Daily Local News (West Chester, PA)

COSBY CHARGES STAND

Montgomery County D.A. seeks testimony of other accusers

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

Entertaine­r Bill Cosby lost his latest bid to have sexual assault charges dismissed against him and a judge began considerin­g whether 19 other alleged accusers can testify at the actor’s upcoming retrial.

Montgomery County Judge Steven T. O’Neill on Monday denied two requests from Cosby’s defense team for a dismissal of the charges against the actor. Defense lawyers Thomas Mesereau Jr., Kathleen Bliss, Becky S. James and Lane L. Vines argued for the dismissal on grounds of prosecutor­ial misconduct and argued prosecutor­s can’t prove the alleged sexual assault occurred within the statute of limitation­s for the alleged crime.

O’Neill’s ruling clears the way for Cosby’s retrial to begin with jury selection on March 29. Testimony is slated to begin April 2.

At the start of Monday’s hearing, the judge offered his condolence­s to Cosby, whose 44-year-old daughter, Ensa, died of renal disease late last month.

“Mr. Cosby, the court does extend its sympathies,” O’Neill said to the actor, to which Cosby responded, “Thank you.”

Meanwhile, prosecutor­s began their quest to call 19 additional women who accuse the actor of sexual misconduct to

testify at his upcoming retrial on charges he sexually assaulted one woman, Andrea Constand, at his Cheltenham mansion in 2004.

“Over the course of decades, he did this same thing to 19 other women in strikingly similar fashion,” Assistant District Attorney Adrienne Jappe argued to the judge. “This evidence is not only relevant, it is admissible.”

Prosecutor­s argued the testimony of the other accusers is relevant “to establish a common plan, scheme or design” for the jury and “to establish that an individual, who over the course of decades intentiona­lly intoxicate­d women in a signature fashion and then sexually assaulted them while they were incapacita­ted, could not have been mistaken about whether or not Ms. Constand was conscious enough to consent to the sexual abuse.”

“He did it 19 times before

he did it to Andrea Constand. It’s not an accident. He knew the debilitati­ng effects these drugs would have on his victim,” Jappe argued.

When the pretrial hearing reconvenes on Tuesday, defense lawyers will deliver their arguments against allowing the 19 other alleged accusers to testify. In court papers, the defense team previously argued admitting evidence of even just one of the “uncharged and unproven accusation­s would be highly prejudicia­l.”

Judge O’Neill indicated he likely would not rule on the admissibil­ity of the testimony of the 19 other alleged accusers on Tuesday and that his decision would come at a later date.

“It’s an extremely weighty issue. This is a big issue,” O’Neill told the lawyers.

O’Neill’s ruling is considered one of the major pretrial legal decisions in the Cosby case. Legal insiders believe the key to the prosecutio­n’s case against Cosby is the admissibil­ity of evidence involving alleged accusers

who came forward after Constand’s allegation­s came to light.

During Cosby’s first trial last June on charges he sexually assaulted Constand, a former Temple University athletic department employee in January 2004, O’Neill allowed prosecutor­s to present the testimony of only one other accuser, or “prior alleged victim,” Kelley Johnson.

Johnson, 55, accused Cosby of engaging in sexual misconduct with her in 1996. Johnson testified she met Cosby around 1990 through her employment working as an assistant to Cosby’s personal appearance agent at the William Morris Agency.

District Attorney Kevin R. Steele had asked the judge to allow a total of 13 other alleged Cosby accusers to testify at the first trial, but the judge ruled in February 2017 that 12 of the women could not testify.

After Cosby’s first trial ended in a mistrial Steele sought a retrial and now is asking O’Neill to reconsider his earlier ruling and allow 19 other accusers to testify.

Steele and Jappe argued a decision by a state court in a homicide case, “that was decided after” O’Neill’s February 2017 ruling, determined that certain “prior bad acts evidence” is admissible at a trial.

Before the hearing began, Steele surprised everyone in the courtroom when he asked the judge to prohibit Cosby’s new defense team from remaining in the case. Steele, who previously didn’t challenge the out-of-town defense team’s appearance in a Pennsylvan­ia courtroom, argued defense lawyers made “reckless and false” statements about prosecutor­s in pretrial court filings and should not be permitted to continue in the case.

In those pretrial papers defense lawyers accused prosecutor­s of misconduct for allegedly failing to disclose they interviewe­d Marguerite Jackson, a potential trial witness who reportedly worked with Constand at Temple University and who claimed Constand once told her that she “had not been sexually assaulted but she could say that she

had, file charges and get money.”

But Steele argued Cosby’s previous lawyer Brian J. McMonagle acknowledg­ed that he was fully aware that prosecutor­s met with Jackson prior to Cosby’s first trial last June.

The new defense team subsequent­ly filed a supplement­al motion, backing off the claim, acknowledg­ing that Cosby’s previous lawyer did learn about the prosecutio­n’s interview of Jackson before the first trial in June 2017.

“These folks come as guests of the court. They have not earned the right to practice here in Pennsylvan­ia,” Steele said at one point regarding the defense team members from California and Nevada who previously were granted special permission to practice in Pennsylvan­ia for Cosby’s trial.

The judge called Steele’s request to oust the defense team “a big deal,” adding if he granted it Cosby would not have the lawyers of his choice. The judge ultimately ruled Mesereau and his team could stay in the case.

When defense lawyers sought a dismissal of the charges on the grounds prosecutor­s can’t prove the alleged incident occurred within the statute of limitation­s, they argued Constand previously testified the sexual assault occurred at Cosby’s Cheltenham home before Jan. 20, 2004, forcing prosecutor­s to prove that the incident occurred on an evening somewhere within a 22day window between Dec. 30, 2003, and Jan. 20, 2004.

The statute of limitation­s for the crime is 12 years. County prosecutor­s charged Cosby, 80, with aggravated indecent assault on Dec. 30, 2015.

But prosecutor­s argued the criminal complaint lodged against Cosby clearly identified the relevant timeframe. Assistant District Attorney Robert Falin suggested Cosby’s claim was premature and more a challenge to the sufficienc­y of the evidence and not a pretrial issue. Falin suggested at trial Cosby will be free to present any admissible evidence he believes supports his statute

 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Bill Cosby arrives for a pretrial hearing in his sexual assault case at the Montgomery County Courthouse Monday in Norristown.
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Bill Cosby arrives for a pretrial hearing in his sexual assault case at the Montgomery County Courthouse Monday in Norristown.
 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Bill Cosby, center, departs a pretrial hearing in his sexual assault case at the Montgomery County Courthouse Monday in Norristown.
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Bill Cosby, center, departs a pretrial hearing in his sexual assault case at the Montgomery County Courthouse Monday in Norristown.

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