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Harvey Weinstein’s former company was alerted back in 2015 to cash settlements he had made in connection with sexual harassment allegations, according to a report.

Lawyer David Boies, who represented Weinstein in 2015 when his contract was up for renewal, told the New York Times that the company’s board was informed of three or four settlements.

The Weinstein Company, which has fired the disgraced movie mogul, said this week it had not been aware of any payouts to women who accused him of unwanted touching and sexual harassment.

On Tuesday, Weinstein’s brother and company co-founder, Bob Weinstein, and company chief David Glasser told employees they were shocked by the allegations and unaware of payments, the Times reported, citing employees who spoke on the condition of anonymity.

Board member Lance Maerov, who handled the contract talks, acknowledged in an interview that he had been informed of settlements, but said he had assumed they were used to cover up consensual affairs, the paper reported.

The contract was up for renewal just as Italian actress Ambra Battilana Gutierrez, 22, reported to police that Weinstein had groped her at his Manhattan office.

Working with the NYPD, she later captured Weinstein speaking about the sleazy encounter in audio published along with a lengthy expose in the New Yorker on Tuesday.

The District Attorney’s Office declined to press charges.

Manhattan DA Cyrus Vance Jr. on Wednesday said: “Our sex-crimes prosecutors made the determination that this was not going to be a provable case and the decision was made not to go forward.”

But some company board members and top execs worried that Weinstein had engaged in a pattern of behavior that could present a legal liability for the company, the paper reported.

The producer refused to make his personnel file available to the board directly and instead used outside lawyer H. Rodgin Cohen to examine the file and determine whether it was legally safe to keep Weinstein, the Times reported.

In Cohen’s letter to the board, he does not describe the contents of Weinstein’s file, nor does he address any instances of private settlements with women who had alleged sexual harassment.

Boies said that at the time of the contract negotiations, he was aware of three or four settlements but would not specify which ones, and would not say who within the company or the board was informed of them.

Maerov said he approved the contract after receiving assurances that no company money was used and that there were no pending complaints against Weinstein, sources told the Times.

Bob Weinstein and Glasser declined to comment to the Times.