(Black serial rapist) Bill Cosby in the news

http://philadelphia.cbslocal.com/20...mery-county-for-2nd-day-of-pretrial-hearings/

Judge Hints He May Not Allow Cosby’s Prior Testimony Giving Quaaludes To Women Before Sex
March 30, 2018 at 11:58 pm

NORRISTOWN, Pa. (AP) — The judge in Bill Cosby’s sexual assault retrial hinted Friday that he could keep jurors from hearing the comedian’s prior testimony about giving quaaludes to women before sex, a potential blow to the prosecution’s plans to portray him as a serial predator. :mad:

Judge Steven O’Neill said at a pretrial hearing that he won’t rule on the testimony until it’s brought up at the retrial, which is scheduled to begin April 9 in suburban Philadelphia.

“This defendant is not on trial for what he said in his deposition,” O’Neill said.

Jury selection is scheduled to begin Monday as the 80-year-old Cosby faces charges he drugged and molested former Temple University athletics administrator Andrea Constand at his suburban Philadelphia home in 2004.

The quaalude testimony came from a deposition that was part of Constand’s civil suit against Cosby. It was included in the first trial that ended with a hung jury and prosecutors contend it is more evidence of his prior bad acts.

Cosby admitted in the testimony he gave quaaludes to a 19-year-old before having sex in the 1970s, but his lawyers say it’s irrelevant to the trial because there’s no evidence he gave his accuser the
drug.

“The ’70s isn’t relevant in this case,” said defense lawyer Becky James, calling quaalude use then widespread. “It was not to assault them. It was not to make them incapacitated. It was never with the purpose or intent of having sex with unconsenting women.”

District Attorney Kevin Steele said the testimony, along with the testimony of up to five additional accusers, bolsters their plan to portray Cosby as a serial predator. Those women weren’t allowed to testify at the first trial.

Prosecutors say they want O’Neill to allow the drug testimony, because otherwise they’d only be able to use it to cross-examine Cosby if he testifies. Cosby did not testify in the first trial.

Constand says Cosby gave her three blue pills. His lawyers say quaaludes never came in that color. The comedian contends he gave her the over-the-counter antihistamine Benadryl.

Assistant District Attorney Stewart Ryan argued Cosby’s deposition testimony is important because it shows he had an awareness of the effects that central nervous system depressants, such as quaaludes, have on women, and it shows his admitted intent for using such drugs.

“The man sitting right over there said these things and they were typed down,” Ryan said.

Lawyer Dennis McAndrews, who prosecuted chemical heir John E. duPont for murder in 1997, said it will be a “closer case” if the judge excludes the evidence.

He said Cosby’s testimony along with an old comedy routine about Spanish fly are evidence of his consciousness of the effects of the intoxicants and his willingness to use them.

“It is very relevant testimony to show a preexisting desire and willingness to use controlled substances of any kind that are available to facilitate non-consensual sex,” he said.

While O’Neill dealt Cosby’s lawyers a blow by allowing the testimony from additional accusers, Cosby’s lawyers are counting on him to make rulings critical to their plan to portray the accuser as a greedy liar who framed the comedian.

O’Neill had said he would rule Friday on testimony from a witness who claims Constand spoke about falsely accusing a celebrity before going to police, but hadn’t done so by the time court offices closed.

The judge also has to decide how much jurors will hear about Cosby’s financial settlement with Constand. His lawyers say the amount will show “just how greedy” she was.

Prosecutors said the theory that Constand wanted to set Cosby up is undermined by his testimony in a 2005 deposition that she only visited his home when invited and that he gave her pills without her asking.

Cosby’s lawyers also argued in court papers Friday that the retrial should be postponed if prosecutors are allowed to bring in more witnesses in a bid to bolster the accounts of the five additional accusers.

They argued that the 14 proposed supporting witnesses, including celebrity doctor Drew Pinsky and book publisher Judith Regan, are irrelevant and would only further confuse and distract the jury.

O’Neill said he’ll decide on the supporting witnesses one-by-one during the trial. Prosecutors say they’ll be used in a limited role to describe the accusers’ demeanor after the alleged assaults and buttress criticism of them for failing to go to the authorities in a timely fashion.

Cosby’s lawyers argued none of the potential witnesses were present when the alleged assaults occurred, and many weren’t told about them by the accusers until years later.

O’Neill, who presided over Cosby’s first trial, remained on the case after rejecting the defense’s assertions Thursday that he could be seen as biased because his wife is a social worker and advocate for assault victims.

The Associated Press does not typically identify people who say they are victims of sexual assault unless they grant permission, which Constand has done.
 
http://philadelphia.cbslocal.com/2018/04/03/bill-cosby-retrial-jury-selection-day-2/

Cosby Judge Delivers 2 Big Victories To Defense
April 3, 2018 at 9:07 am

NORRISTOWN, Pa. (CBS/AP) — Bill Cosby’s defense team got two major legal victories on Tuesday, as the judge is allowing a woman who says his accuser was out for money to testify and for the jury to hear the amount of the settlement she received.

Judge Steven O’Neill said that Marguerite Jackson’s testimony is subject to further rulings at trial, specifically following testimony from accuser Andrea Constand.

At the first trial, O’Neill barred Jackson from testifying after Constand denied knowing her. Since then, prosecutors told Cosby’s lawyers that Constand modified her statement to admit she “recalls a Margo.”

Constand’s attorney says that Jackson is “not telling the truth.”

O’Neill previously helped prosecutor’s case by allowing five additional accusers to testify against Cosby.

He also said Tuesday that he’ll wait until trial, if needed, to rule on up to 14 witnesses prosecutors want to call to support the testimony of the five additional accusers who are taking the stand. Cosby’s lawyers had objected to the witnesses, saying they’d need to postpone the trial to prepare their testimony.

Just one juror was seated as jury selection began on Monday. Things moved at a far slower pace than on the opening day of Cosby’s first trial last spring, when five jurors were selected.

The young man picked as a retrial juror said he did not know anything about Cosby’s case.

He was an outlier among the 120 suburban Philadelphia residents summoned as potential jurors in the case.

Three-quarters of them were sent home for cause – the majority because they said they already have formed an opinion about Cosby’s guilt or innocence.

That leaves just 27 people invited back for individual questioning on Tuesday as prosecutors and Cosby’s lawyers work to fill 17 remaining jury spots. Another group of 120 potential jurors also is being brought in, in case they do not make the cut.

O’Neill said the jury will be sequestered at a hotel and warned that the retrial could last about a month.

Cosby has pleaded not guilty to charges he drugged and sexually molested Constand, a Temple University women’s basketball administrator, at his suburban Philadelphia home in 2004. He says the encounter was consensual.

The former TV star once revered as “America’s Dad” for his family sitcom “The Cosby Show” wore a dark suit with a trench coat draped across his legs and a thin wooden cane in his hand as O’Neill questioned potential jurors.

Picking a jury has proven particularly tough after the #MeToo movement started toppling famous men in rapid succession months after Cosby’s first trial ended in a deadlock.

All but one of the people in the initial group of potential jurors said they were aware of the #MeToo movement or the allegations it spurred against powerful entertainment figures. The lone person who claimed ignorance on #MeToo was not invited back.

Veteran lawyers and jury consultants say #MeToo could cut both ways for Cosby, making some potential jurors more hostile and others more likely to think men are being unfairly accused.

In all, prosecutors and the defense removed a total of 91 potential jurors before breaking on Monday.

But six other people who echoed the lone selected juror in saying they had no knowledge of Cosby’s case are being brought in for individual questioning.

Last year’s trial was mostly a he-said-she-said. For the retrial, O’Neill has ruled jurors can hear from five additional accusers, giving prosecutors a chance to portray Cosby as a serial predator.

The AP does not typically identify people who say they are victims of sexual assault unless they grant permission, which Constand has done.
 
https://www.nbcphiladelphia.com/new...y-Selection-Norristown-Retrial-478753213.html

Bill Cosby Defense Alleges Discrimination in Jury Selection
By Michael R. Sisek
Published at 9:16 AM EDT on Apr 4, 2018 | Updated 3 hours ago

Bill Cosby's lawyers alleged a member of the prosecution team made a disparaging remark Wednesday after a black woman was removed from consideration as a prospective juror in the comedian's sexual assault retrial.

