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Jury delivers mixed verdict in NYC assault trial of Marvel actor Jonathan Majors

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NEW YORK CITY — BREAKING: A Manhattan criminal court jury found Marvel star Jonathan Majors guilty of one count of assault and one count of harassment but acquitted him of another count of assault and one aggravated harassment count, all in connection with an alleged attack on his ex-girlfriend Grace Jabbari in the backseat of an SUV this past March.

The verdict came after about 5 hours of deliberations over portions of three days.

Majors stood to hear the verdict but was seated at the defense table in a grey suit between defense attorneys Priya Chaudhry and Seth Zuckerman. His current girlfriend, actress Megan Good, is seated behind him along with members of his family.

Jabbari testified Majors fractured her finger and lacerated her ear after she grabbed his phone when a message from another woman popped up saying, “I wish I was kissing you.” The defense accused Jabbari of making up her allegations out of revenge for Majors breaking off the relationship.

The mixed verdict signals the jury believed Jonathan Majors recklessly assaulted Grace Jabbari but did not intentionally do so.

The mixed verdict also suggests the jury did not believe Majors intentionally committed aggravated harassment inside the SUV but did believe he harassed her outside the vehicle by picking her off the ground and throwing her back inside.

Majors did not appear to react as the verdict was read. He stood, with his lawyers, facing the jury as the forewoman announced the verdict on each of the four counts.

Sentencing on the two counts of conviction set for February 6.

Judge Gaffey renewed an order of protection that prevents Majors from any contact with Jabbari.

This is a breaking news update. Earlier article below.

Jury deliberations continue Monday in the Jonathan Majors criminal assault trial, which has featured clashing narratives about whether the rising Hollywood star was the aggressor or victim during a chaotic struggle with his then-girlfriend that began in the back seat of a car.

The case has centered on allegations brought by Grace Jabbari, a 30-year-old British dancer, who said the “Creed III” actor struck her on the side of the head, twisted her arm behind her back and squeezed her finger until it broke during a dispute last spring.

Monday morning, jurors requested that the instructions relating to count number 4, harassment in the 2nd degree, be re-read to them.

They also asked to see two pieces video again: raw surveillance footage of a car; and vido of Jabbari and a group of strangers she met after the fight with Majors.

And jurors asked that testimony about the icing of Jabbari’s finger be read back to them.

In closing arguments that ended before lunch Thursday in a Manhattan courtroom, Majors’ lawyer portrayed Jabbari as a compulsive liar who concocted a story of an abusive relationship as revenge after catching her boyfriend of two years texting another woman.

The 34-year-old actor dabbed his eyes with a tissue as his attorney, Priya Chaudhry, implored the jury to “end this nightmare for Jonathan Majors.”

Prosecutors, meanwhile, said the actor “struck a blow” to his partner’s head that left her stunned in the back seat of a car. They said the assault was the latest escalation in Majors’ repeated attempts to “exert control” over his girlfriend through both physical and emotional violence, citing a past instance in which he allegedly urged her not to seek medical attention for a head injury because it could “lead to an investigation.”

Deliberations ended Friday without a verdict.

The verdict may have implications far outside the Manhattan courtroom. Prior to his arrest in March, Majors’ “Kang the Conquerer” character was being set up as the next major supervillain in the Marvel universe. His prestige drama, “Magazine Dreams,” was postponed from its scheduled release earlier this month.

The struggle in the back of the car was not captured on video. But in their closing arguments, each side furnished security footage depicting scenes leading up to and after the dispute that they said underscored their point.

In one video played repeatedly to jurors by the prosecution, Majors can be seen “manhandling” Jabbari outside the vehicle, lifting her off the ground and placing her in the back seat “as if she was a doll,” according to Manhattan assistant district attorney Kelli Galaway.

Minutes later, footage showed Majors sprinting through the darkened streets of Lower Manhattan in an effort to evade Jabbari, who said she wanted details about the “romantic” text message she had seen on his phone. The video, according to the defense, served as proof that “Jonathan was trying to escape Grace and Grace kept attacking him.”

After Majors had fled the scene, Jabbari followed a group of strangers she had met on the street to a dance club, where she could be seen on grainy security footage ordering shots and using her injured hand to hold a champagne glass and sign a check.

That footage, the defense argued, proved she was unharmed following the incident. But prosecutors countered that Jabbari had not discovered the extent of the injuries until the following morning – at which point she sent photographs of her bruised hands and a cut to a friend.

“This is not a revenge plot to ruin the defendant’s life or career,” Galaway said. “What matters is what happened in the car that night.”

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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