The Guardian (Charlottetown)

As trial winds down, district attorney downplays Cosby travel records

- BY MICHAEL R. SISAK

Prosecutor­s highlighte­d gaps in Bill Cosby’s travel records on Monday as they sought to downplay their significan­ce to the comedian’s defence on sexual assault charges.

Cosby’s lawyers introduced the records in an attempt to show he couldn’t have been at his suburban Philadelph­ia mansion in January 2004, the month his chief accuser alleges he drugged and sexually molested her there.

But prosecutor­s pointed out multiple stretches of time that month when Cosby wasn’t aboard his private jet or performing around the country. And District Attorney Kevin Steele noted in court Monday that the records reflect only jet travel, not other modes of transporta­tion.

Cosby is charged with three counts of aggravated indecent assault stemming from his encounter with Andrea Constand. Cosby, now 80, says she consented. His first trial last year ended with a hung jury.

As the retrial entered its third week, the judge said he expected closing arguments on Tuesday.

The date of Cosby’s encounter with Constant is important because of the date he was charged. Prosecutor­s reopened the case in 2015, and he was charged late that year — just before the 12year statute of limitation­s was set to expire.

The flight records and travel itinerarie­s produced by Cosby’s lawyers do not show any flights in or out of the Philadelph­ia area in January 2004, indicating he wasn’t around for the alleged assault, according to the defence. Cosby’s lawyers argue that any encounter with Constand at his suburban home must have happened earlier, thus falling outside the statute of limitation­s.

But the records also have large gaps - a total of 17 days that month in which Cosby wasn’t travelling, performing or taping TV appearance­s.

Cross-examining a defence aviation expert, Steele, the prosecutor, zeroed in on March 16, 2004, the date Constand said she confronted Cosby after a dinner he hosted at a Chinese restaurant for Philadelph­ia high school students.

Cosby’s private jet records don’t show him taking any flights to the Philadelph­ia area around that time, either.

“You can’t tell us whether he got on a commercial flight,” Steele said. “You can’t tell us whether he got on a train. You can’t tell us whether he got in a car and drove to Philadelph­ia.”

Jurors also heard Monday from Roslyn Yarbrough, a former secretary for Cosby’s agent, who testified that Cosby spent most of his time at his Massachuse­tts estate and New York City townhouse, and was “very rarely” at the home near Philadelph­ia.

As court opened, Judge Steven O’Neill blocked the defence from using old deposition testimony from a confidante of Constand’s, dealing a blow to his lawyers’ effort to undermine Constand’s credibilit­y.

The defence wanted to use Sheri Williams’ deposition, given as part of Constand’s 2005 civil lawsuit against Cosby, after failing to reach Williams with a subpoena to testify in front of the jury.

O’Neill rejected the request, saying a prosecutor should have the right to cross-examine her.

Constand testified at Cosby’s first trial last year that she and Williams were good friends and were in touch as she went to police in January 2005 with allegation­s the TV star drugged and molested her.

 ?? AP PHOTO ?? Defence witness Roslyn Yarbrough arrives to testify in actor and comedian Bill Cosby’s sexual assault retrial at the Montgomery County Courthouse in Norristown, Pa., Monday.
AP PHOTO Defence witness Roslyn Yarbrough arrives to testify in actor and comedian Bill Cosby’s sexual assault retrial at the Montgomery County Courthouse in Norristown, Pa., Monday.

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