The 80-year-old's comedian's lawyers didn't reveal in open court what they alleged had been said, but sought to use the remark as evidence that prosecutors illegally removed the woman from the jury pool on the basis of her race.

Prosecutors pushed back, noting two blacks have been already been seated as jurors. The judge said he didn't believe the prosecution had any "discriminatory intent" but halted the third day of jury selection to consider the defense argument.

Cosby lawyer Kathleen "Ignorance Is" Bliss said someone connected with the defense team heard someone on the prosecution side say "something that was discriminatory and repulsive."

"By all appearances, she was a perfectly qualified juror who stated that she could be fair and impartial," Bliss said, adding there was no explanation for the woman's removal "other than her race." :rolleyes:

District Attorney Kevin Steele responded there was "absolutely no legitimacy" to the defense's challenge, adding that prosecutors had no problem seating the two other black people who've appeared for individual questioning so far.

"Of the two opportunities we have had to take a member of the African-American community, we have done so," Steele told Judge Steven O'Neill. "For them to now make the claim that the strike of an individual establishes some type of pattern is, I think unfortunately, not being done for this court but for the media behind us."

O'Neill ordered both sides into chambers to talk it over.

The jury so far consists of six whites and two blacks. Four jurors are men and four are women.

Steele didn't give a reason why the prosecution used one of its seven peremptory strikes on the woman, who had said she could ignore what she knows about the Cosby case and the #MeToo movement against sexual misconduct in order to serve as an impartial juror. She also said being a domestic violence victim wouldn't color how she serves.

The battle over the juror's removal highlighted a vast racial disparity in the suburban Philadelphia jury pool that's limiting the number of black people available for consideration.

Just 10 of 240 prospective jurors brought in on the first two days of jury selection were black, or about 4.2 percent. The black population in Montgomery County is about 9.6 percent black, according to the latest U.S. Census estimates.

The county's jury questionnaire asks prospective jurors to self-identity their race to "help the court to monitor the juror selection process to avoid discrimination." The questionnaire makes clear that it's against the law to discriminate against potential jurors.

The county says the names of people called for jury duty are selected randomly from a master list that combines voter registration records and driver's license records.

Cosby's lawyers had appeared ready to strike at the first instance of prosecutors blocking a black juror, producing a legal brief that argued the move violated a 32-year-old Supreme Court ruling that prohibits prosecutors from excluding prospective jurors because of their race. The defense had made the same argument on Tuesday regarding the prosecution's exclusion of several white men, but O'Neill rejected it.

The legal maneuvering came as lawyers picked an eighth juror, a white woman who was at first hesitant to guarantee she could block out what she's read and seen about the Cosby case and the #MeToo movement against sexual misconduct.

"I could try. I mean, it's still in my head," she explained, before eventually agreeing.

Cosby has pleaded not guilty to charges he drugged and molested Andrea Constand at his suburban Philadelphia home in 2004. He says the encounter with the former Temple University women's basketball administrator was consensual.

Prosecutors plan to call as many as five additional accusers in a bid to portray Cosby — the former TV star once revered as "America's Dad" for his family sitcom "The Cosby Show" — as a serial predator.

The AP does not typically identify people who say they are victims of sexual assault unless they grant permission, which Constand has done.

As Wednesday's session got underway, a judge gave The Associated Press and other media organizations more access to jury selection.

Media lawyers had challenged an arrangement that forced reporters to watch the group questioning part of the process on a closed-circuit feed from another courtroom. The camera showed the judge, prosecutors and defense lawyers, but not potential jurors who were being questioned as a group.

Montgomery County President Judge Thomas DelRicci agreed to move the camera to the back of the courtroom so the media could see the potential jurors. The judge refused to make room in the crowded courtroom for a pool reporter, but said if the jury pool did not fill the room to capacity, he'd allow reporters to attend live.
 
http://philadelphia.cbslocal.com/2018/04/04/cosby-defense-discrimination/

12 Jurors Selected For Bill Cosby Sex Assault Retrial
April 4, 2018 at 5:15 pm

NORRISTOWN, Pa. (CBS/AP) — Twelve jurors have been selected in the sexual assault case against Bill Cosby on a day there were fireworks in the courtroom that initially brought jury selection to a grinding halt.

The main panel consists of 10 whites and two blacks. The jury has seven men and five women. There’s still a crew of 120 potential alternate jurors that have to be narrowed down to six.


Earlier Thursday, Cosby’s lawyers alleged a member of the prosecution team made a disparaging remark after a black woman :rolleyes: was removed from consideration. They didn’t reveal in open court what they claim had been said, but sought to use the remark as evidence that prosecutors illegally removed the woman from the jury pool on the basis of her race. :mad: :mad: :mad:

Prosecutors pushed back, noting two black jurors had been seated, and the judge said he didn’t believe the prosecution had any “discriminatory intent.”

Cosby’s lawyers eventually relented, and once jury selection resumed, three white men and a white woman were quickly placed on the panel. That brought the total number picked over three days to 12 — a full jury. Six alternates also have to be picked.

The battle over the black juror’s removal highlighted a vast racial disparity in the suburban Philadelphia jury pool that limited the number of black people available for consideration.

Just 10 of about 240 prospective jurors questioned on the first three days of jury selection were black, or about 4.2 percent. The black population in Montgomery County is about 9.6 percent black, according to the latest U.S. Census estimates.

The county says the names of people called for jury duty are selected randomly from a master list that combines voter registration records and driver’s license records.

On Wednesday, Cosby lawyer Kathleen Bliss said in court that someone connected with the defense team heard someone on the prosecution side say “something that was discriminatory and repulsive” after the black woman was dismissed. :rolleyes:

“By all appearances, she was a perfectly qualified juror who stated that she could be fair and impartial,” Bliss said, adding there was no explanation for the woman’s removal “other than her race.”

District Attorney Kevin Steele responded there was “absolutely no legitimacy” to the defense’s challenge :p, adding that prosecutors had no problem seating the two other black people who’d appeared for individual questioning.

“Of the two opportunities we have had to take a member of the African-American community, we have done so,” Steele told Judge Steven O’Neill. “For them to now make the claim that the strike of an individual establishes some type of pattern is, I think unfortunately, not being done for this court but for the media behind us.”

Steele didn’t give a reason why the prosecution used one of its seven peremptory strikes on the woman, who had said she could ignore what she knows about the Cosby case and the #MeToo movement against sexual misconduct in order to serve as an impartial juror. She also said being a domestic violence victim wouldn’t color how she serves.

Cosby’s lawyers had appeared ready to strike at the first instance of prosecutors blocking a black juror, producing a legal brief that argued the move violated a 32-year-old Supreme Court ruling that prohibits prosecutors from excluding prospective jurors because of their race. The defense had made the same argument on Tuesday regarding the prosecution’s exclusion of several white men, but O’Neill rejected it.

Cosby, who is black, is accused of drugging and molesting Andrea Constand at his suburban Philadelphia home in 2004. He says the encounter with the former Temple University women’s basketball administrator was consensual.

Prosecutors plan to call as many as five additional accusers in a bid to portray Cosby — the former TV star once revered as “America’s Dad” for his family sitcom “The Cosby Show” — as a serial predator.

Man Accused Of Fatally Shooting Woman On Easter Sunday Arrested In Connecticut

The AP does not typically identify people who say they are victims of sexual assault unless they grant permission, which Constand has done.

As Wednesday’s session got underway, a judge gave The Associated Press and other media organizations more access to jury selection.

Media lawyers had challenged an arrangement that forced reporters to watch the group questioning part of the process on a closed-circuit feed from another courtroom. The camera showed the judge, prosecutors and defense lawyers, but not potential jurors who were being questioned as a group. Montgomery County President Judge Thomas DelRicci agreed to move the camera to the back of the courtroom so the media could see the potential jurors.
 
http://philadelphia.cbslocal.com/2018/04/05/bill-cosby-jury-selection-day-4/

Jury Selection Wraps Up In Bill Cosby’s Sexual Assault Trial
April 5, 2018 at 6:50 pm

NORRISTOWN, Pa. (AP) — Prosecutors and the defense wrapped up jury selection in the Bill Cosby sexual assault case Thursday, setting the stage for the first big celebrity trial of the #MeToo era.

All six alternates — half of them black — were picked without incident after an earlier showdown over the jury’s racial makeup. Alternate jurors listen to the evidence and testimony, but do not participate in jury deliberations unless called upon to replace jurors on the main panel.

