Ashley Judd and Harvey Weinstein
© Getty ImagesAshley Judd and Harvey Weinstein
Ashley Judd spoke to ABC News for the first time since her sexual harassment accusations against Harvey Weinstein, revealing she offered to have sex with him later on if he'd leave her alone.

Judd, 49, claimed she had not heard any stories of Weinstein's prior alleged misconduct before meeting him in his hotel room.

"I had no warning ... I remember the lurch when I went to the desk and I said, 'Mr. Weinstein, is he on the patio?' and they said, 'No, he's in his room,'" she recalled of the incident, which allegedly took place nearly 20 years ago. "I was like, 'Ugh, are you kidding me?' [But I went because] I had a business appointment. That's his pattern of sexual predation. That's how he rolled."

"There's this constant grooming negotiation going on," she continued. "I thought 'no' meant 'no,'" she said, adding that Weinstein offered her a massage. "I fought with this volley of 'nos,' which he ignored. Who knows? Maybe he heard them as 'maybe,' maybe he heard them as 'yeses,' maybe they turned him on. I don't know."

Judd added that Weinstein then led her toward a closet, where he asked her to choose his suit for the day, and that there was no apparent exit from the room. She recalled cowering in a hallway for close to seven minutes when Weinstein asked her to come into the bathroom with him.

Finally, Judd claims she made a deal with Weinstein to someday have an intimate encounter with him, but not right then.

"He kept coming at me with all this other stuff, and finally I just said, 'When I win an Oscar in one of your movies, okay?'" Judd said. "And he was like, 'Yeah, when you get nominated.' And I said, 'No! When I win an Oscar.' And I fled. I just fled."

She doesn't regret the decision.

"Am I proud of that? I'm of two minds: The part that shames myself says no," she said firmly. "The part of me that understands the way shame works says, 'That was absolutely brilliant. Good job, kid. You got out of there. Well done.'"