Deadlocked Cosby jurors struggle to end impasse
Prospect of a mistrial grows as judge directs them to keep talking.
Four days after getting the case, deadlocked jurors in Bill Cosby’s sexual assault trial struggled to end their impasse Thursday on charges he drugged and molested a woman in 2004, the prospect ofamistrial growing larger even as the judge directed them to keep talking.
The jurors had deliberated about 30 hours before telling Judge Steven O’Neill they couldn’t reach a unanimous decision on any of the counts against the 79-year-old comedian. The judge told them to try again for a verdict.
As evening fell, the panel of seven men and five women was still at it, poised for another marathon session in a case that has already helped torpedo Cosby’s career and nice-guy reputation.
The charges involve Cosby’s sexual encounter with Andrea Constand, 44, at his suburban
Philadelphia home. Constand says Cosby gave her pills that made her woozy, then took advantage of her. His lawyer says Cosby and Constand were lovers shar- ing a consensual moment of intimacy.
Cosby’s spokesman, Andrew Wyatt, maintained
the impasse showed jurors doubted Constand’s story.
“They’re conflicted about the inconsistencies in Ms. Constand’s testimony,” Wyatt said. “And they’re hear- ing Mr. C.’s testimony, and he’s extremely truthful. And that’s created this doubt.”
Constand’s lawyer, Dolores Troiani, said only that the “jury is apparently work- ing very hard.” The district attorney’s office declined to comment.
Constand, former director of operations for the women’s basketball team at Temple University, Cosby’s alma mater, passed the time by shooting hoops in a hallway outside the district attorney’s office. She tweeted a video that shows her shooting a mini-basketball into a net to the tune of “Sweet Georgia Brown,” the theme song of the Harlem Globetrotters. It ended with: “ALWAYS FOLLOW THROUGH.”
Constand won a national title with the University of Arizona and played in a pro league in Europe before landing the job with Temple. It was at Temple she met Cosby, a member of the board of trustees.
With the jury struggling to find common ground, some of the other women who have accused Cosby of sexual assault confronted sign-wav-
ing Cosby supporters gathered on the courthouse steps to await the outcome. But the atmosphere remained calm, with accusers and supporters even holding hands at times.
Dozens of women have come forward to say Cosby had drugged and assaulted them, but Constand’s was the only case to result in criminal charges.
The 12-member jury must come to a unanimous decision to convict or acquit. If the panel can’t break the deadlock, the judge could declare a hung jury and a mistrial. In that case, prose-
cutors would get four months to decide whether they want to retry the TV star or drop the charges.
Pennsylvania law professor David Rudovsky, a crim-
inal lawyer in Philadelphia, said Thursday that the jurors’
inability to agree on a verdict didn’t surprise him, given the nature of a case that boiled down to Cosby’s word against his accuser’s and the legal meaning of consent.
He added that a hung jury would be a victory for Cosby.
“In most criminal cases, anything short of a convic- tion is a win for the defense,” said Rudovsky, who isn’t involved in the case. “It doesn’t surprise me that this jury is split. The prosecution had a strong case,
but the defense was able to show a lot of inconsistencies.”
The sequestered jurors have appeared increasingly tired and upset as deliberations dragged on. Some of them looked defeated as the judge sent them back to the jury room.
The jury, bused in from the Pittsburgh area, has paused a half-dozen times to revisit key evidence, including Cosby’s decade-old admissions that he fondled Constand after giving her pills.
Each of the three counts of aggravated indecent assault against Cosby carries a max- imum 10-year prison term, though the counts could be merged at sentencing if he is convicted.
The case has helped demolish his image as “Amer- ica’s Dad,” cultivated during his eight-year run as kindly Dr. Cliff Huxtable on the toprated “The Cosby Show” in the 1980s and ’90s.