Sunday Mirror

HOW COSBY TRIAL AND ROW OVER

- BY GRACE MACASKILL

THEY were born just a couple of hundred miles from each other, but these two men may as well be from different worlds. One is white, the other black. One went to prestigiou­s Yale University and rose to become a US Court of Appeal judge.

The other quit college for the Navy, and went on to become America’s biggest TV star. Yet today, the paths of Brett Kavanaugh and Bill Cosby cross on the quicksand of sexual assault allegation­s.

Cosby, 81, is already in it over his head. The comedian who became a household name in family TV sitcom The Cosby Show must now get used to being inmate number NN7687.

He will serve three to 10 years in a Philadelph­ia jail among serial child molesters and rapists after being convicted of drugging and molesting basketball player Andrea Constand in 2004 at his home.

Meanwhile, right-winger Kavanaugh, 53 – nominated by President Donald Trump to be a Supreme Court judge – is almost up to his neck in it after millions watched Christine Blasey Ford, a professor of psychology in California, give powerful testimony to a Senate committee that he sexually assaulted her when they were high school teenagers in the 1980s.

THREATEN

His fate now hangs on an FBI probe into the allegation that could end his ascent to power as one of nine judges with a lifelong seat on the bench of the highest US court with the final say on law and the ability to challenge government policy.

But should the quicksand threaten to suck Kavanaugh under, he at least has a rope to cling to – thrown by Trump, who knows a thing or two about sexual assault claims himself.

Yesterday the President tweeted: “Just started, tonight, our 7th FBI investigat­ion of Judge Brett Kavanaugh. He will someday be recognized as a truly great Justice of The United States Supreme Court!”

Critics say Trump’s confidence can be explained by the fact that, having ordered the FBI to reopen Kavanaugh’s file, he’s given the bureau just a week complete its probe.

The White House itself is setting parameters for the investigat­ion, deciding whether FBI agents can interview two other women who have accused Kavanaugh of misconduct. Ford’s moving TV testimony before the Senate Judiciary Committee last week even forced Trump to admit it was “very compelling”. It was also seen as a powerful blow on behalf of the #MeToo movement – born from the hashtag that went viral on Twitter last year shortly after sex allegation­s emerged against movie mogul Harvey Weinstein.

The 51-year-old professor moved millions as she tearfully told how the future lawyer forced her down on a bed at a high school house party in front of a friend, “groped me and tried to take off my clothes. He began grinding his hips into me. They were laughing with each other.”

Then she says he clamped his hand over her mouth when she tried to scream before she was able to escape. “I believed he was going to rape me,” Trump Tweet makes it plain FBI will find nothing she said. She claimed the assault “drasticall­y altered my life,” filling her with shame and fear and causing “panic attacks and anxiety”.

And she said her motive for giving evidence was not political, but to do her “civic duty”.

Ford said: “I am here today not because I want to be. I am terrified.”

Kavanaugh – a former aide to President George W Bush – told the committee her accusation­s were “radically inconsiste­nt” with his character, adding: “The truth is that I have never sexually assaulted anyone.”

Then at one point in the proceeding­s, committee member Lindsey Graham, a Kavanaugh supporter, said his friend was “not a Bill Cosby” – a moment not lost on viewers. The country is still reeling from the jailing of a man who rose to TV fame playing the father in a well-off African-American family. Reportedly paid more than £1million an episode, his estimated wealth three years ago was nearly £400million.

FRAMED

Last week, moments after Cosby was sentenced, his publicist Andrew Wyatt claimed he and Kavanaugh were victims of a “sex war” – enraging #MeToo supporters and winning applause from critics who think the campaign has gone too far.

After insisting the star was “innocent” and had been “framed”, Wyatt bragged his boss has been enjoying his early days behind bars in Pennsylvan­ia

 ??  ?? COCKY
COCKY
 ??  ?? ACCUSED Kavanaugh sweating on top job
ACCUSED Kavanaugh sweating on top job
 ??  ?? DEFIANT Trump gives his backing
DEFIANT Trump gives his backing
 ??  ?? MOVING Ford’s testimony
MOVING Ford’s testimony

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