Cosby's main accuser to testify in sexual
assault case
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[April 13, 2018]
By David Dekok
NORRISTOWN, Pa. (Reuters) - A woman who is
at the center of the case against Bill Cosby is expected to take the
stand on Friday in a Pennsylvania courtroom, where she previously
accused the comedian of drugging and sexually assaulting her more than a
decade ago.
Cosby, who played the loveable patriarch and "America's Dad" on "The
Cosby Show," is on trial in Norristown for a second time on a charge of
aggravated indecent assault of former friend and colleague Andrea
Constand, 45.
In all, some 50 women have accused Cosby of molestation going back
decades. All but Constand's case were too old to be prosecuted, and
Cosby's first trial ended in a mistrial last June due to a deadlocked
jury.
The 80-year-old entertainer has denied the charge, saying any sexual
contact was consensual. His lawyers have portrayed Constand as a
gold-digging con artist.
"Based on the evidence heard so far, Mr. Cosby should be found not
guilty on all charges," Cosby spokesman Andrew Wyatt said on Thursday.
Since the first trial, the #MeToo movement exploded, prompting an
increasing number of women to come forward with accusations of
harassment or assault from rich and famous men.
During the first trial, Constand said she first met Cosby in late 2002,
when she was the newly hired director of basketball operations for
Temple University's women's basketball program and he was a university
trustee and the Philadelphia school’s most famous alumnus.
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Model Janice Dickinson, walks through the Montgomery County
Courthouse while on a break from testifying against actor and
comedian Bill Cosby during the fourth day of his sexual assault
retrial case in Norristown, Pennsylvania, U.S., April 12, 2018. Mark
Makela/Pool via Reuters
After a series of phone calls, Constand, who was then in her 30s,
said the married Cosby began inviting her to dinner at his house and
other events. On at least one occasion, Constand said she rebuffed
his advances, telling him she had no interest.
In January 2004, Constand said, Cosby invited her to his house again
to discuss her career options. That night, he offered her the three
blue pills, saying they were her "friends".
Constand told the court that she took the pills, which he promised
would help her "relax". The pills left her feeling "frozen" and
unable to resist him, she said.
Former supermodel Janice Dickinson testified on Thursday that Cosby
drugged and raped her at a Lake Tahoe home in 1982. Several other
women have also testified that they were drugged and sexually
assaulted by Cosby in the 1980s, when Cosby was at the height of his
popularity.
(Reporting by David DeKok; Editing by Hugh Lawson)
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