Cosby’s lawyers had accused prosecutors of discrimination for removing a black woman from consideration on the main jury of 12 that will decide the 80-year-old comedian’s fate.

The district attorney’s office rejected the allegation, noting that prosecutors had no objection to seating two other black people on the jury. The other 10 jurors are white. There are seven men and five women.

Opening statements are scheduled for Monday in a trial that’s expected to last a month.

As he left the courthouse, Cosby thanked a woman who wished him good luck. His spokesman, Andrew Wyatt, urged jurors to remain “fair and impartial,” adding, “We would want them to erase everything they heard outside this courtroom when they come in for Monday.”

Prosecutors didn’t comment on the case Thursday.

Cosby faces three felonies stemming from allegations by a former Temple University women’s basketball administrator who says Cosby, a Temple alum and longtime trustee, gave her pills that made her woozy, then assaulted her at his home in the Philadelphia suburbs in 2004.

Cosby, once revered as “America’s Dad” for his family sitcom “The Cosby Show,” says the encounter was consensual. :rolleyes:

The first alternate picked Thursday, a middle-aged black man, said he could set aside what he’s heard about the Cosby case but hesitated and couldn’t guarantee it when pressed by the judge. Prosecutors and Cosby’s lawyers nevertheless found him acceptable.

A middle-aged white woman also picked as an alternate said she could put aside her thoughts that Cosby, who is black, is guilty.

A Philadelphia judge, meanwhile, threw out a former prosecutor’s defamation lawsuit against Cosby’s accuser.

Judge Ann Butchart on Tuesday dismissed the lawsuit against Andrea Constand and two of her lawyers by Bruce Castor Jr. He claimed Constand and her lawyers harmed his reputation and cost him a chance to return as district attorney by criticizing him and suing him for defamation days before the 2015 election.

Castor was district attorney in 2005 when Constand first told police Cosby had drugged and molested her. Castor ended his investigation into Cosby after four weeks, announcing the comedian wouldn’t be charged because the evidence showed both parties “could be held in less than a flattering light.”

A new district attorney reopened the case in 2015 after Cosby’s deposition in Constand’s lawsuit was unsealed at the request of The Associated Press. Cosby gave the deposition in 2005 and 2006 as part of Constand’s suit against him.

Castor’s lawsuit said Cosby paid Constand “well into the millions of dollars” in a settlement.

Constand’s federal defamation suit against Castor is still active.

The Associated Press does not typically identify people who say they are victims of sexual assault unless they grant permission, which Constand has done.
 
http://philadelphia.cbslocal.com/20...ster-charges-at-bill-cosby-as-retrial-begins/

Topless Protester Charges At Bill Cosby As Retrial Begins
April 9, 2018 at 8:53 am

NORRISTOWN, Pa. (AP) – A topless protester with “Women’s Lives Matters” written on her body in red ink charged at Bill Cosby Monday as he walked into the courthouse in Montgomery County for the start of his sexual assault retrial.

The woman jumped over a barricade and launched toward Cosby but was intercepted by sheriff’s deputies. She was taken into custody and led away in handcuffs.

Cosby seemed startled by the commotion as protesters chanted at him, but was not touched and is uninjured.

The unidentified woman was among about a half-dozen people chanting in support of Cosby’s accuser. She had “Women’s Lives Matters” written in red ink on her chest and stomach along with other phrases in black and red all over her body.

Opening arguments are scheduled to begin Monday morning and prosecutors have lined up a parade of accusers to make the case that the man revered as “America’s Dad” lived a double life as one of Hollywood’s biggest predators.



NAKED SHEBOON ALERT!!

AP_18099470295393.jpg
 
http://philadelphia.cbslocal.com/2018/04/09/cosby-paid-accuser-nearly-millions/

Prosecutor: Bill Cosby Paid Andrea Constand Nearly $3.4 Million
April 9, 2018 at 11:58 pm

NORRISTOWN, Pa. (AP) — Bill Cosby paid nearly $3.4 million :eek: to the woman he is charged with sexually assaulting, a prosecutor revealed to jurors Monday, answering one of the biggest questions surrounding the case as the comedian’s retrial got underway.

District Attorney Kevin Steele highlighted the 2006 civil settlement during his opening statement, in an apparent attempt to suggest Cosby wouldn’t have paid out so much money if the accusations against him were false. Cosby’s lawyers have signaled they intend to use the settlement to argue that Andrea Constand falsely accused the former TV star in hopes of landing a big payoff.

The amount had been confidential — and was kept out of the first trial — but a judge ruled that both sides could discuss it at this one.

“This case is about trust,” Steele told the jury. “This case is about betrayal and that betrayal leading to the sexual assault of a woman named Andrea "Howard Stern" Constand.”

Cosby, 80, is charged with drugging and molesting Constand, a former employee of Temple University’s basketball program, at his suburban Philadelphia home in 2004. Constand says he gave her pills that made her woozy, then penetrated her with his fingers as she lay incapacitated, unable to tell him to stop.

“She’s unconscious. She’s out of it,” Steele said. “She will describe how her body felt during this circumstance. She’s jolted during this. She feels herself being violated. … And she’ll tell you she remembers waking up on this sofa with her clothes disheveled at 4 o’clock in the morning. This is hours after this starts.”

The defense will deliver its opening statement on Tuesday in a trial expected to last a month.

Cosby’s first trial last spring ended with the jury hopelessly deadlocked. The comedian faces three counts of aggravated indecent assault, each punishable by up to 10 years in prison.

Ahead of opening statements, a topless protester who appeared on several episodes of “The Cosby Show” as a child jumped a barricade and got within a few feet of Cosby as the comedian entered the courthouse.

The woman, whose body was scrawled with the names of more than 50 Cosby accusers as well as the words “Women’s Lives Matter,” ran in front of Cosby and toward a bank of TV cameras but was intercepted by sheriff’s deputies and led away in handcuffs. Cosby seemed startled by the commotion as a half-dozen protesters chanted at him.

The protester, Nicolle Rochelle , 39, of Little Falls, New Jersey, was charged with disorderly conduct and released.

“The main goal was to make Cosby uncomfortable because that is exactly what he has been doing for decades to women,” she said afterward.

Rochelle, an actress, said she didn’t have any bad experiences with Cosby when she was on the show, nor did she intend to physically hurt him. She is a member of the European feminist group Femen , which is known for staging topless protests around the world.

Cosby spokesman Andrew Wyatt praised deputies for their quick action but urged court officials to increase security.

“It’s a different world. Things have changed,” Wyatt told The Associated Press, referring to recent mass shootings and other cases. “You never know who’s going to want to make a name for themselves.”

Opening statements were delayed for several hours while the judge sorted through allegations raised late Friday that a juror told a woman during jury selection that he thought Cosby was guilty. Cosby’s lawyers wanted the juror removed from the case.

After questioning all 12 jurors and six alternates behind closed doors, Judge Steven O’Neill ruled the juror could stay, saying all the panelists told him they stuck to their pledge to remain fair and impartial.

Prosecutors have lined up a parade of five additional accusers to make the case that the man revered as “America’s Dad” lived a double life as one of Hollywood’s biggest predators. Only one additional accuser took the stand at the first trial.

Cosby lawyer Tom Mesereau, who won an acquittal in Michael Jackson’s 2005 child molestation case, has said the jury will instead learn “just how greedy” Constand was.

The retrial is taking place in a potentially more hostile environment for Cosby. The #MeToo movement caught fire four months after the first trial, raising awareness of sexual misconduct as it toppled kikes Harvey Weinstein, Sen. Al Franken, Matt Lauer and other powerful men.

The Associated Press does not typically identify people who say they are victims of sexual assault unless they grant permission, which Constand and Dickinson have done.
 
http://philadelphia.cbslocal.com/20...ster-charges-at-bill-cosby-as-retrial-begins/

‘I Wanted Him To Feel Something’: Topless Protester A Former ‘Cosby Show’ Actress And Activist
April 9, 2018 at 11:01 pm

NORRISTOWN, Pa. (CBS/AP) — The topless protester who leaped over a barricade and ran toward Bill Cosby at the start of his sexual assault retrial on Monday is an actress who appeared on the comedian’s family sitcom “The Cosby Show” as a child.

Nicolle Rochelle, a member of European feminist group Femen, which is known for staging topless protests, said she wanted to send a message to the 80-year-old comedian.

