On Monday afternoon, a six-person jury in New York City found Jonathan Majors guilty of reckless assault in the third degree and guilty of second-degree harassment against his ex-partner, Grace Jabbari, stemming from an incident in March. The jury found Majors not guilty of one other charge of intentional assault in the third degree and not guilty of the charge of aggravated harassment in the second degree, The Hollywood Reporter reports. The two assault charges and aggravated harassment charge relate to what happened between Majors and Jabbari while they were inside a car on the evening of March 25, while the second-degree harassment charge relates to an altercation between the two outside the vehicle.
In a statement responding to the verdict, Manhattan district attorney Alvin Bragg said the evidence in the case “illustrated a cycle of psychological and emotional abuse, and escalating patterns of coercion far too common across the many intimate partner violence cases we see each and every day.” He thanked the jury “for its service” and thanked Jabbari, “the survivor,” for “bravely telling her story despite having to relive her trauma on the stand.”
In a statement, @ManhattanDA Alvin Bragg said the evidence in this case “illustrated a cycle of psychological and emotional abuse, and escalating patterns of coercion far too common across the many intimate partner violence cases we see each and every day.” pic.twitter.com/WkiQmHoE9z