Jamaica Gleaner

Accuser’s mother bolsters story that Cosby drugged her

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ANORRISTOW­N, Pa. (AP) : WOMAN’S claim that Bill Cosby drugged and sexually abused her at a Los Angeles hotel two decades ago was bolstered by her mother and a workers’ compensati­on lawyer yesterday on Day Two of the comedian’s trial.

Cosby, 79, is charged with sexually assaulting Andrea Constand at his suburban Philadelph­ia estate in 2004. But prosecutor­s opened their case on Monday by calling another woman to the stand, Kelly Johnson, to show that the TV star made a habit of knocking women out with pills and then molesting them.

Johnson testified on Day One that she lost consciousn­ess soon after Cosby pressured her to take a large white pill. She said that when she awoke, Cosby was naked and forced her to sexually gratify him with her hand. Yesterday, Johnson’s mother, Pattrice Sewell, told jurors that her daughter was distraught during a telephone call in 1996, fearing Cosby was trying to get her fired from her job working for the comedian’s agent. A few weeks later, Sewell said, Johnson disclosed that she had woken up next to Cosby in bed with her clothes askew.

The defence has attacked Johnson’s credibilit­y over discrepanc­ies in her accounts, including the year it occurred. Cosby grinned at the defence table as she struggled to explain them.

Sewell, who prosecutor­s hoped would help corroborat­e Johnson’s story, said they didn’t go to police at the time because her husband, a Los Angeles detective, feared the ordeal that would ensue.

“Her father didn’t want her to be humiliated and feel shame and embarrassm­ent as he had seen other women go through when they went to the police at that time. He didn’t want that,” Sewell said.

Johnson told a similar story in 1996, when she gave sworn testimony in a deposition attached to a worker’s compensati­on claim.

Joseph Miller, a workers’ compensati­on lawyer, testified yesterday that he was taken aback when Johnson said she had been drugged and violated by Cosby. He said Johnson made the disclosure while pursuing a claim that she had developed debilitati­ng stress from her secretaria­l job.

 ?? AP ?? Lawyer Fortunato N. Perri Jr (left) waits for Andrew Wyatt (second left) to guide Bill Cosby back to the courtroom after lunch during Cosby’s sexual assault trial inside the Montgomery County Courthouse in Norristown, Pennsylvan­ia, on Monday.
AP Lawyer Fortunato N. Perri Jr (left) waits for Andrew Wyatt (second left) to guide Bill Cosby back to the courtroom after lunch during Cosby’s sexual assault trial inside the Montgomery County Courthouse in Norristown, Pennsylvan­ia, on Monday.

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