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NewsJune 7, 2002

BEVERLY HILLS, Calif. -- Winona Ryder was ordered Thursday to stand trial on charges alleging she shoplifted some $6,000 worth of merchandise from Saks Fifth Avenue and possessed a drug without a prescription. A store security official testified during a preliminary hearing that she saw the actress cutting security sensor tags off the items. A criminalist testified that two pills found in Ryder's possession were a generic form of Percoset, a prescription painkiller...

The Associated Press

BEVERLY HILLS, Calif. -- Winona Ryder was ordered Thursday to stand trial on charges alleging she shoplifted some $6,000 worth of merchandise from Saks Fifth Avenue and possessed a drug without a prescription.

A store security official testified during a preliminary hearing that she saw the actress cutting security sensor tags off the items. A criminalist testified that two pills found in Ryder's possession were a generic form of Percoset, a prescription painkiller.

Superior Court Judge Elden Fox said there was sufficient cause for her to be tried on charges of second-degree burglary, grand theft, vandalism and possession of a controlled substance.

Saks security official Colleen Rainey testified she looked through slats of a door and saw Ryder kneeling on the floor of a fitting room on Dec. 12, taking things out of shopping bags and putting them on the floor around her.

"I saw her cutting sensor tags off of merchandise," she testified.

Asked by defense lawyer Mark Geragos if she recognized the movie star that day, Rainey said she told another employee she looked familiar "and I said I thought it was maybe Winona Ryder."

But she added, "Her behavior was such and the way she was dressed -- she appeared to be a bit disheveled. I may have mentioned she looked homeless."

Saks security official Kenneth Evans testified earlier that he had the same reaction when he first began watching her as a possible shoplifter.

Evans said the actress carried a garment bag, a red Saks shopping bag, another shopping bag and her tote bag.

"And she was wearing a three-quarter-length cashmere coat?" asked Geragos.

"Yes," said the witness.

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"And do you get a lot of homeless people wearing three-quarter-length cashmere coats?" the lawyer asked.

The question drew an objection and it was not answered.

Evans also said, however, that before leaving the store Ryder twice charged purchases that amounted to about $3,700.

Authorities initially alleged Ryder shoplifted about $4,800 worth of items but the value was later raised.

Ryder came to court Thursday with her right arm wrapped in an elastic bandage and a sling. Geragos said Ryder's right arm broke at the elbow when she was hit from behind while walking through a crush of reporters at the courthouse Monday, causing a delay in the hearing.

Outside court, Geragos denounced Rainey's testimony.

"That testimony was as close to full-blown perjury as I've seen in a courtroom," Geragos said.

"I believe Saks targeted her as a celebrity prior to the Christmas holidays and they have a more than willing partner in the district attorney's office," Geragos said.

Deputy District Attorney Julie Jurek rejected Geragos' allegations of perjury.

"I'm 100 percent satisfied that all of the peoples' witnesses told the truth today," she said.

Among court spectators was Mark Klaas, whose 12-year-old daughter, Polly, was abducted from her Petaluma home in 1993 and killed by a convicted kidnapper. Ryder, who is from Petaluma, was active in the search and later efforts to reform the criminal justice system. Ryder embraced Klaas during a break and thanked him for coming.

"I think it's terrible what they're doing to her," Klaas said. "She understands the seriousness of crime in our society."

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