“The main goal was to make Cosby uncomfortable because that is exactly what he has been doing for decades to women,” she told reporters after her release from custody.

Rochelle, of Little Falls, New Jersey, had the names of more than 50 of Cosby’s accusers scrawled on her body, along with the words “Women’s Lives Matter,” when she ran in front of Cosby toward a bank of TV cameras outside the suburban Philadelphia courthouse. She was taken down by sheriff’s deputies and charged with disorderly conduct.

Her protest came ahead of opening statements in a case that pits Cosby against a former Temple University women’s basketball official who says the comedian drugged and molested her in 2004. He says the encounter was consensual.

Rochelle, who guest-starred on several episodes of “The Cosby Show” more than 25 years ago, said she didn’t have any bad experiences with Cosby when she was on the show, nor did she intend to physically hurt him on Monday.

“I wanted him to feel something. I wanted him to feel what he did and have it be in his face,” said Rochelle, who has been living in Paris. “I wanted to approach him, but I didn’t want to touch him at all.”

Rochelle tells CBS3’s Chantee Lans that if her actions touched just one woman it was all worth it.

“If I touched just one person it was all worth it and I already know that happened because I’ve spoken to that person who is in tears and that was my goal. At least one woman feels more supported today. I can sacrifice my body for all that she went through. That’s the least I can do,” Rochelle says.

Authorities told Rochelle to stay away from the courthouse, a warning she said she will heed.

The actress, singer and dancer’s activist group Femen, which got its start in Ukraine a decade ago, regularly stages topless protests against religious institutions, far-right politicians and other targets seen as oppressing women.

The group has been re-energized by the #MeToo movement against sexual misconduct. Paris-based Femen leader (((Inna Shevchenko))) said Femen has a presence in eight countries.

Femen activists target their unauthorized protests — which have been staged at the Vatican, in front of Russian President Vladimir Putin and elsewhere — to attract as much media attention as possible. That media obsession, and the members’ use of their breasts as a protest tool, has drawn criticism from feminist groups and others who see Femen protests as a distraction.

Femen argues that its actions are more effective than officially sanctioned protests.

“When a woman is nude, it usually attracts attention, and that was definitely the goal,” Rochelle said. “To attract attention to the fact that women are not laying down peacefully and taking this kind of treatment, and that people are against Cosby.”

Cosby’s first trial ended in a mistrial. The case has helped demolish his image as America’s Dad, cultivated during his eight-year run as kindly Dr. Cliff Huxtable on the top-rated “The Cosby Show” in the 1980s and ’90s.
 
http://philadelphia.cbslocal.com/2018/04/10/cosby-lawyer-launches-fierce-attack-on-accuser/

Bill Cosby Lawyer Attacks Accuser As Prosecutors Build Case
April 10, 2018 at 11:58 pm

NORRISTOWN, Pa. (AP) — Bill Cosby’s retrial took a far more combative turn Tuesday than the first go-round, as his lawyers launched a scathing attack on his accuser and prosecutors put the first in a parade of women on the stand to portray the comedian as a sexual predator.

Heidi Thomas, who was a 24-year-old aspiring actress in 1984 when she met Cosby in Reno, Nevada, testified he knocked her out with a potent glass of wine and forced her to perform oral sex.

Prosecutors have lined up five accusers in all to make the case that the TV star, once revered as America’s Dad :rolleyes:, made a habit of drugging and assaulting women well before he was charged with violating Andrea Constand at his suburban Philadelphia home in 2004.

Cosby’s lawyer urged jurors to ignore the other accusers — calling them irrelevant to this case — but saved most of his fire for Constand, branding her a “con artist” who tried to frame the comedian for the money.

Tom Mesereau, delivering his opening statement a day after prosecutors took their turn, said Constand “hit the jackpot” when Cosby paid her $3.4 million over a decade ago to settle her lawsuit against him.

“What did she want from Bill Cosby?” Mesereau said. “You already know the answer: money, money and lots more money.”

His attack on Constand was a striking departure from the more subdued tone that Cosby’s previous lawyer took at the first trial, which ended in a hung jury last spring.

It was also a likely glimpse of what’s to come when the former Temple University basketball administrator takes the stand to say Cosby made her woozy with pills and then penetrated her with his fingers.

Cosby, 80, is charged with three counts of aggravated indecent assault, each punishable by up to 10 years in prison.

As they began building their case against Cosby, prosecutors chose Thomas, now a Colorado music teacher, as their first substantive witness.

Thomas, who said her agent had arranged for Cosby to give her acting tips :rolleyes:, told the jury that she took a sip of white wine that Cosby gave her as they rehearsed a scene in which she was portraying a drunken woman. Thomas said her next memory was waking up with Cosby forcing himself on her.

She said she remembered thinking she felt sick and wondering, “How did I get here?”

Thomas testified she blamed herself for what happened, thinking she must have said or done something that led Cosby to believe she would be open to his advances. She never told her agent or her parents about the alleged assault.

“I was pretty sure whatever I did was my fault,” Thomas testified, adding: “I was just going to move on. And I did.”

Thomas, who went public with her allegations in 2015, has teamed with other Cosby accusers to lobby for longer statutes of limitations for sex crimes, including a successful effort to double Colorado’s to 20 years.

Under cross-examination, Thomas testified that she chronicled her trip to Reno in a scrapbook and recorded a cassette tape at the home where she had the encounter with Cosby. She said she wanted to recount the trip for her mother and agent but destroyed it years later after seeing a psychiatrist.

It made no mention of the alleged assault, Thomas said, because she had planned to give it to her mom.

Defense attorney Kathleen Bliss is to continue questioning Thomas on Wednesday.

Earlier Tuesday, Mesereau told the jury that Constand was in deep financial trouble and set out to exploit her relationship with Cosby.

Constand stiffed roommates on utility bills, racked up big credit card bills and operated a Ponzi scheme while running women’s basketball operations at Temple, where Cosby was an alumnus and trustee, Mesereau said.

He said Constand went to Cosby’s home at least a half-dozen times and sneaked into bed with him at a Connecticut casino, winning his trust so she could set him up later, he said. :rolleyes:

Constand outlined her scheme to a Temple colleague, Marguerite Jackson, Mesereau said. The defense plans to call Jackson as a witness, and Mesereau said she will testify that Constand mused about setting up a celebrity so she could sue and get money.

“A con artist is what you get, ladies and gentlemen of the jury,” the defense attorney said. “A con artist. And we’ll prove it.”

Cosby’s legal team at his first trial wasn’t nearly as aggressive in attacking Constand, focusing instead on inconsistencies in her statements to police and arguing the pair had a romantic relationship. The jury that time was not permitted to hear about the settlement, nor was Jackson allowed to take the stand.

Under no such constraints this time, the defense let loose on Constand.

Mesereau also urged jurors to set aside any sympathy they might have for the #MeToo movement against sexual misconduct that has toppled Harvey Weinstein, Sen. Al Franken, Matt Lauer and other powerful men in recent months.

The comedian arrived at the courthouse Tuesday amid heightened security after a topless protester who appeared on several episodes of “The Cosby Show” as a child jumped a barricade on Monday and got within a few feet of Cosby as he entered the courthouse.

Cosby was surrounded by five sheriff’s deputies as he walked inside Tuesday.

The Associated Press does not typically identify people who say they are victims of sexual assault unless they grant permission, which Constand and Thomas have done.
 
http://philadelphia.cbslocal.com/2018/04/11/prosecutors-bill-cosby-sex-assault-retrial-accusers/

Judge Denies Cosby Legal Team’s Request For Mistrial After Witness Outburst
April 11, 2018 at 11:57 pm

NORRISTOWN, Pa. (CBS) — Bill Cosby’s lawyers asked the judge to declare a mistrial following a witness outburst in the courtroom on Wednesday. Chelan Lasha blurted out, “You remember, don’t you, Mr. Cosby?” in reference to her claims that the comedian molested her in 1986 in the Elvis Presley suite at the Las Vegas Hilton.

She made the comment while breaking for lunch and in earshot of the jury.

Judge Steven O’Neill immediately denied a defense request for a mistrial. :D

Cosby sat still during the exchange, and for much of the testimony accusing him of drugging and assaulting the woman.

Lasha said Cosby gave her a blue pill and Amaretto and then passed out.

