Jonathan Majors trial moved to November as N.Y. judge denies motion to dismiss case
Jonathan Majors will stand trial for his domestic violence case in November after several months of delays.
The Manhattan District Attorney’s Office confirmed on Wednesday that the “Loki” and “Creed III” star’s trial will begin Nov. 29. “We look forward to presenting our case at trial,” a spokesperson for the office said in a statement shared with The Times.
Majors, 34, faces misdemeanor assault and harassment charges linked to an alleged domestic dispute in New York earlier this year. In March, Grace Jabbari alleged that Majors struck her face with an open hand and cut her ear, grabbed her hand, and pushed her into a vehicle, causing her to fall backward during the altercation. He was arrested on March 25.
The actor appeared virtually in a Manhattan courthouse on Wednesday. During the hearing, a New York judge denied a defense request to dismiss the actor’s case, according to multiple reports.
Jonathan Majors’ accuser will not face charges, despite recent reports that said she would be charged with assaulting the Marvel actor, prosecutors said.
Legal representatives for Majors, who maintain his innocence, declined to comment.
Wednesday’s hearing comes a week after the D.A. filed a 115-page motion in response to Majors’ team’s dismissal request. The motion, reviewed by The Times, details the prosecution’s case against the actor and includes more details from the night of alleged domestic dispute.
Law enforcement was also trying to obtain a September 2022 report from London police, the document said. The filing is said to refer to medical care allegedly sought by U.K. native Jabbari while Majors was also in London filming the second season of “Loki.”
News Analysis: What Jonathan Majors’ dramatic rise and fall says about race and justice in Hollywood
The actor, who this week faces his first court date in a domestic dispute, may suffer more career damage than his Hollywood counterparts do. Is race a factor?
Majors broke out with the A24 film “The Last Black Man in San Francisco” before getting roles in HBO’s “Lovecraft Country” and Marvel’s “Ant-Man and the Wasp: Quantumania.” The domestic violence allegations took a toll on his career as he was reportedly dropped by publicity and management firms and cut from several film projects and ad campaigns.
In August, Majors’ attorney Priya Chaudhry said the actor “remains unwavering in his determination to be absolved from this harrowing ordeal.”
Times staff writer Jonah Valdez contributed to this report.
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