Three additional women have come forward to accuse actor Jeremy Piven of sexual misconduct.
The "Entourage" star, who was previously accused of sexual misconduct and inappropriate behavior by several other women, reportedly behaved similarly with the three women who came forward on Saturday.
The new accusations span from 1985 to 1996 and include a situation where Piven, 52, exposed himself to an extra at his Los Angeles home and tried to force himself on another woman in a Montreal hotel room.
A second woman, who works as an executive and asked to remain anonymous, told BuzzFeed News she met Piven in Montreal around 1994 while he was in the city filming "Dr. Jekyll and Ms. Hyde."
The unidentified woman, now 46, said she met the actor while she was working at a hair salon and agreed to show him around town. She arrived at his hotel room and was told by the front desk to go up to his room, which she didn't think much of because "he was a nice enough guy," BuzzFeed reported.
Piven reportedly shoved her against the wall when she entered and tried to kiss her. The woman was able to push him off and leave.
"I guess he thinks he's this actor and he can do whatever the hell he wants to people," she told the site. "As a woman … you deal with this kind of thing all the time. But this was a little more violent than the other things that have happened to me. To have somebody force themselves on you like that, it made me feel very uncomfortable and grossed out."
The third newly reported incident allegedly occurred in 1996 when Diane Gonzalez was working as an extra on the sitcom "Ellen," where Piven played Ellen DeGeneres' cousin.
The pair reportedly had a consensual romantic encounter that then turned physically aggressive.
Gonzalez was invited to Piven's home after a night out with the cast and crew for drinks when an innocent kiss turned inappropriate once they made their way inside.
After looking at pictures on the star's fridge, she turned around to find him standing there with his penis exposed.
She laughed it off in an attempt for things to not get worse and then he grabbed her and started kissing her before picking her up and taking her into the bedroom.
In the bedroom, Piven got on top of her and pinned her arms behind her head.
She kept saying she wanted to go home as he became more forceful. He also allegedly tried to unbutton her pants.
"I think the threat was just how aggressive and how strong he became as he was holding me down. I just didn't want it to get any worse," Gonzalez said. "I just kept telling myself, 'Well, you're alone, nobody knows where I'm at.' It's not like I told anybody I'm going to follow him home, so I kept telling myself, 'Okay, you gotta play this smart now.'"
Piven's lawyer said that any encounter between Piven and Gonzalez was consensual.
"These allegations, which in one case goes back more than 30 years and the two others more than 20 years ago, are false," Piven said. "As evidenced by the lie detector test I took and passed, I have never forced myself on anyone, nor have I ever exposed myself or restrained anyone against their will. To the contrary, if any woman ever said no, I stopped."
McCain Olson, now 51, worked as an extra on the set of the movie "Lucas" in 1986, which starred Piven, Charlie Sheen, Winona Ryder and the late Corey Haim. She claimed that while on set, a 17-year-old Piven followed her into a trailer, pinned her down on a couch, climbed on top of her and started to kiss her. She also alleged he tried to reach down her shorts and up her shirt.
"At one point I kind of was like, 'This is it, this is where I'm going to get raped,'" McCain Olson, now 51, "I kept trying to push him away. I was like, 'No, get off me.'"
Olson was eventually able to escape, but never told anyone about the incident because she didn't want to lose her job or become a problem. Piven never spoke to her on set after the alleged assault.
At least four people close to Olson confirmed that she had told them what had happened between her and Piven.