'America's
dad' on trial: Cosby sex assault case in second day
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[June 06, 2017]
By Joseph Ax
NORRISTOWN, Pa. (Reuters) -
The first witness in Bill Cosby's trial said she held
off for years going public with the story of how the
comedian drugged and sexually abused her for fear no one
would take her word against someone she viewed as "the
biggest celebrity in the world."
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Cosby, 79, is not charged with assaulting the witness, Kelly
Johnson, but prosecutors are using her testimony to show that he
followed a pattern of drugging women and then assaulting them -
including Andrea Constand, whose case is the basis of the
criminal trial that began on Monday.
Prosecutors will continue building their case on Tuesday with
testimony from Johnson's mother if Judge Steven O'Neill allows
her to take the stand after defense lawyers objected.
Johnson testified that in 1996 Cosby gave her a pill to "relax"
her when she went to his Los Angeles hotel room for career
advice. She said she became unconscious and when she came to,
she was partially undressed and Cosby made her touch his
genitals.
Johnson said she had waited years to accuse Cosby.
"I was humiliated and embarrassed," she said. "I was very afraid
because I had a secret about the biggest celebrity in the world
at that time. It was just me and my word against his."
More than 50 women have accused Cosby - once beloved by American
audiences as the dad in the long-running TV hit "The Cosby Show"
- of sexually assaulting them in a series of attacks dating to
the 1960s.
Constand's is the only one of those cases that is not too old to
be the subject of criminal prosecution, leaving the question of
whether Cosby will be found guilty of sex crimes hanging
primarily on her word. Constand says Cosby sexually assaulted
her in his suburban Philadelphia home in 2004.
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Pennsylvania prosecutors brought criminal charges against Cosby in
late 2015, just days before the statute of limitations was to run
out. Cosby has repeatedly denied all criminal wrongdoing, describing
his encounter with Constand as consensual.
Constand and Johnson are the only Cosby accusers expected to testify
during the two-week trial in Norristown, Pennsylvania.
Cosby, whose attorneys said is legally blind, is not expected to
testify. Prosecutors, however, said they will introduce as evidence
his words in a 2005 deposition related to the Constand case, when he
admitted obtaining the sedative Quaaludes for women and also to
giving Constand Benadryl.
Defense attorney Brian McMonagle said he welcomed that evidence.
"Mr. Cosby has never, ever under oath run from what happened that
night," McMonagle said on Monday. "At no point in time did he ever
say anything to anybody that this young woman was incapacitated in
any way."
(Editing by Scott Malone and Bill Trott)
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