”

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In fact, both sides in the case now accept that Polanski was not at the restaurant en route to Tate’s funeral but was there within three or four weeks of the murder. Polanski’s lawyers deny there was ever any incident like the one described in Vanity Fair.

At the time of the court decision in February, Vanity Fair said in a statement: “The ruling does not affect the substance of the case, which ... is being vigorously defended by Vanity Fair.”

The combination of a high-profile libel trial involving household names like Polanski and Farrow, and the prospect of him suing via video from another country, means the courtroom is likely to be packed.

The case has generated debate in Britain about whether Polanski should be allowed to use the country’s legal system while avoiding the consequences of its laws.

Polanski, whose mother died in a concentration camp, lives in Paris with his wife, the French actress Emmanuelle Seigner.

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