Update: In a lengthy statement addressed to his firm on Tuesday, David Boies said that Harvey Weinstein is no longer a client and that he “would never knowingly participate in an effort to intimidate or silence women or anyone else.” Boies' full statement is appended below. 

Criticism escalated Tuesday against star litigator David Boies after The New Yorker reported that the Boies Schiller Flexner chairman, a longtime legal adviser to Harvey Weinstein, contracted with former Israeli Mossad agents to derail the publication of a New York Times article about Weinstein's alleged predatory conduct with women.

Boies signed a July 2017 contract with an Israeli private intelligence agency called Black Cube as part of his efforts to protect Weinstein's reputation while his firm was separately representing the Times in a libel case, The New Yorker reported. Boies was also involved in Weinstein's relationship with PSOPS, another investigative firm, the magazine said.

Reaction from The New York Times was swift.

“We learned today that the law firm of Boies Schiller and Flexner secretly worked to stop our reporting on Harvey Weinstein at the same time as the firm's lawyers were representing us in other matters. We consider this intolerable conduct, a grave betrayal of trust, and a breach of the basic professional standards that all lawyers are required to observe. It is inexcusable and we will be pursuing appropriate remedies,” the paper said in a statement late Monday.

On Twitter, Boies fared poorly too.

“You're David Boies. Your obituary will say you helped extend marriage rights to millions. This is what you do next?” said one tweet  from a senior editor from The Atlantic.

In comments included in the The New Yorker article, titled “Harvey Weinstein's Army of Spies,” Boies said: “We should not have been contracting with and paying investigators that we did not select and direct. At the time, it seemed a reasonable accommodation for a client, but it was not thought through, and that was my mistake. It was a mistake at the time.”

Boies, whose own film finance venture has done business with The Weinstein Co., earlier this fall described for The American Lawyer what his role would and wouldn't entail in representing Weinstein.

He said that he wouldn't be helping Charles Harder of Beverly Hills-based Harder Mirell & Abrams, who at the time threatened a $50 million suit against the Times over its report alleging that Weinstein for years sought sexual favors from actresses, sometimes in workplace settings.

Since then, Weinstein terminated his relationship with Harder and the libel suit was never filed.

Boies also said his role would not be to address “the subject matter of various news stories” published since The Times' initial article detailing sexual harassment allegations against Weinstein, including The New Yorker's bombshell report that included rape allegations.

Weinstein has denied those new allegations, specifically stating he has not engaged in sex that was not consensual.

Boies, his firm and his film finance company, Boies/Schiller Film Group (BSFG), have multiple other ties to Weinstein, his brother Robert Weinstein (now head of The Weinstein Co.) and the company itself. BSFG has co-produced movies with TWC, such as “Jane Got a Gun,” a 2015 film starring Natalie Portman, and “Gold,” a 2016 film starring Matthew McConaughey.

Boies and his partners Charles Fox Miller and Theodore “Ted” Uno, both of whom are family lawyers that litigate divorces, represented Robert Weinstein, now separated from his ex-wife. Boies also represented Harvey Weinstein during his dispute with board members of a nonprofit aids research organization, which led to allegations that the film producer had used $600,000 in charitable contributions for commercial purposes.

On Tuesday a spokesman for Boies Schiller Flexner forwarded the following statement from David Boies to all employees of his firm:

Many of you have asked for clarification of my, and the Firm's, role related to Harvey Weinstein and recent stories concerning the hiring of private investigators. You are entitled to clarification and it is important to me to make clear what happened.

Mr. Weinstein was a client of mine; he is no longer a client of mine or of the Firm.

In the first half of this year, Mr. Weinstein learned that the New York Times was considering publishing a story alleging that many years ago Mr. Weinstein had raped an actress. Mr. Weinstein hotly disputed that allegation.

I told Mr. Weinstein at that time that neither I nor the Firm would represent him in this matter, and he hired several other lawyers to represent him.

I also told Mr. Weinstein that the Times story could not be stopped through threats or influence; the only way that the story could be stopped was by proving it was not true.

Mr. Weinstein, together with the lawyers representing him, selected private investigators to assist him and drafted a contract. He asked me to execute the contract on his behalf. I was told at the time that the purposes of hiring the private investigators were to ascertain exactly what the actress was accusing Mr. Weinstein of having done, and when, and to try to find facts that would prove the charge to be false and thereby stop the story.

I did not (nor did the firm) select the investigators (at least one of which had been used by Mr. Weinstein previously) or direct their work; that was done by Mr. Weinstein and his other counsel.

While I told Mr. Weinstein that I was not in a position to represent him on these issues, his request to contract with investigators seemed at the time, like a reasonable accommodation for a longtime client. I regret having done this. It was a mistake to contract with, and pay on behalf of a client, investigators who we did not select and did not control. It was not thought through, and that was my mistake. I take responsibility for that.

I also want to address the issue of whether there was a conflict of interest with the Firm's representation of the New York Times. First, when we were engaged by the Times we made clear that we needed to be able to continue to represent clients adverse to the Times on matters unrelated to the work we were doing for the Times. Our Engagement Letter, countersigned by the Times, expressly states:

“We have explained and you have agreed that as a result of the types of clients the Firm advises and the types of engagements in which we are involved, we may be requested to act for other persons on matters which are not substantially related to the Engagement, where the interests of the other persons, and the Firm's representation of them, may be against the client's, including adversity in litigation.”

Second, despite the language in our Engagement Letter, I told Mr. Weinstein that we would not represent him in this matter.

Third, because I perceived the investigators' work as trying to ascertain the exact charges against Mr. Weinstein and to develop facts that would prove the charges untrue, I thought at the time that was an appropriate endeavor.

Had I known at the time that this contract would have been used for the services that I now understand it was used for, I would never have signed it or been associated in any way with this effort. I have devoted much of my professional career to helping give voice to people who would otherwise not be heard and to protecting the rights of women and others subjection to oppression. I would never knowingly participate in an effort to intimidate or silence women or anyone else, including the conduct described in the New Yorker article. That is not who I am.

If any of you have further questions, please let me know and I will try to address them.