She told the court through tears, “Dr. Huxtable, you said you were going to help me. Why are you doing this to me? You’re supposed to help me be successful. I was a child, a good girl and he took that all way from me.”

At least two accusers said in court that they were raped by Cosby.

Cosby had supporters in the courtroom, including Rev. Derrick Johnson from Delaware.

“I’m certainly sad about the mischaracterization of who he is, what he is about,” said Johnson.

Defense attorneys previously called accusers like Lasha and others “distractions.” They’ve also described central witness Andrea Constand as a “con artist.”

“Well, we will see who the real con artist is in the courtroom, Mr. [Tom] Meserau, when the verdict comes down. When the jury hears from six women who allege that Bill Cosby drugged and raped them and they carried this with them their entire lives, we’ll see who the real con artist is,” said attorney Kelly Bloom.

Three accusers took the stand on Wednesday.
 
https://www.nbcphiladelphia.com/news/local/THU-Bill-Cosby-Accusers-Stand-Norristown-479518563.html

Model Janice Dickinson Tells Jury Bill Cosby Raped Her
A former TV personality who has called herself the "world's first supermodel," Dickinson became one of the first women to go public with her allegations against Cosby when she told her story on "Entertainment Tonight" in 2014
By Michael R. Sisak
Published at 9:54 AM EDT on Apr 12, 2018 | Updated at 8:22 PM EDT on Apr 12, 2018

dickenson_cosby.jpg


A former model told a jury Thursday that Bill Cosby raped her in 1982 after giving her a pill he claimed would ease her menstrual cramps but instead left her immobilized and unable to stop an assault she called "gross."

Janice Dickinson, the fourth of five accusers to take the witness stand at Cosby's sex assault retrial, told jurors she was "rendered motionless" by the pill as Cosby got on top of her in his Lake Tahoe, Nevada, hotel room. She said he smelled of cigars and espresso.

"I didn't consent to this. Here was 'America's Dad,' on top of me. A married man, father of five kids, on top of me," Dickinson said. "I was thinking how wrong it was. How very wrong it was."

Dickinson, 27 at the time, testified she felt vaginal pain and, after waking up the next morning, noticed semen between her legs. She said Cosby looked at her "like I was crazy" when she confronted him about what had happened.

"I wanted to hit him. I wanted to punch him in the face," she said.

A former TV personality who has called herself the "world's first supermodel," Dickinson became one of the first women to go public with her allegations against Cosby when she told her story on "Entertainment Tonight" in 2014.

Another accuser, taking the witness stand after Dickinson, said Cosby prodded her to drink two shots in his Las Vegas hotel suite, then had her sit between his knees and started petting her head.

Lise-Lotte Lublin told jurors she lost consciousness and doesn't remember anything else about that night in 1989 — a time when Cosby was at the height of his fame starring as sweater-wearing father-of-five Dr. Cliff Huxtable on America's top-rated TV show, "The Cosby Show."

"I trusted him because he's 'America's Dad,'" Lublin said. "I trusted him because he's a figure people trusted for many years, including myself."

Dickinson and Lublin were among five additional accusers whom prosecutors called to the stand to show Cosby had a history of drugging and molesting women long before he was charged with violating Andrea Constand at his suburban Philadelphia home in 2004.

The 80-year-old comedian says his sexual encounter with Constand was consensual. His first trial ended in a hung jury.

The defense has dismissed the other women's testimony as "prosecution by distraction."

"These women proved that they were here to back up their sister — they got their sister's back," Cosby spokesman Andrew Wyatt said Thursday outside court.

Dickinson, the only celebrity accuser to testify against Cosby, parried with defense attorneys who seized on discrepancies between her testimony Thursday and what she wrote about their encounter in her 2002 autobiography.

She told jurors she wanted to include details about the assault, but wound up telling a highly sanitized version in which there was no sex at all, let alone a rape, because her publisher told her the legal department would never let the allegations against Cosby make it to print.

Dickinson said she went along because she needed the money — and feared Cosby would ruin her career.

"It's all a fabrication there. It was written by ghostwriters. I wanted a paycheck," she said.

Dickinson testified she got to know Cosby after he called her agent and said he wanted to meet and possibly mentor her as she looked to expand her career into singing and acting. The first accuser to testify, Heidi Thomas, said she met Cosby the same way.

She said Cosby invited her to Lake Tahoe after an initial meeting at his New York City townhouse, where he had given her an acting manual. Cosby tracked her down to Bali, where she was modeling for an oil company calendar, and asked her to Lake Tahoe "to further talk about my career."

In Tahoe, she tested out her vocal range with Cosby's musical director, watched Cosby perform and then joined the two men for dinner at the hotel. She said that's where she started to get cramps, and that's when Cosby produced a little blue pill. She took it and soon became woozy and "slightly out of it."

Cosby's musical director left, Dickinson said, and Cosby told her: "We'll continue this conversation upstairs."

Dickinson had a Polaroid camera with her, she said, and snapped photos of Cosby in the room wearing a colorful robe and talking on the telephone. Then Cosby pounced.

"Shortly after I took the pictures and he finished the conversation, he got on top of me," Dickinson said. "His robe opened up. ... I couldn't move.

"I didn't fly to Tahoe to have sex with Mr. Cosby," she said.

Prosecutors hope the five accusers' testimony will help bolster Constand, the former women's basketball administrator at Cosby's alma mater, Temple University. Constand, who will take the stand later in the trial, alleges Cosby gave her pills and molested her. The defense says she set him up to score a big payday. Cosby settled her civil suit for $3.4 million.

The chief accuser at Bill Cosby's sex assault retrial is set to testify.

Andrea Constand says the 80-year-old comedian drugged and molested her during an encounter at his home in 2004. He says their encounter was consensual.

The trial judge says Constand is due to take the stand Friday.

On Thursday, a woman who alleges Cosby had her drink two shots that knocked her out told the jury she didn't realize until years later what he might have done to her.

Lise-Lotte Lublin was a 23-year-old model and aspiring actress when she says Cosby prodded her to drink two shots in his Las Vegas hotel suite. She says she lost consciousness and doesn't remember anything else about that night in 1989.

The Associated Press doesn't typically identify people who say they're victims of sexual assault unless they grant permission, which Lublin and Constand have done.
 
http://philadelphia.cbslocal.com/2018/04/13/andrea-constand-bill-cosby-retrial-sex-assault-charges/

‘I Just Could Not Fight Him Off’: Main Accuser Andrea Constand Takes Stand In Bill Cosby Sex Assault Retrial
April 13, 2018 at 11:59 pm

NORRISTOWN, Pa. (CBS/AP) – Bill Cosby’s primary accuser has taken the witness stand at the actor’s sexual assault retrial, telling a jury she wants justice after five other women testified that the man once revered as “America’s Dad” is a serial rapist who harmed them too.

Andrea Constand’s appearance was her second chance to confront Cosby in court after his first trial ended with a hung jury.

“I was weak. I was limp, and I just could not fight him off,” said Andrea Constand, once again confronting the 80-year-old comedian in court after his first trial ended with a hung jury.

Her harrowing account of sexual molestation was remarkably similar to the one she gave at last year’s trial, and jurors watched intently and scribbled notes as she described how Cosby — the good-guy celebrity she viewed as a mentor and friend — had betrayed her trust.

Constand, who worked as a women’s basketball administrator at Temple University, his alma mater, said Cosby offered her pills and a sip of wine after she said she was “stressed” about telling the Temple coach of her plans to leave to study massage therapy in her native Canada. He called the pills “your friends” and told her they would “help take the edge off.”

Instead, Constand said, the pills instead made her black out. She awoke to find the actor known as “America’s Dad” penetrating her with his fingers, touching her breast and putting her hand on his penis.

She said she wanted Cosby to stop but couldn’t say anything. She tried moving her arms and legs but couldn’t.

Constand said she awoke between 4 and 5 a.m. to find her bra up around her neck and her pants half unzipped. She said Cosby stopped her as she went to leave: “All he said was there’s a muffin and tea on the table and then, ‘All right’ and then I left.”

Afterward, Constand said, “I was really humiliated. I was in shock. And I was really confused.”

Cosby has said he gave Constand the cold medicine Benadryl and that she consented to a sexual encounter. She was expected to face intense cross-examination by a defense team intent on portraying her as a “con artist” who framed him for money.

