Weinstein Company sale is back on

Earlier this week, TWC had announced plans to file for bankruptcy.

The firm’s board of directors confirmed in a statement obtained by ABC News that it has arranged the sale to the same investor group with whom talks broke down last week.

The film production company has been looking for an influx of cash and assets ever since Harvey Weinstein became the subject of dozens of allegations by women of harassment or assault.

Contreras-Sweet said in a statement Thursday that the revived agreement will allow the investor group to purchase of Weinstein Co. assets "to build a movie studio led by a board of directors made up of a majority of independent women."

Additionally, she said the agreement will "save about 150 jobs, protect the small businesses who are owed money and create a victims’ compensation fund that would supplement existing insurance coverage for those who have been harmed.”

"We are pleased to have received express commitments from the parties that the new company will create a real, well-funded victims compensation fund" and implement human-resources policies to protect employees, Schneiderman said in a statement. "We will work with the parties in the weeks ahead" to ensure the commitments are honored prior to the sale's closing.

However, the attorney general also stressed that his lawsuit against the company “remains active and investigation remains ongoing at this time.”

In the wake of the allegations against Harvey Weinstein, he apologized for his behavior and sought professional help, but his spokeswoman has said that "any allegations of nonconsensual sex are unequivocally denied by Mr. Weinstein." Following the women's claims and news reports, Weinstein was fired from the company that bears his name, banned from the Producer's Guild of America and expelled from the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences.