Veteran filmmaker remains wanted in the United States for the statutory rape of a 13-year-old girl in 1977.

Roman Polanski won the best director award for, An Officer and a Spy, at a fractious French film academy ceremonies in Paris early on Saturday, prompting a walkout by several women in the audience.

The entire board of the Cesar Awards had been forced to resign earlier this month amid fury at the veteran – wanted in the United States for the statutory rape of a 13-year-old girl in 1977 – topping the list of nominations.

Actress Adele Haenel, who recently denounced alleged sexual assault by another French director in the early 2000s when she was 15, got up and walked out of the room, followed by a few others.

“Distinguishing Polanski is spitting in the face of all victims. It means raping women isn’t that bad,” Haenel told the New York Times earlier this week.

The film’s actors and production team, including best actor nominee Jean Dujardin, also declined to attend the ceremony.

Dujardin posted a message on Instagram that said, “By making this film, I believed and I still believe I made more good than harm.”

Polanski’s film won two other awards for best costume design and best adaptation. No one came on stage to accept the trophies awarded to An Officer and a Spy.

The show’s host, comedian Florence Foresti, left Polanski’s film out of her opening remarks when she mentioned the ones with multiple nominations.

Instead, Foresti referred to the 86-year-old director as “Atchoum,” French for the Sneezy character in, Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs.

“I decided that Atchoum would not be big enough to overshadow the French cinema,” she said.

The Cesar for best film has been awarded to, Les Miserables, Ladj Ly’s Oscar candidate, about tensions between police and minorities in a poor Paris suburb. The film won the Jury Prize in Cannes Film Festival last year.

The entire male-dominated leadership of the Cesar stepped down recently amid disagreement about its decision-making structure and how to deal with the Polanski problem.

A few hundred protesters brandishing signs with phrases such as “Victims, we believe you” and “No to impunity” assembled outside the Salle Pleyel hall before the ceremony started. The group chanted, “We are here, we are here, even if Polanski doesn’t want to, we are here.”

“By supporting the aggressors, by celebrating the aggressors, one does not allow the victims to speak out. Their word is denied,” Celine Piques of women’s activist group Osez le Feminisme said.

In a statement this week, the Paris-based Polanski said the ceremony was turning into a “public lynching” and that he decided not to attend the ceremony to protect his colleagues and his wife and children.

Polanski is still wanted in the US, decades after he was charged with raping a 13-year-old girl in 1977. He pleaded guilty to unlawful sexual intercourse with a minor but fled the country on the eve of sentencing.

Last year, a woman came forward to accuse Polanski of raping her in 1975 in his Swiss chalet when she was 18. Polanski denied it, and the allegations are too old for an investigation.

But the accusation put the director under fresh scrutiny in France, where he has long been revered as one of the country’s premier filmmakers despite the outstanding rape charge in the US. Other accusations have also emerged.