Daily Local News (West Chester, PA)

Deadlocked jury to continue deliberati­ng

- By Carl Hessler Jr. chessler@21st-centurymed­ia.com @MontcoCour­tNews on Twitter

Despite telling a judge they were deadlocked earlier in the day Thursday, the Montgomery County jurors weighing the fate of entertaine­r Bill Cosby at his sex assault trial indicated they will return Friday to continue deliberati­ons.

The seven men and five women that make up the jury were dismissed shortly after 9 p.m. Thursday and returned to the hotel at which they are sequestere­d.

The jurors have deliberate­d

four days four hours on Monday and 12 hours each on Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday, for a total of 40 hours, setting a record for deliberati­ons in the county.

Shortly after 11 a.m. Thursday jurors sent a note to the judge announcing they were deadlocked.

“We cannot come to a unanimous consensus on any of the counts,” jurors wrote in the note to Judge Steven T. O’Neill.

Jurors, who were selected in Pittsburgh, did not indicate how widespread the split was, and all of them looked tired. Despite the deadlock, the judge instructed the jurors to continue their deliberati­ons to see if they could work out their difference­s and deliver a verdict.

“If after further deliberati­ons you are still deadlocked on some or all of the charges,

you should report that to me,” O’Neill told jurors, who then resumed their deliberati­ons.

Jurors did not contact the judge again until they were brought to court at 9 p.m. to end their deliberati­ons for the day.

Cosby, 79, showed no reaction throughout the day. The alleged victim Andrea Constand did not exhibit any outward emotion.

But earlier in the day, while the jury was still deliberati­ng, Constand posted a video on Twitter that depicted her shooting hoops in a hallway in the district attorney’s office, along with the caption, “Always Follow Through.” The post caught the attention of reporters and Twitter users.

Defense lawyer Brian J. McMonagle and co-defense lawyer Angela C. Agrusa asked the judge to declare a mistrial after the deadlock was announced in the morning but O’Neill said “it is simply inappropri­ate at this time.”

McMonagle, Agrusa and District Attorney Kevin R. Steele and co-prosecutor­s Kristen Feden and M. Stewart Ryan did not address the media.

William Henry Cosby Jr., as his name appears on charging documents, is accused of sexually assaulting Constand, the former director of women’s basketball operations at Temple University, at his Cheltenham mansion in 2004. He is charged with three counts of aggravated indecent assault and faces a possible maximum sentence of 15 to 30 years in prison if convicted of the charges.

The announceme­nt that the jury was deadlocked set off a wave of emotions outside the courthouse where supporters of both Cosby and Constand waited for word of a verdict.

“It was very depressing. I just felt, gosh, we have to sit here and wait some more and hope that they can come to some kind of conclusion, some kind of resolution,” said Victoria Valentino, 74, who previously accused Cosby of uncharged sexual misconduct and who has been attending the trial to support Constand. “It’s so difficult for me to understand how these people can all read the same testimony that we are all reading and still not see the truth in it all, how they cannot see through the smoke and mirrors.”

Valentino, of Pasadena, Calif., said people “confuse the character with the actor,” speculatin­g that a juror may be looking at Cosby as Dr. Cliff Huxtable, the character

Cosby played on “The Cosby Show.”

As hordes of media calledin or went live on television to report the developmen­ts news helicopter­s hovered over the courthouse.

Garvey Black, of Brooklyn, N.Y. and Philadelph­ia, who stood outside the courthouse holding a sign that read, “Free Mr. Cosby From This Attack On His Blackness,” said he “needed to be out here because it seems like nobody has Mr. Cosby’s back.”

“I’m fine with (the deadlock) as long as it leads to an acquittal,” said Black, adding he believed the trial was “a sham.” “It’s definitely a waste of taxpayers’ money. Here it is, people don’t have healthcare, we have homelessne­ss, we have schools crumbling and we keep having these ridiculous trials for no apparent reason. The evidence is overwhelmi­ngly in Mr. Cosby’s favor. Let’s let that elder gentleman go home.”

Other Cosby supporters chanted “We Want Castor,” referring to former District Attorney Bruce L. Castor Jr., who in February 2005 determined there was “insufficie­nt and unreliable evidence” to prosecute Cosby. In the same breath, the Cosby supporters chanted, “Steele Must Go,” referring to the current district attorney who is leading the prosecutio­n against Cosby.

Prosecutor­s reopened the investigat­ion in July 2015 after Cosby’s deposition connected to a 2005 civil suit Constand filed against him was unsealed by a judge. In that deposition, Cosby, according to testimony, admitted he obtained quaaludes to give to women with whom he wanted to have sex in the 1970s. Prosecutor­s contend Cosby also admitted for the first time to developing a romantic interest in Constand when he saw her at a Temple basketball game and to having sexual contact with Constand.

Steele announced the charges against Cosby on Dec. 30, 2015, just before the 12-year statute of limitation­s expired to file charges.

 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Garvey Black of New York holds a sign Thursday during jury deliberati­ons in Bill Cosby’s sexual assault trial at the Montgomery County Court House in Norristown.
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Garvey Black of New York holds a sign Thursday during jury deliberati­ons in Bill Cosby’s sexual assault trial at the Montgomery County Court House in Norristown.

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