Cosby lawyer Tom Mesereau told jurors in an opening statement on Tuesday that Constand was a pauper who stiffed roommates on bills, racked up big credit card debt and once ran a Ponzi scheme until she “hit the jackpot” in 2006, when Cosby paid her $3.4 million to settle the civil lawsuit Constand filed after the district attorney at the time dropped the case.

On the stand, Constand told jurors she has nothing to gain financially now by wanting Cosby locked up.

“Ms. Constand, why are you here?” prosecutor Kristen Feden asked.

“For justice,” Constand said.

Constand testified that Cosby had made previous sexual advances, but she wasn’t concerned about him. As a physically fit former professional basketball player, she was confident she could handle him.

“I thought it was a little bit absurd, given that Mr. Cosby was just a little bit younger than my grandfather,” Constand said of the sexual interest he’d shown in her. “He was a married man, and I absolutely showed no interest in him. But I wasn’t threatened, and I didn’t judge him.”

Constand’s allegation is the only one among dozens against Cosby that has led to criminal charges. If convicted, the former TV star best known for his No. 1 family sitcom “The Cosby Show” faces up to 10 years in prison on each of three related aggravated indecent assault charges.

A jury deadlocked after last year’s trial, unable to reach a verdict after more than 52 hours of deliberations over six days.

For this trial, prosecutors had the strategic advantage of putting Constand on the witness stand after a parade of other accusers who told jurors that Cosby had used the same tactics on them: preying on women who saw him as a mentor, debilitating them with pills or alcohol and then violating them when they were unable to fight back. Just one other accuser was permitted to testify at the first trial.

The defense has called the other accusers irrelevant, urging jurors to focus only on the charges that Cosby is facing.

Cosby’s lawyers say Constand outlined her get-rich scheme to a Temple colleague, Marguerite Jackson. The defense plans to call Jackson as a witness and says she will testify that Constand mused about framing a celebrity before she lodged sexual abuse allegations against Cosby in 2005.

Jackson, a longtime Temple official, has said that she and Constand worked closely together, had been friends and had shared hotel rooms several times. She has said Constand once commented to her about setting up a “high-profile person” and filing suit.

On the stand Friday, Constand said she remembers having a hotel room to herself at Temple’s away basketball games and did not recall ever rooming with Jackson.

Constand’s lawyer, Dolores Troiani, called the defense attacks on her client “outrageous” and “baseless.” She ripped Cosby’s team for trashing her reputation in the courtroom, where lawyers are immune from defamation lawsuits, and in statements to the media.

“I’d love to see if he thinks he’s going to prove any of this,” Troiani told The Associated Press.
 
https://www.nbcphiladelphia.com/news/local/Bill-Cosby-Accuser-Calls-479889873.html

Bill Cosby's Legal Team Tries to Discredit Chief Accuser
Bill Cosby lawyer paints accuser as unrequited lover
By Michael R. Sisak
Published 8 minutes ago | Updated 5 minutes ago

Bill Cosby's chief accuser spent late nights at the comedian's home, drove four hours to see him at a casino and called him twice on Valentine's Day, about a month after she says he drugged and molested her, jurors learned Monday as the defense sought to undercut her account.

Andrea Constand took the witness stand for a second day Monday and said under cross-examination that her phone calls to Cosby were about basketball and had nothing to do with romance.

Constand, 45, testified last week that Cosby knocked her out with pills and then sexually assaulted her at his suburban Philadelphia home in 2004. Cosby, 80, says Constand consented to a sexual encounter. His first trial last year ended with a hung jury.

The defense is trying to cast Constand as an unrequited lover who acted inappropriately by showing interest in the long-married Cosby. She has testified that she saw the former TV star as a mentor and had no romantic interest in him.

Phone records show Constand, the former director of women's basketball operations at Temple University, made brief calls to Cosby around the time of a Temple home game on Feb. 14, 2004, the month after the alleged assault.

"You think you called Mr. Cosby to talk about basketball?" Mesereau asked her.

Constand testified that she felt a duty to answer Cosby's inquiries since he was a powerful alumnus and trustee.

Picking up where he left off Friday, Mesereau questioned Constand about inconsistencies in her police statements and prior testimony.

Mesereau said Constand told police in 2005 that she called Cosby from her university-issued cellphone just before she arrived at his house on the night of the alleged assault to ensure the gate would be open. But Constand's phone records show she did not make any calls to Cosby's mansion that month.

Constand explained that she may have been mistaken, that there were times Cosby told her in advance that the gate would be open and that she often reached him at another number.

Mesereau opened the retrial last week with a blistering attack on Constand, telling jurors that she is a "con artist" who framed the comedian and cashed in with a $3.4 million settlement.

On Monday, the defense lawyer suggested Constand broke her 2006 confidential settlement agreement with Cosby by agreeing to cooperate with law enforcement in the reopened criminal case.

"Didn't you think when Mr. Cosby paid you this large sum of money he was hoping it was all go away?" Mesereau asked, wondering in front of jurors if she'd ever offered to give back the money.

Prosecutors have called five other women to the stand who said Cosby drugged and assaulted them too. The defense has called the other accusers irrelevant to the case.

If convicted, he could get up to 10 years in prison on each of three charges of aggravated indecent assault.

The Associated Press does not typically identify people who say they are victims of sexual assault unless they grant permission, which Constand has done.
 
http://philadelphia.cbslocal.com/20...imony-retrial-sex-assault-quaaludes-to-women/

Judge Rules Jury Can Hear Bill Cosby Testimony About Giving Quaaludes To Women
April 17, 2018 at 9:53 am

NORRISTOWN, Pa. (CBS/AP) – Prosecutors in Bill Cosby’s sexual assault retrial can read the comedian’s prior testimony about giving quaaludes to women before sex to the jury, the judge in the case ruled Tuesday.

Judge Steven O’Neill ruled Tuesday that prosecutors can read the testimony into the record at Cosby’s retrial on charges he drugged and molested Andrea Constand at his suburban Philadelphia mansion in 2004. The testimony was also included at his first trial that ended with a hung jury last year.

Cosby testified at a deposition related to Constand’s lawsuit against him that he had gotten quaaludes from his doctor in Los Angeles in the 1970s. He said he was given seven prescriptions for the now-banned sedative, ostensibly for a sore back.

Cosby said he never took the drug, instead giving it to women he wanted to have sex with.

“Quaaludes happen to be the drug that kids, young people were using to party with and there were times when I wanted to have them just in case,” Cosby testified.

Cosby’s lawyers argued the testimony is irrelevant to his retrial because there’s no evidence he gave Constand the drug.

Prosecutors are building to the conclusion of their case against Cosby with investigators and a pharmaceutical expert expected to take the stand beginning Tuesday in the comedian’s sexual assault retrial.

The prosecution on Monday delivered a searing one-two punch as Constand rejected defense allegations that she concocted her story to score a big payday, and her mother testified that Cosby apologized and called himself a “sick man.”

Andrea and Gianna Constand’s testimony followed that of five additional accusers who told jurors that Cosby had drugged and assaulted them two decades earlier.

As Cosby arrived at the suburban Philadelphia courthouse Tuesday, spokeswoman Ebonee Benson told reporters that their testimony “seemed to be more colorful and more embellished” than at the first trial. She said that Andrea Constand helped devise a plan to make money off Cosby and her mother helped her execute it.

Benson’s statement came a day after Andrea Constand withstood a defense cross-examination that sought to expose her as a con artist who set Cosby up, leaving the witness stand at his retrial without budging from her allegation that he drugged and molested her at his suburban Philadelphia home in 2004.

“Did you ever fabricate a scheme to falsely accuse him for money?” Cosby lawyer Tom Mesereau asked her.

“No, sir,” Constand replied.

Constand, a former Temple University women’s basketball administrator, was mostly calm and composed in more than seven hours of testimony over two days.

Her mother followed her on the witness stand on Monday and was more feisty, often clashing with prosecutors and bristling when they asked her if she benefited from Andrea Constand’s $3.4 million civil settlement with Cosby.

“She didn’t buy ME a house,” Gianna Constand snapped. “This isn’t about money.”

The mother testified about a phone conversation she said she had with Cosby about a year after the alleged assault on her daughter in which he described in graphic detail their sexual encounter and then apologized.

Gianna Constand said she was “very combative” with Cosby, demanding he tell her the medication he had given her daughter and what he had done to her.

