BRITAIN: Roman Polanski's libel action against the publishers of Vanity Fair magazine neared its conclusion yesterday, with both sides in the case putting final arguments to the jury.
The film director is suing Conde Nast for a July 2002 article which alleges he tried to seduce a woman in a New York restaurant on his way to his murdered wife's funeral in 1969, using Sharon Tate's name to help him succeed.
Vanity Fair now admits that the article was inaccurate, because Mr Polanski has proved he could not have been in the restaurant until weeks after Ms Tate's burial.
However, the magazine sticks by the gist of its story. Summing up yesterday, Vanity Fair's lawyer, Thomas Shields, referred to "Roman's law of morality".
He sought to show Mr Polanski had no reputation to damage in the first place and was quite capable of acting as he was alleged to have done. "Sadly, we would say, it [ his reputation] is beyond repair."
Mr Polanski has admitted having sex within four weeks of Ms Tate's murder, and of being unfaithful to her before and during their marriage.
He is fighting the case in London via video link from Paris in order to avoid the risk of extradition to the United States. He is wanted there after pleading guilty to having sex with a 13-year-old girl in 1977 when he was 43.
The 71-year-old cannot be extradited from France, where he was born.
Lawyer John Kelsey-Fry, for Mr Polanski, said that far from showing "callous indifference" to his wife's memory, at the time of the alleged incident he was "thousands of feet up in the air, under sedation, supported by his friends, in utter grief".
He sought to undermine the accuracy of the article and asked why one of the central characters in the case, the woman Mr Polanski allegedly romanced at the restaurant, had not been called by Vanity Fair.
"The most obvious, potentially the most compelling, witness in the defence's case, if the defence's case is true, is Beatte Telle," Mr Kelsey-Fry said.
Hollywood actress Mia Farrow and Ms Tate's sister, Debra Tate, were among the witnesses during the trial, and Mr Polanski's current wife, Emmanuelle Seigner, was in court yesterday.
Judge David Eady began his summing up to the jury, and a verdict is expected imminently.