Cosby, 80, is undergoing his second trial on charges that he
drugged and raped Andrea Constand, 45, at his suburban
Philadelphia home in 2014. At the time, she was director of
operations for the women's basketball team at Temple University,
the entertainer's alma mater.
The former TV star's first trial ended with the jury unable to
reach a verdict.
Constand has accused Cosby of attacking her when she visited him
to discuss leaving her job. After she consumed three blue pills
that he said would relax her, she said she became immobilized
and awoke to find Cosby touching her breasts and vagina and
using her hand to stroke his penis.
Two days of cross examination ended with defense lawyer Tom
Mesereau asking Constand if she once roomed with Margo Jackson,
who was barred from testifying in the first trial but will be
allowed to take the witness stand in the retrial.
Jackson has said that Constand once told her on a basketball
road trip that she could make a lot of money through a false
charge of sexual assault against a celebrity.
On Monday, under questioning by Mesereau, Constand denied
knowing Jackson, rooming with her or ever speaking to her.
Mesereau then said, "Before you filed charges against Mr. Cosby,
did you fabricate a scheme?"
Montgomery County Assistant District Attorney Kristen Feden
interrupted with an objection sustained by Montgomery County
Court of Common Pleas Judge Steven O'Neill.
Mesereau tried a second time, slightly altering his statement
and again drew a sustained objection.
Earlier on Monday, the defense questioned whether Constand
followed the terms of a $3.38 million civil settlement Cosby had
paid her.
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The payout settled a civil lawsuit that Constand filed after
Pennsylvania prosecutors in 2005 initially declined to charge Cosby
for the alleged assault. Mesereau repeatedly asked Constand if she
had abided by its terms, which barred her from initiating criminal
charges against him.
"You didn't talk to anyone about the criminal case after you got all
this money?" Mesereau asked.
Constand said she had not.
"Then what are you doing here?" he demanded.
Prosecutors objected, and Judge O’Neill sustained the objection. But
Mesereau repeated the line: "Then why are you here?" several more
times, prompting the judge to remind the jury that attorney
statements are not evidence and should not be considered when it
deliberates Cosby's guilt or innocence.
Constand is one of about 50 women who have accused Cosby of assaults
dating back decades. Her accusation is the only one recent enough to
be the subject of criminal prosecution.
District Attorney Kevin Steele brought criminal charges in late
2015, days before the statute of limitations for the crimes was due
to expire.
Cosby has repeatedly denied the accusations, saying any sexual
contact was consensual. His attorneys have sought to undercut
Constand's credibility, arguing that her goal had been to win a
hefty payout from Cosby.
Cosby could face 10 years in prison if convicted.
Five of his other accusers have testified in this trial.
(Reporting by David DeKok; writing by Barbara Goldberg; editing by
Scott Malone, Jonathan Oatis and Tom Brown)
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