Cosby
allowed to delay providing evidence in Massachusetts defamation case
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[April 05, 2016]
By Alex Dobuzinskis
(Reuters) - Comedian Bill Cosby won the
right on Monday to delay providing evidence in a lawsuit in
Massachusetts, in which he is accused of defaming women with public
assertions that they fabricated sexual misconduct allegations against
him.
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In his ruling, the federal judge hearing the case cited a risk
Cosby might be forced to disclose facts prosecutors would use in a
separate criminal case against him in Pennsylvania.
Cosby, who personified the model American family man in his
long-running hit television series "The Cosby Show," was charged
last year in Pennsylvania with sexually assaulting former basketball
coach Andrea Constand in 2004.
He also has been sued in civil courts in the United States by at
least nine women, including seven in the case in Massachusetts.
In that civil case, U.S. District Judge Mark Mastroianni concluded
in a 13-page ruling that Cosby has a right to delay providing
evidence to avoid "incriminating himself in the criminal case" by
disclosing anything that may "support a conviction."
The decision follows a similar order last week by a California state
judge who delayed Cosby's scheduled deposition and other evidence in
a civil lawsuit accusing Cosby of sexually abusing a woman in 1974
when she was 15 years old.
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In the California ruling, which was seen as a precedent in other
civil cases against Cosby, the judge also put on hold discovery for
the plaintiff, Judy Huth.
But the ruling on Monday from Mastroianni took a slightly different
approach. The judge, citing the need to move the case forward,
required the plaintiffs and third parties to provide evidence when
asked by attorneys for Cosby.
Over the past two years, more than 50 women have publicly accused
Cosby of rape and other sexual wrongdoing. Most involve encounters
said to have occurred a decade or more ago, exceeding the statute of
limitations for legal action.
Cosby, 78, is free on bail in the Pennsylvania case, which is the
only criminal prosecution he faces.
(Reporting by Alex Dobuzinskis in Los Angeles; editing by John
Stonestreet)
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