Daily Mail

Cosby the sex predator could die in jail

- From Tom Leonard

BILL Cosby faced the prospect of dying behind bars last night after he was convicted of drugging and sexually assaulting a teenager.

Following the retrial of the 80-yearold TV star once known as ‘America’s Dad’, a jury in Pennsylvan­ia found him guilty of three counts of aggravated indecent assault against Andrea Constand, a former university basketball star he had mentored.

Each count is punishable by up to ten years in prison.

The verdict ends years of controvers­y for the star of the enormously popular comedy series, The Cosby Show, after dozens of women made similar allegation­s – accusing him of drugging and sexually assaulting them. Five of them testified at his retrial.

Some of his accusers were in court and cheered as the verdict was announced.

Cosby sat back in his chair as he learnt his fate and stared straight ahead.

But after the jurors left, he stood up and erupted angrily at prosecutor Kevin Steele’s insistence the millionair­e star owned a plane and should be denied bail as a flight risk. ‘He doesn’t have a plane, you a**hole!’ said Cosby, adding of Mr Steele: ‘I’m sick of him!’ Cosby’s wife of 54 years, Camille, had stood by him for years but was not in the Norristown court for the verdict.

The judge ruled he could remain free, wearing a GPS tracking device at his Philadelph­ia home, before sentencing. His lawyers said he will appeal.

Many have seen the case as the first big legal test for the MeToo Movement that sprang up to campaign against sexual harassment following the scandals over Harvey Weinstein and other Hollywood predators.

Gloria Allred, a lawyer for some of Cosby’s other accusers, said ‘justice has been done’, adding: ‘After all is said and done, women were finally believed.’

Some of the women insist Cosby was protected for decades by an entertainm­ent world reluctant to take on America’s biggest black star. Janice Baker-Kinney, who says he drugged and raped her in 1982, said she was relieved ‘ this toxic chain of silence has been broken’. She and the other women could move forward ‘ with heads held high’, she added.

In recent years, Cosby – who as family patriarch Dr Cliff Huxtable had made history by portraying a successful black family on US television – had admitted to decades of philanderi­ng. He also admitted giving quaaludes, a powerful sedative, to young women so he could have sex with them.

His first trial collapsed in June last year after the jury was unable to agree on a verdict.

The second jury of seven men and five women took 14 hours to reach their unanimous decision following a 14-day trial.

Cosby, who spent years establishi­ng himself as a moralising public figure who lectured young black men on their failings, did not testify in his own defence.

He and his lawyers had insisted that his relationsh­ip with the then 19-year- old Miss Constand, who had worked for his alma mater, Temple University in Philadelph­ia, was consensual. His legal team had depicted her in court as a cash- strapped ‘con artist’ and a liar who was interested in only one thing: ‘Money, money and lots more money.’

Cosby’s case was bolstered by Marguerite Jackson, a former colleague of Miss Constand, who testified that she had confided how she planned to frame a celebrity for money.

Miss Constand, a Canadian massage therapist, claimed she was left comatose and raped by Cosby in January 2004. They had become friends while she was working at the University as manager of its women’s basketball team. He was a trustee of the university and she turned to him for career advice.

She said he invited her to dinner at his home and gave her three blue pills to ‘relax’ her.

Cosby claimed he only gave her the antihistam­ine Benadryl after she complained of anxiety.

Miss Constand later took out a civil suit against the star and set-

‘Women were finally believed’ ‘Foolish and ridiculous’

tled for an undisclose­d sum. During his trial, Cosby’s lawyers had tried to arouse sympathy for him, saying he was ‘nearly blind’.

He had been ‘foolish’ and ‘ridiculous’ in being attracted to a younger woman but he was no criminal, the court heard.

More than 60 women have made sexual accusation­s against Cosby but only Miss Constand’s case resulted in criminal charges. Many of the other cases occurred too long ago to result in charges.

 ??  ?? Grim-faced: Bill Cosby after hearing the guilty verdict yesterday
Grim-faced: Bill Cosby after hearing the guilty verdict yesterday
 ??  ?? Leaving court: Bill Cosby, flanked by spokesman Andrew Wyatt, raises his hand after the hearing
Leaving court: Bill Cosby, flanked by spokesman Andrew Wyatt, raises his hand after the hearing
 ??  ?? ‘Justice has been done’: Attorney Gloria Allred with Cosby’s accusers after the conviction
‘Justice has been done’: Attorney Gloria Allred with Cosby’s accusers after the conviction
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