She said Cosby told her he had given Andrea Constand a prescription drug – not the cold and allergy medicine Benadryl as he has claimed – but did not provide the name of it. She said he described how he had touched Andrea Constand’s breasts and vagina and guided her hand to his penis.

“He said to me, ‘Don’t worry, Mom, there was no penile penetration,'” Gianna Constand testified.

She told jurors that Cosby said he “felt like a dirty old perverted man” and, at the end of the call, conceded he was a “sick man.” Her testimony prompted Cosby, sitting with his lawyers at the defense table, to open his eyes wide.

Andrea Constand told jurors last week that Cosby knocked her out with pills and then sexually assaulted her. Cosby, now 80, says Constand consented to a sexual encounter. His first trial ended with a hung jury.

At last year’s trial, Cosby’s lawyers suggested that Constand and the former “Cosby Show” star were lovers who had been intimate with each other in the past. This time, defense lawyers are trying to portray Constand as an opportunist who feigned romantic interest in him and then leveled a false accusation of sexual assault so she could file a lawsuit.

Constand has testified that she saw the former TV star as a mentor and had previously rejected his advances. And she said her phone calls to Cosby were about basketball and had nothing to do with romance.

The defense plans to call as a witness a former Temple administrator, Marguerite Jackson, to testify that before Constand lodged her allegations against Cosby in 2005, Constand had mused to her about setting up a “high-profile person” and filing suit. Jackson has said that she and Constand worked closely together, had been friends and had shared hotel rooms several times.

On Monday, Constand testified she did not “recall ever having a conversation with” Jackson.

A judge blocked Jackson from testifying at last year’s trial after Constand took the stand and denied knowing her. At the time, O’Neill ruled Jackson’s testimony would be hearsay.

The judge has ruled that Jackson can take the stand at the retrial but indicated he could revisit the issue after Constand was finished testifying.

The Associated Press does not typically identify people who say they are victims of sexual assault unless they grant permission, which Constand has done.
 
http://philadelphia.cbslocal.com/2018/04/19/cosbys-defense-team-loses-5th-bid-for-mistrial/

Cosby’s Defense Team Loses 5th Bid For Mistrial
April 19, 2018 at 10:08 am

NORRISTOWN, Pa. (CBS/AP) – The judge in Bill Cosby’s sexual assault retrial is rejecting the defense’s fifth bid for a mistrial.

Cosby’s lawyers argued on Thursday that prosecutors were out of line for implying they were wrong to help star defense witness Marguerite Jackson write a statement outlining how she says Cosby’s chief accuser mused about framing a celebrity.

Prosecutor Stewart Ryan irked Cosby’s lawyers during Jackson’s cross-examination by repeatedly saying they “created” her affidavit. :p

The judge says there is “simply no grounds for a mistrial” and that Cosby’s lawyers are raising the issue too late.

Judge Steven O’Neill is also slamming the comedian’s lawyers for dragging out the trial by having just one witness ready to testify Thursday. :D

Cosby is charged with drugging and molesting a woman in 2004. He says it was consensual.
 
http://philadelphia.cbslocal.com/2018/04/18/prosecution-rests-bill-cosby-sex-assault-retrial/

Cosby’s Star Witness Says Accuser Spoke Of Plot To Frame
April 18, 2018 at 11:56 pm

NORRISTOWN, Pa. (CBS/AP) — The prosecution in Bill Cosby’s sexual assault retrial has rested on Wednesday, with the exception of calling one expert witness on Thursday.

The chief accuser at Cosby’s retrial talked about framing a celebrity before going to police with her allegations in 2005, a key defense witness testified Wednesday as the TV star’s lawyers began putting on their case.

Marguerite Jackson, an academic adviser :rolleyes: at Temple University, said Andrea Constand told her she could fabricate sexual assault allegations and “get that money” from a civil suit, bolstering Cosby’s efforts to show Constand made up the allegations against him to extort a big civil settlement.

f7b3ce63e4be48c29fbcb4f87b60dab0.jpg

Marguerite Jackson, an academic adviser at Temple University, said Andrea Constand told her she could fabricate sexual assault allegations and “get that money” from a civil suit, bolstering Cosby’s efforts to show Constand made up the allegations against him to extort a big civil settlement.
(Credit: CBS3)


Jackson’s account was immediately challenged by prosecutors, who suggested she wasn’t on the trip where she says her conversation with
Constand took place.

Her appearance on the witness stand was one of the most highly anticipated moments of a retrial that has Cosby, 80, defending himself against criminal charges that he knocked Constand out with pills and then sexually assaulted her at his suburban Philadelphia home in 2004. Cosby’s lawyers call Constand a “con artist” who set him up. The famed comedian paid her nearly $3.4 million in 2006.

Jackson recounted a conversation she said she had with Constand on a road trip to the University of Rhode Island with the Temple University women’s basketball team, where Constand was working as operations director.

After watching a TV news report about a celebrity who had been sued over allegations of sexual assault, Jackson said Constand told her: “Oh wow, something similar happened to me.” Constand said she never reported the assault because her assailant was a “high-profile person” and she knew she couldn’t prove it, Jackson testified.

Jackson, who said she roomed with Constand on the trip, told jurors she encouraged Constand to come forward. She testified Constand then switched gears, saying: “No it didn’t, but I could say it did. I could say it happened, get that money. I could quit my job. I could go back to school. I could open up a business.”

Jackson said the conversation happened Feb. 1, 2004, a few weeks after Constand says Cosby molested her.

Constand denied rooming with Jackson and testified Monday she didn’t “recall ever having a conversation with” her.

During Jackson’s cross-examination, a prosecutor produced Temple records showing Jackson’s travel to other away games but not to the one at the University of Rhode Island. The defense did not produce any records to support Jackson’s claim she was on the trip.

Jackson testified she was aware of the 2005 criminal probe, Constand’s subsequent lawsuit and her big financial settlement with Cosby, but never told anyone in Cosby’s camp — even though Cosby was represented at the time by Patrick O’Connor, the chairman of the board at Temple, where Jackson got her degree and has worked for 31 years.

She said a comedian she met on a cruise put her in touch with Cosby’s lawyers in November 2016. They got to talking about Cosby after the comedian offered to buy her a drink and promised, “‘I won’t put anything in it,'” she recalled.

“They came in. Took my statement. The whole nine,” Jackson said. “They called me to testify, then they didn’t allow my testimony.”

Judge Steven O’Neill blocked Jackson from taking the stand at Cosby’s first trial last year, ruling her testimony would be hearsay after Constand told the jury she didn’t know her. That trial ended without a verdict after jurors deadlocked.

The judge changed his mind about Jackson for the retrial, giving the defense case a huge boost.

Outside court, Cosby spokeswoman Ebonee Benson said investigators intentionally ignored Jackson’s allegations because they’ve “always known how damaging this testimony would be.”

The defense case was scheduled to resume Thursday.

Prosecutors wound down their case earlier Wednesday, introducing the comedian’s explosive testimony about giving quaaludes to women before sex — an old admission that’s taken on new significance after a half-dozen women testified earlier in the retrial that he drugged and violated them, too.

A police detective read a transcript of the 2005 testimony as prosecutors saved for the very end of their case Cosby’s own words about using the 1970s party drug “the same as a person would say, ‘Have a drink.'”

Cosby was deposed in 2005 and 2006 after Constand filed suit against him. The deposition was hidden from public view until 2015, when The Associated Press petitioned to have it unsealed, leading prosecutors to reopen the criminal case and file charges.

Jurors at Cosby’s first trial also heard excerpts from the deposition.

In a transcript read to the jury Wednesday, the “Cosby Show” star said he obtained seven prescriptions for quaaludes from his doctor in Los Angeles in the 1970s, ostensibly for a sore back, but added he didn’t use them himself because they made him tired.

“Quaaludes happen to be the drug that kids, young people were using to party with, and there were times when I wanted to have them just in case,” Cosby testified, according to the transcript.

The sedative was banned in the U.S. in 1982, the same year one of the women who testified, Janice Baker-Kinney, alleges Cosby knocked her out with pills she suspected to be quaaludes and then raped her.

Cosby’s lawyers sought Wednesday to minimize the importance of his quaaludes testimony. Defense attorney Kathleen Bliss underscored that most of that testimony pertained to the 1970s, and a police detective acknowledged during cross-examination that authorities didn’t find quaaludes in a search of Cosby’s home after Constand went to police.

