Calgary Herald

Cosby re-trial set to begin

- Michael r. SiSak

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

The judge in 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.

Judge Steven O’Neill said at a pre-trial 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.

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 defence 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 colour. 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 pre-existing 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.

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.

THE ’70S ISN’T RELEVANT IN THIS CASE.

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