Cosby told police in 2005 that he gave Constand 1½ tablets of the cold and allergy medicine Benadryl to help her relax, then fondled her breasts and genitals, according to a police transcript read to the jury.

He said Constand never told him to stop. :rolleyes:

Constand said Cosby knocked her out with the pills, penetrated her with his fingers and guided her hand to his penis.

The Associated Press doesn’t typically identify people who say they’re victims of sexual assault unless they grant permission, which Constand and Dickinson have done.
 
https://www.nbcphiladelphia.com/news/local/Cosby-Lawyers-Accusers-Confidante-480358873.html

Defense Says Schedules Show Cosby Wasn't Around for Assault
Cosby's lawyers are scrambling to make sure jurors hear from accuser Andrea Constand's confidante before deliberations get underway next week
By Michael R. Sisak and Claudia Lauer
Published 5 hours ago | Updated 22 minutes ago

Jurors got a look at Bill Cosby's travel records on Friday as his lawyers made the case that he never visited his suburban Philadelphia mansion in the month he's accused of drugging and molesting a woman there.

Cosby's lawyers say the alleged assault on Andrea Constand couldn't have happened in January 2004, when she says the famed comedian knocked her out with pills and violated her. The date is important because Cosby wasn't charged until December 2015, just before the 12-year statute of limitations was set to expire.

The defense produced logs for Cosby's private jet flights as well as several days' worth of schedules listing his whereabouts and media appearances. The schedules do not indicate what Cosby was doing during his personal time.

Debbie Meister, his personal assistant, testified the flights on Cosby's Gulfstream IV — dubbed "Camille" after his wife of more than 50 years — coincided with comedy performances and other events on Cosby's schedule.

None of the records showed him flying in and out of Philadelphia-area airports from December 2003 to February 2004.

Cosby spokesman Andrew Wyatt said outside court that the records "connect the dots" that the comedian wasn't around Philadelphia at that time.

Cosby, 80, is charged with three counts of aggravated indecent assault. He says his sexual encounter with Constand was consensual.

Earlier Friday, Cosby's lawyers told the judge they want jurors to hear from Constand's confidante before deliberations get underway next week, but said she's been unreachable.

The defense asked for permission to read parts of Sheri Williams' deposition into the record just as prosecutors did with Cosby's old testimony. Williams gave the deposition as part of Constand's 2005 lawsuit against Cosby, who wound up settling for nearly $3.4 million.

Judge Steven O'Neill appeared skeptical of the defense request, saying he wants to hear from a witness who can show the defense has made a reasonable effort to serve Williams with a subpoena to testify in person. O'Neill put off a ruling until Monday.

Constand testified at Cosby's first trial last year that she and Williams were good friends and would speak "at all hours of the day: morning, noon, and night." She said they were in touch as she went to police in January 2005 with allegations he drugged and molested her about a year earlier.

Cosby's lawyers said they expected Williams' testimony to refute Constand's claims that she was unaware he was romantically interested in her. And they said the testimony would show that Constand "could not have been the unwitting victim" prosecutors have portrayed.

Constand testified at the trial that Cosby had never expressed any romantic interest, though she called the passes he made at her before the alleged assault — touching her thigh and trying to unbutton her pants — "a little bit absurd."

"Mr. Cosby was just a little bit younger than my grandfather. He was a married man and I absolutely showed no interest in him. But I wasn't threatened and I didn't judge him," she testified.

Cosby testified in his own deposition — also given as part of Constand's lawsuit — that he had a romantic relationship with her.

Two weeks in, Cosby's trial on three counts of aggravated indecent assault is rapidly winding down.

O'Neill told jurors Thursday that there are only a few more days of testimony. Cosby lawyer Tom Mesereau went into the case predicting it would last about a month.

A pair of drug experts — one for the prosecution and one for the defense — spent Thursday debating the identity of the drug he gave Constand on the night she says he molested her.

Cosby has insisted he handed 1½ tablets of over-the-counter cold and allergy medicine Benadryl to Constand to help her relax before their sexual encounter at his mansion outside Philadelphia. Constand testified he gave her three small blue pills that left her incapacitated and unable to resist as he molested her.

Williams' deposition testimony, which has been under seal, could provide insights into what led Constand to accuse Cosby and whether the encounter was a factor in her leaving her job a few months later as the director of women's basketball operations at Temple University.

A private investigator working for the defense said he attempted to serve Williams at least six times at her North Carolina home before sending her a FedEx package containing a subpoena and instructions to call Cosby's legal team.

The Associated Press does not typically identify people who say they are victims of sexual assault unless they grant permission, which Constand has done.
 
http://philadelphia.cbslocal.com/20...chedules-show-cosby-wasnt-around-for-assault/

Defense Says Schedules Show Cosby Wasn’t Around For Assault
By Joe Holden
April 20, 2018 at 11:50 pm

PHILADELPHIA (CBS/AP) — Bill Cosby, leaving the courthouse in Norristown, waved his cane to those shouting his name, calling for him to be vindicated. Others were close by, blaring messages of condemnation.

Week two of the entertainer’s indecent assault trial concluded early Friday afternoon. His defense team intended to use a man named Robert Russell, to bring out the ghosts in Andrea Constand’s past.

“Robert Russell should be allowed to say Andrea Constand wasn’t living the holistic lifestyle,” Publicist Andrew Wyatt told reporters. “That he did drugs with Andrea Constand and also Gianna Constand.”

Before taking the stand, the judge heard from the defense on their plans. Attorney Tom Mesereau told the court Russell would say Constand had a history of drug use that was extensive, and he thought she was addicted to hallucinogenic mushrooms. :rolleyes:

Judge Steven O’Neill wouldn’t allow it, telling lawyers his testimony would only be used to sully Constand’s reputation.

Two women also testified on Friday, employees of Cosby’s. They showed a calendar entry from 2003, evidence, his legal team said showed a long-running affair with Constand.

A handful of witnesses remain as part of the defense’ case.

Jurors also got a look Friday at Bill Cosby’s travel records as his lawyers made the case that he never visited his suburban Philadelphia mansion in the month he is accused of drugging and molesting a woman there.

Cosby’s lawyers say the alleged assault on Andrea Constand could not have happened in January 2004, when she says the comedian knocked her out with pills and violated her. The date is important because Cosby was not charged until December 2015, just before the 12-year statute of limitations was set to expire.

The defense produced logs for Cosby’s private jet flights as well as several days’ worth of schedules listing his whereabouts and media appearances. The schedules do not indicate what Cosby was doing during his personal time.

Debbie Meister, his personal assistant, testified that the flights on Cosby’s Gulfstream IV — dubbed “Camille” after his wife of more than 50 years — coincided with comedy performances and other events on Cosby’s schedule.

None of the records showed him flying into or out of Philadelphia-area airports from December 2003 to February 2004.

Cosby spokesman Andrew Wyatt said outside court that the records “connect the dots” that the comedian wasn’t around Philadelphia at that time.

Cosby, 80, is charged with three counts of aggravated indecent assault. He says his sexual encounter with Constand was consensual.

Sequestered jurors got an early start to the weekend as Day 10 of the trial drew to a close shortly after lunch. Testimony will resume Monday. The jury is expected to get the case next week.
 
http://philadelphia.cbslocal.com/2018/04/23/defense-resumes-cosby-trial/

Cosby Defense Blocked From Using Deposition
April 23, 2018 at 9:20 am

NORRISTOWN, Pa. (AP) — The judge in Bill Cosby’s sexual assault retrial won’t allow his lawyers to introduce testimony they say would shed light on the possible motivation of the comedian’s chief accuser.

The defense wanted jurors to hear deposition testimony from Andrea Constand’s friend, Sheri Williams. Cosby’s lawyers said Williams hasn’t responded to subpoenas.

They wanted Williams’ testimony to rebut Constand’s claims that she was unaware Cosby was romantically interested in her. They said Williams would show Constand “could not have been the unwitting victim” prosecutors have portrayed.

Judge Steven O’Neill rejected the defense request Monday as the trial entered its third week.

Cosby is charged with drugging and molesting Constand at his suburban Philadelphia home in 2004. He says it was consensual.

The Associated Press doesn’t typically identify people who say they’re victims of sexual assault unless they grant permission, which Constand has done.
 
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